Daily Prayers with Decomposing Corpses: Death Chairs at Aragonese Castle
The Aragonese Castle is a castle built on top of a rocky islet next to Ischia, a small Italian island on the northern end of the Gulf of Naples. Whilst a stronghold is said to have already been built during Classical times, much of the present structure dates to the Middle Ages. The Aragonese Castle…
Christians Supplied Medieval Pagans with Horses for Sacrifice for Funeral Rituals
In the late medieval period, pagans in the Baltic region of northern Europe imported horses from neighboring Christian nations for use in funeral rituals, according to a study. Horse sacrifices were highly visible and symbolic public rites across pagan prehistoric Europe, persisting the latest among the Baltic tribes, up to the 14th century AD. Offering pits might…
Most visited pilgrims sites in the world
Pilgrimage has been a significant part of human civilization, binding cultures, religions, and races across continents. It's a spiritual voyage that millions undertake each year, seeking solace, answers, or simply an intimate encounter with their faith. What are the  pilgrimage destinations you must visit, and why are these places so revered? River Ganges Photo…

Hermit who lived naked on a desert island 29 YEARS is forced to return to Japan

Japanese authorities denied a man the chance his wish to die a castaway on an island he called home for three decades.
Masafumi Nagasaki was the only inhabitant of the kilometre-wide Sotobanari island but was forced to return to civilisation after being found unwell by police, reported Daily Mail
He lived in solitude since 1989 and became known as the ‘naked hermit’ after being discovered by a traveller who writes about castaways.

 

 


Masafumi Nagasaki has been forced to return to mainland Japan after being the sole inhabitant of an island for almost three decades

 

The ‘naked hermit’ shunned mainstream society and set up base on Sotobanari island in 1989

 

 

Nagasaki, 82, proudly lived in the buff after a typhoon washed away his clothes
Alvaro Cerezo told news.com.au Nagasaki was evicted after someone found him on the island looking ‘weak’.
Police were called and he has been taken to live in a government house 60km away in Ishigaki city.
Cerezo added his health is okay and he ‘probably only had the flu’ when he was found, remarking that Nagasaki’s island life is ‘over’ as he isn’t allowed to return.

 

 

Previously part of the entertainment industry, Nagasaki opted for a life of rice cakes and water

 

 

 

 

he has been moved 60km away to Ishigaki and is not allowed to return to Sotobanari
Nagasaki’s story first came to light in 2012.
He shunned mainstream society in the early nineties to set up base on the little island of Sotobanari where there is no running water.
The remote spot, which is just a kilometre wide, is in Japan’s tropical Okinawa prefecture and located closer to Taiwan than Tokyo.
The currents that surround the kidney-shaped island are so dangerous local fisherman rarely cast nets in the area.
Previously he worked in the entertainment industry before ‘retiring’ from civilisation.

 

 

The kidney-shaped island is in Japan’s tropical Okinawa prefecture and located near Taiwan

 

 

 

‘I don’t do what society tells me, but I do follow the rules of the natural world’ says Nagasaki
Meet the naked Hermit Masafumi Nagasaki

 

‘I don’t do what society tells me, but I do follow the rules of the natural world. You can’t beat nature so you just have to obey it completely,’ he said.
‘That’s what I learned when I came here, and that’s probably why I get by so well.’
He would travel to a nearby island using money sent from his family to get water and his staple food of rice cakes, which he would boil four or five times a day.
Water for bathing and shaving comes from rain caught in a system of battered cooking pots.

 

 

 

Nagasaki smokes a cigarette at his eating place where (right) he is seen enjoying a meal on a makeshift polystyrene table
Just a year into his stay his clothes were washed away in a typhoon.
‘Walking around naked doesn’t really fit in with normal society, but here on the island it feels right, it is like a uniform.’
He would spend each day stretching in the sun, cleaning his camp and trying to avoid insect bites.
The island was where he wanted to be his final resting place.
‘Finding a place to die is an important thing to do, and I’ve decided here is the place for me,’ he said.
‘It hadn’t really occurred to me before how important it is to choose the place of your death, like whether it’s in a hospital or at home with family by your side.
‘But to die here, surrounded by nature — you just can’t beat it, can you?’

 

 

Religious Tourism

Recent Posts

Daily Prayers with Decomposing Corpses: Death Chairs at Aragonese Castle

The Aragonese Castle is a castle built on top of a rocky islet next to…

7 months ago

Christians Supplied Medieval Pagans with Horses for Sacrifice for Funeral Rituals

In the late medieval period, pagans in the Baltic region of northern Europe imported horses from neighboring…

7 months ago

Most visited pilgrims sites in the world

Pilgrimage has been a significant part of human civilization, binding cultures, religions, and races across…

7 months ago

Паломницкий маршрут “Шлях Сантьяго”: поради початківцям

«Щасливий ти, здійснюючи паломництво, якщо, завершуючи дорогу, ти відкриваєш, що справжній Шлях тільки починається». Колись…

7 months ago

14th Century Church Discovered under a Tennis Court in Hungary

During an archaeological excavation in  Visegrád, a fortified medieval castle on a hill overlooking the Danube…

7 months ago

The Worst Popes and Their Dirty Secrets

Throughout history, the papacy has been a beacon of spirituality and moral guidance for billions…

7 months ago