Make that baby scream: a sumo tradition
More than 100 babies faced off in the sumo ring on Saturday in an annual contest pitting crying toddlers against each other in a Japanese tradition believed to bring infants good health.
Sumo wrestlers from Onoe stable hold up crying babies during a “Baby-cry Sumo” event at the Yukigaya Hachiman shrine in Tokyo on April 29, 2015. Some 100 babies aged under one took part in the annual baby crying contest. Japanese parents believe that sumo wrestlers can help make babies cry out a wish to grow up with good health. AFP PHOTO / TOSHIFUMI KITAMURA
The “crying sumo” event, held at Tokyo’s Sensoji Temple in the historic Asakusa district, saw hulking sumo wrestlers attempt to make 120 babies bawl on command to the delight of parents and onlookers.
The ceremony dates back some 400 years and is held at shrines and temples nationwide. The rules vary from region to region — in some versions the babies are raced against each other to see who will cry first, while in others the first crier is the loser.
In the Asakusa event, which has itself been running since 1991, pairs of toddlers were brought into the sumo ring, where real sumo wrestlers held them and shook them gently as a referee shouted, “Cry! Cry!”.
The winner was judged to be the infant who cried the quickest and loudest.
Some burst out screaming with little prompting, but others required judges enter the ring wearing a devil mask, drawing laughter from the audience.
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