GROUNDBREAKING
JI CHIN SAI
groundbreaking
ceremony for KIKKOMAN
1996 April
Hoogezand-Sappemeer
THE KIKKOMAN CHRONICLES
Excerpt from Chapter 1:
Completing the Circle
REFERENCE
JICHINSAI GROUNDBREAKING: 1987 House of 4 Winds 1995 Kikkoman 1996 Panasonic 2003 Hi-Bis 2008 FujiFilm 2008 IJburg 2009 Sakura
Completing the Circle
On a crisp April day in 1996, a white-robed Shinto priest walked to a
small altar draped with blue and white curtains, clapped his hands
twice, and slowly intoned the Japanese words used to activate a Shinto
purification ceremony. The location of this ancient ritual was not a
shrine somewhere in Japan, but inside a large seven-sided tent in the
town of Hoogezand-Sappemeer, the Netherlands.
More than 300 years after Dutch traders carried the first
ceramic canisters of Japanese-made shoyu (soy sauce) to Europe,
Japan’s oldest and largest shoyu maker had come to the Netherlands to
break ground for its first European factory, which was up and running
in the autumn of 1997. As it had done 23 years earlier when it opened
its first plant in the United States, the Kikkoman Corporation had
engaged a Shinto priest to make sure the gods were happy with the
site. Kikkoman was leaving nothing to chance.
While the decision to locate in the northern Dutch city of
Hoogezand-Sappemeer was not some sentimental gesture to
chronological symmetry, its historical significance nevertheless was
not lost on the scores of guests who crowded into the tent. Neither was
the fact that the Shinto priest was a Dutchman named Paul de Leeuw
from the Netherlands's Yamakage Shinto Shrine.
In a way, it was as if the Dutch and the Japanese were
completing a circle begun 328 years earlier. In the Dutch language
archives of The Hague are records showing that between 1668 and
1699 a group of 16 Japanese merchants shipped large quantities of soy
sauce from Japan to the Coromandel Coast in south-east India,
Ceylon, Vietnam, and the Netherlands. One surviving ship manifest
reveals that 12 barrels of "Japanischzoya' were shipped from Dejima
in Nagasaki harbor in 1688 and "thence to Rotterdam." From the
Netherlands, soy sauce apparently made its way into many of Europe's
royal kitchens.
Surviving anecdotal material says that King Louis XIV, who
ruled France from 1661 to 1715, considered Japanese shoyu his
favorite seasoning in the royal kitchens. We may never know just how
accurate that material is, but one thing is sure: Demand for soy sauce
in the common kitchens of twentieth-century Europe is growing.
Which brings us back to Hoogezand-Sappemeer and an
obscure Shinto ceremony under way inside a tent.
'Shubatsu-no-gi," chanted the Shinto priest, signalling the first
of nine steps of the "Ji Chin Sai" meant to purify the grounds and
make them ready for construction. That was followed by the "Koshin-
no-gi" (descent of the deity), the 'Kensen-no-gi" (offering
presentation), and the 'Oharai- no-gi" (the purification of the site).
Finally, the priest turned and intoned: 'Tamagushi Hoten,' which
signaled the beginning of the sacred sprig offering-the most
meaningful moment in the ceremony.
Kikkoman President and Chief Executive Officer Yuzaburo
Mogi stood and walked to the saidan, or altar. After arriving, he
bowed once, extended his right hand with the palm face down, and
accepted a short sprig from the priest. With his left hand raised
slightly above the right one, Mogi held the leafy end of the sprig,
faced the altar, and raised the sprig to cheek level. As he faced the
altar, he bowed once more, pulled his right hand with palm upward
toward his body, and extended his left hand. Then he pulled his left
hand toward his right hand until he could switch the leafy end of the
sprig from his left to his right palm. Holding the bare end of the sprig
with his left hand, he slowly turned it clockwise and then placed it
gently on the altar. Mogi bowed twice, clapped his hands twice, and
bowed deeply once again. He then stepped backward until he passed
under a rope made of rice plants, bowed once more, and returned to
his seat.
The mostly Dutch audience, which included the mayor of
Hoogezand-Sappemeer and a handful of other special guests, was
entranced by the ceremony.
'I have never seen a ritual so precise and yet so unpretentious,'
one of the guests whispered. "It seems so earthy.'
The Dutch guest was very observant. The essence of the Ji Chin Sai,
like all Shinto ceremonies, lies in the reverence paid to all things in
nature. Japan's 2000-year-old indigenous religion, which literally
means "the way of the gods," teaches that all things, both animate and
inanimate, have their own kami, or spirits-even the ground upon
which the new Kikkoman plant would be constructed.
Mogi's participation had taken all of 3 minutes, but the
symbolism of the ceremony spanned centuries of Japanese history and
culture. By purifying the ground upon which the plant would be built,
Mogi and Kikkoman were appeasing whatever god or gods resided in
the area, thus ensuring that no spiritual ill will or mischief would
befall the project. After Mogi had returned to his seat, the Shinto
priest removed the offerings from the altar and ended the 20-minute
religious ceremony by sipping sake from a small porcelain cup.
Later, Mogi and Mrs. Anneke van Dok-van Weele, the Dutch
minister of foreign trade, broke ground for the plant that will have an
initial capacity of 4000 kL per year-the equivalent of 30 million small
bottles of soy sauce. Eventually, the plant will turn out 30,000 kL -
enough to supply every market in Europe. For Yuzaburo Mogi, the
ceremony represented the culmination of a vision that he has long
fostered for the Kikkoman Corporation.
About the Author
Ronald E. Yates is an award-winning journalist, writer,
and lecturer who worked more than 25 years as a foreign
correspondent, national correspondent, and financial
writer for the Chicago Tribune. He is currently a professor
of journalism and head of the Department of Journalism at
The University of Illinois, Urbana/Champaign. Yates'
innate understanding and fascination with Japanese
society and culture come from ten years of living in Japan,
where he served twice as the Tokyo Bureau Chief for the
Tribune. He is a nationally recognized authority on the
global economy, American corporate competitiveness,
international trade, and U.S. foreign relations.
© 1981 JAPANESE DUTCH SHINZEN FOUNDATION