The Best Japanese Festivals & Events On the Web

                        
×
2024 - Annual Japan Day Parade & Japan Street Fair (Celebrates Japanese Culture, Art, Tradition & Japanese Food) FREE (See Video)
2024 Fireflies Infinity Mirror Room (Yayoi Kusama's Beloved Installation Re-Opens to the Public: Sept 9, 2023) Phoenix Art Museum
Yayoi Kusama's Infinity Mirror Rooms - Two of Yayoi Kusama’s Infinity Mirror Rooms-On View at The Broad
2024 Annual Nisei Week Ondo Festival Event (Community Dance Celebration) & Closing Ceremony - Little Tokyo, LA (Sunday)
2024 Japanese Heritage Night Event - Los Angeles Dodgers vs Arizona D-backs at Dodger Stadium (Use Only Dodger Link)
2024 The Samurai Collection (25 Year Collection Focused on Japanese Samurai Armor - Largest Collection Outside of Japan) Ann & Gabriel Barbier-Muller
2024 - 28th Annual ALL TOYOTAFEST Event - Biggest Toyota Family Reunion Car Show in Long Beach, Over 500 1960’s to 2023 Toyota & Lexus!
2024 Heart Mountain Pilgrimage (3 Days: Thu-Sat) Preserve and Memorialize the Heart Mountain World War II Japanese American Confinement Site
A Beautiful Japanese Rock Garden in Traditional Japanese Style, USC Campus (Video) Landscape Composed Arrangements of Rocks (Aid for Meditating)
2024 Los Angeles Dodgers Schedule with New Japanese Superstars Shohei Ohtani & Yoshinobu Yamamoto (2024 Schedule) [Video]
2024 Yayoi Kusama's Longing for Eternity - On View at The Broad
2024 Samurai Splendor: Sword Fittings from Edo Japan (Must-See for Anyone Interested in Japanese Art, History, or Culture) Ongoing Exhibit
Legendary Japanese Animator Hayao Miyazaki Wins a Golden Globe for film “The Boy and the Heron”

2022 七夕祭り Wish Upon a Tanabata Star Celebration - Make a Wish & Turn it Into a Tanzaku Decoration With a Personalized Message #JCCCNCNEW

SELECT DISTINCT e.PkID, e.Title, e.StartDate, e.StartTime, e.EndTime, e.TBD, e.Description, e.LocID, l.Name, l.Lat, l.Lon, e.SeriesID FROM hc_events e LEFT JOIN hc_locations l ON (e.LocID = l.PkID) WHERE (e.SeriesID = '832' OR e.LocID = '832') AND e.IsActive = 1 AND e.IsApproved = 1 AND e.StartDate >= '2024-04-27' ORDER BY e.Title, e.StartDate, e.TBD, e.StartTime
2022 七夕祭り Wish Upon a Tanabata Star Celebration - Make a Wish & Turn it Into a Tanzaku Decoration With a Personalized Message #JCCCNC
Click For Location
Date: Sunday, 31 July, 2022       Time: All Day
Map of Japanese Cultural & Community Center of North Calif - JCCCNC (Main), 1840 Sutter Street

With beautiful colored streamers, lanterns, and paperstrips, or tanzaku, imbued with the hopes, wishes, and dreams of many, Tanabata is easily one of Japan’s most aesthetic cultural holidays. However, it is also important that we learn the history, folklore, and cultural significance of Tanabata to facilitate the preservation of tradition and cultivate a deeper understanding and connection between our community and their cultural roots.

Tanabata, also known as “star festival,” translates to “evening of the 7th,” and takes place every year on July 7th, celebrating an old folk legend of love in the stars. Princess Orihime, daughter of the God of the Heavens, was the most skilled cloth weaver in the Milky Way. She spent day and night by the river bank creating beautiful pieces of clothing, but in dedicating herself to this task, fell into a deep sadness, fearing that she would never find love. Sympathetic to his daughter’s sorrow, Princess Orihime’s father introduced her to Hikoboshi, a cow herder from the other side of the river, and upon meeting, they fell in love instantly. However, being so infatuated and captivated by one another, Princess Orihime and Hikoboshi began to neglect their responsibilities, angering the God of the Heavens. Out of punishment, Princess Orihime’s father forbade her from seeing Hikoboshi ever again. As furious as the God of the Heavens was, he could not bear his daughter’s sadness and made the exception that once a year, on July 7th, Princess Orihime and Hikoboshi could be together. On the long-awaited day, the Milky Way was too difficult for both lovers to cross, so a flock of magpies created a bridge for them to reunite; however, legend says that when it rains on Tanabata, the magpies do not come and the lovers have to wait another year to embrace one another.

The story of Tanabata, while bittersweet, reminds us of the power and importance of things like love, hope, wishes, and dreams. This year, the Center invites you to participate in our “Wish Upon a Tanabata Star” celebration, where everyone will be able to make a “wish” for the future, whatever that may be, and have it turned into a tanzaku decoration with a personalized message. All tanzakus will be hung on the Center’s Tanabata display for the whole month of July. Please join us in celebrating Tanabata this year!

Form

Disclaimer: Please double check all information provided on our platform with the official website for complete accuracy and up-to-date details.

   

Sunday, 31 July, 2022



Event Contact

七夕祭り Wish Upon a Tanabata Star Celebration

Phone: (415) 567-5505

Event Organizer Website


Visit Organizer Website

Get More Details From the Event Organizer

Event Location Website


Visit Location Website

For More Location Details

Social Media

Moved to the bottom of the page.


Event Cost

Suggested Donation $5-10

Add Event To Your Calendar


iCalendar Google Calendar

Windows Live Calendar

Event Information Can Change

Always verify event information for possible changes or mistakes.

Contact Us for Issues

Japanese Event & Festival Categories




Social Media & Email Share