Folk songs and friendships; dancing Bon Odori

Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni
Story by Lance Cpl. Lauren Brune

Date: 08.16.2019
Posted: 08.16.2019 01:51
News ID: 336141
Folk songs and friendships; dancing Bon Odori

Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni residents joined Japanese locals on the dance floor during a Bon Odori Festival at Kinjuen nursing home in Iwakuni, Aug. 14, 2019.

Station residents were invited to participate in the festival, as part of a Marine Corps Community Services Cultural Adaptation Program trip.

“This event is a unique experience for station residents,” said Mikie Watanabe, cultural adaptation specialist. “It is very rare for Americans to be able to participate in a Japanese summer event where they get to wear a Yukata, a summer Kimono, and participate in a traditional Bon Odori Festival.”

Residents helped locals decorate the nursing home with lanterns, banners and games for the children who attended the event. This opened the door for both parties to learn and practice each other’s native language and interact with each other.

Nursing home residents gathered into the common area to eat and watch as everyone danced. Smiles filled their faces when familiar visitors from the station showed up for their second or third time to this particular event.

Bon Odori, also known as Bon dance, is a style of dancing to folk songs that differ from region to region but with the common theme of honoring and appreciating ancestors and their sacrifices.

After dancing, everyone who attended the festival participated in games to win prizes, and eat traditional summer festival foods like yakisoba and shaved ice.

Station residents who attended this event for the first time said their favorite part was being able the dance and interact with the locals.

“My favorite part was dressing up in Yukatas and having fun with my wife,” said Michael Cox, a Lockheed Martin employee. “Being able to experience the cultural exchange and practicing Japanese with the native speakers would not have been possible without the Cultural Adaptation Program."