• Source: Ukehi
    • Ukehi or Ukei (誓占, lit. "pledge divination") is a Japanese Shinto divination ritual.


      Function and performance


      Hayashi Oen, a nineteenth-century practitioner of ukehi, identified six functions of the rite. He claimed it could be used to:

      ask for information or messages from the kami
      establish the will of the kami
      predict the outcome of an event
      enervate or animate living beings
      manipulate weather conditions
      kill one's enemies
      The dictates of ukehi can come as a dream, but more commonly the petitioner would use the ritual to ask a question of the kami and then await an omen of some sort to confirm their response. If nothing happened, it was assumed that the kami did not favour the proposed course of action. The questioning of the kami took the form of an oath or vow. Sometimes the ritual involved inscribing the choices available on bamboo slips, which were then shaken in a container; whichever slip fell out dictated the appropriate course of action.
      In the novel Runaway Horses, Mishima Yukio described the procedure of ukehi as "contain[ing] an element of danger not unlike a footing that could give way at any moment".


      Notable ukehi


      An ukehi ritual undertaken by the deities Amaterasu and Susanoo-no-Mikoto resulted in the birth of eight more deities.
      In the late 19th century, Hayashi Oen and his pupil Otaguro Tomoo performed ukehi several times, and eventually the latter received what he believed was divine authorization to begin the Shinpūren rebellion.


      See also


      Kotodama
      Flipism, the practice of relying on random outcomes to make decisions


      References

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