Hasty Briefsbeta

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Lords of the Ring

4 days ago
  • #Japan
  • #sumo
  • #culture
  • Sumo wrestling is Japan's national sport with deep historical and religious ties to Shinto.
  • The sport involves two wrestlers (rikishi) competing in a sand-covered ring (dohyo), with the goal of forcing the opponent out or making them touch the ground with any part of their body other than their feet.
  • Hoshoryu, one of sumo's two active grand champions (yokozuna), became the 74th yokozuna in January, despite some controversy over his readiness.
  • Mongolian wrestlers have dominated sumo's upper ranks since the 1990s, with six of the last eight yokozuna being Mongolian, sparking debates about national identity and cultural rivalry.
  • The promotion of Japanese wrestler Onosato to yokozuna in May reignited the cultural rivalry between Japanese and Mongolian wrestlers, reflecting broader societal tensions around immigration and nationalism.
  • Sumo's origins trace back to ancient Japanese mythology, with the first match believed to have been between two deities, and the sport evolving from martial-arts training to popular entertainment.
  • The sport faced criticism during Japan's Meiji-era modernization but was later embraced as a symbol of national identity, culminating in the construction of the Kokugikan arena in Tokyo.
  • Foreign wrestlers, particularly from Hawaii and Mongolia, have played significant roles in sumo's internationalization, though their presence has sometimes sparked racial and cultural tensions.
  • The recent rise of far-right political party Sanseito, which opposes immigration, has added a political dimension to the cultural rivalry in sumo.
  • The autumn tournament featured a rare playoff between Hoshoryu and Onosato, with Onosato winning, while Ukrainian wrestler Aonishiki later won a tournament, highlighting sumo's evolving diversity.