Yaese, Okinawa
The stone lion at Tomori has stood on its limestone base since the late seventeenth century, facing the fields as a guard against fire. It is among the oldest stone shisa in Okinawa, and it watches over a landscape that holds far older presences: at the Minatomachi site near the fishing harbor of Minatogawa, bones were recovered belonging to people who walked this island some twenty thousand years before the shisa was carved. Yaese-cho, formed by the merger of Kochinda and Gushichan in the early twenty-first century, sits on a low limestone plateau roughly thirty minutes south of the airport, its sugarcane and bitter melon fields running between the roads.
The weight of the Second World War is not decorative here. Yaese-dake, the town's highest point at a modest hill, was a site of fierce ground combat, and the Okinawa Senshi Kokutei Koen — the only national quasi-park in Japan designated specifically as a war site — covers terrain where the final battles were fought. Giiza-banta, the sea cliff on the coast, served as a water source for survivors during that same period. The hill and the cliff carry that history without ceremony, as ordinary topography does.
The Minatogawa Haare boat race and the Yaese Youth Eisa Festival keep a different kind of time — the lunar calendar's rhythm of Obon, tug-of-war, and fifteenth-night processions. The roadside station Minami no Eki Yaese, opened in 2017, sells local produce and acts as a low-key gathering point. These things coexist without resolution: ancient bone, carved guardian, scorched hillside, cane fields, festival drums.
On this island
- ハナンダー(自然橋)
- 沖縄戦跡
- 港川