Hello Everyone! First off I'd like to thank Switch for the opportunity to post on Phantom River Stone and to share this with you all!
This is going to be the first in a series of posts examining Bailu Village in detail. Shenmue 3 depicts Shenhua's childhood home as an idyllic, rural, mountain community with a long history; one in which just about everyone knows everyone else, and nothing much changes day to day. It's a small wonder then that the coinciding events of the attacks on the village stonemasons and the arrival of Ryo Hazuki is of such keen (if wary at first) interest to just about everybody.
One of the key features that made Shenmue so distinct when it first released was the fact that Ryo could talk to every NPC he came across. These NPCs often had unique ways of responding to Ryo that made them feel like real people with lives beyond their relevance to Ryo's journey. Shenmue 3 by and large continues this tradition. In Bailu alone every villager that Ryo can speak to (which is the vast majority of them) seems to have a unique response to almost every single topic of investigation. Often these unique responses shed light on the villagers themselves, their relationships with each other, and their life aspirations.
In addition to conversing with the locals themselves, a number of physical locations throughout the village reveal even more details about its inhabitants; some of which are very easy to miss on a standard play through. It is these locations that I'm going to focus on starting today with Man Yuan Temple – and in particular the racks of wooden wishing plaques, known as ema, inside.
The History of Ema
The tradition of hanging prayer ema is actually a Japanese custom with historical roots in Shintoism. In the Nara period in Japan (AD 710 – 794) worshipers would donate horses as offerings to shrines in the hope that since the horse was revered as the vehicle of the gods (kami), the kami would be more likely to listen and answer the worshipers' prayers. Horses were prohibitively expensive for most Japanese people of that era however, and over time clay and wooden sculptures came to be used. These sculptures in turn evolved into wooden plaques with a picture (e) of a horse (ma).
A wooden wishing plaque (ema) with a picture of a horse. Source: https://zenpop.jp/blog/post/356/how-to-write-ema |
An ema depicting the rat of the Chinese zodiac. Source: https://theadventuresofworldwind.files.wordpress.com |
Man Yuan Temple
Nestled within a beautiful bamboo thicket, Man Yuan Temple is one of the largest structures in Bailu.
Shenmue 3's Man Yuan Temple. |
The ema racks inside Man Yuan Temple. |
The front rack houses a few ema with anonymous messages that seem like they might be from travelers who visited Bailu over the years and a few messages that make note of important events in the history of the village dating all the way back to the eighteenth century:
An ema making note of an event affecting the village hundreds of years ago. |
- '1826. Gifted an article made from a wolf from Langhuishan.'
- 'Verdant Bridge completed. 1910.'
- 'I hope to pass the civil servant exam!'
- 'I have fulfilled my duties to the emperor and am relieved.' (Written by an ancestor of Mr. Yuan perhaps?)
The Ema Written by Iwao
At this temple, Ryo receives an ema written by his father, Iwao, during his time training in Bailu twenty years prior. This is the ema Iwao wrote:
“Akane... I promise to return. Wait for me... - Iwao” |
Ema of the Bailu Village Residents
“I wanna become a Tai Chi master, start my own school, get rich and famous, and get the girls! - Su Zixiong” |
“Old Man Su Wenxu is always screaming. He should learn to zip it. - Su Yuzhen” |
“The young generation has no manners! - Su Wenxu” |
“I pray my grandson grows up strong and takes over the school. - Kong Mei” |
“Unsure if I should force my grandson into charcoal making. - Lei Yanan” |
“I'll become the greatest fighter! - Lei Mingyang” |
“I pray Shenhua stays healthy until that day comes. - Yuan Yunshen” |
“I pray my hubby gains some pep to his step... in bed. - Wang Wen” |
I hope you all have enjoyed part one of this examination of Bailu Village! If you haven't taken the time to explore the ema at Man Yuan Temple and put names to faces, I highly recommend it. For me at least, it's gone a long way to making Bailu, a location I already loved, feel so much more real. Stay tuned for Part Two in which we contemplate Martial Hall!
Sources used:
https://taiken.co/single/ema-boards-meaning-and-use/
https://theadventuresofworldwind.files.wordpress.com
Reader, Ian. “Letters to the Gods: The Form and Meaning of Ema.” Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, vol. 18, no. 1, 1991, pp. 24–50. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/30233428. Accessed 13 May 2020.
About the Author
Dave Matthews aka SalsaShark has been an avid Shenmue fan since he first bought the game on Dreamcast (incidentally the first console he ever bought with his own money) back in 2000.To this day he's still working out the right words to describe just how much the series has impacted his life and philosophy for the past two decades. A long time lurker on the Shenmue Dojo forums, he has recently started actually posting, so feel free drop in and say hi! He currently lives in Chicago, IL USA with his girlfriend and two friendly cats.
Fantastic read, thanks so much for the extra insight into these "ema" Dave! :)
ReplyDeleteThanks SkillJim!
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