No Females Allowed on Okinoshima Island Japan Fearing They Turn into Stone

Date:

A view of Okinoshima island, some 60km from Munakata city, Fukuoka prefecture. (Photo: AFP)
If you want to get away from your wife, the Okinoshima island in Japan – as elusive as it sounds – is out of bounds to all female visitors. A myth has it there if any woman goes near the Okitsu-Miya Shrine, they will be turned into a stone.

 

The Japanese island of Okinoshima sits between Japan’s southwestern main island of Kyushu and the Korean Peninsula. Okinoshima and the surrounding sites in the Munakata Region in the Fukuoka prefecture have been given World Heritage status at the 41st session of the UNESCO World Heritage Committee held in Poland on Sunday (Jul 9).

What:
Okinoshima is home to the 17th century Okitsu-Miya Shrine which was built to pray for the safety of sailors.

The island’s ancient rules regarding entry have been preserved with tight restrictions on the number of visitors, the Japan Times said. There are several rules you will have to observe, if you are one of the 200 lucky tourists that are allowed to visit annually, before you step foot on the island.

  1. No woman allowed
  2. Shoes have to be removed
  3. Undergo a cleansing ritual
  4. Nothing to be taken away
  5. Nothing to be divulged

 

Where:

So elusive that I can hardly see it on the map. Getting there is a challenge.

There’s a jetty there and a lighthouse. Probably, the rest of the buildings are temples.

 

A Shinto priest holding a ritural ceremony at Okitsugu shrine of the Munakata Taisha in Okinoshima island, some 60 kilometres from Munakata city, Fukuoka prefecture. (Photo: AFP)
A Shinto priest holding a ritural ceremony at Okitsugu shrine of the Munakata Taisha in Okinoshima island, some 60 kilometres from Munakata city, Fukuoka prefecture. (Photo: AFP)
Okitsugu shrine of the Munakata Taisha at Okinoshima island, some 60 kilometres from Munakata city, Fukuoka prefecture. (Photo: AFP)
Okitsugu shrine of the Munakata Taisha at Okinoshima island, some 60 kilometres from Munakata city, Fukuoka prefecture. (Photo: AFP)

 

How to get there:

You can get more information here.

Kolin
Kolin
Kolin is your average, everyday traveler who's slightly obsessed with the comfort of his own bed. (Okay, maybe more than slightly.) New environments? Love them! The smell of his pillows? Can't live without them. So, join him on his sleep-deprived adventures as he navigates the world, one sleepless night at a time.

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