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Rachel Mealey in Tokyo: Japanese people believe dolls have souls and cannot be thrown away with the rubbish.

星期五

Sukkos-Lantern Festival: G'shem

Been researching the bond between [4 Species of] Israeli Sukkot-{Objects of} Far Eastern Lantern Festival music and dance, which generally occur at the same time each year.

"Each of the four 'play' instruments of Korean SamulNori reflects a different weather condition: the Yanggu (an hourglass-shaped drum) represents rain, the Kkwaenggwari (a small gong) thunder, the Jing (a larger gong) wind, and the Buk (a barrel drum similar to the bass drum) clouds. The philosophy of Yin-Yang is also embedded in these percussive instruments: Buk and Janggu (Leather) symbolize sounds of earth, while Jing and Kkwaenggwari (Metal) symbolize sounds of the firmaments. SamulNori depicts traditional Korean culture: an agricultural society rooted in the natural environment, who perform rice farming music in villages to ensure and to celebrate good harvests for the coming year. In Korea, wind instruments are generally not used to petition for heavenly moisture, but rely solely on seasonally loud percussion."

Korean SamulNori-Red Sun

Depending on merit {or lack thereof}, there is generally a trio of possible manifestations, a pair which is not so pleasant: 1). Existential Flood 2). Existential Drought 3). Life-Sustaining Bene-ficial G'shem {not too mats, not too little: Just  enough Yum Kippour 'em Precipitation in its proper time to last until next year's Sukkot-Lantern Festivities}

Related:

ben Menashe Headbanger
The Heavy Metal genre can be just as purposeful for properly petitioning The Rainmaker.

Cheshvan Mazal [Destiny-Constellation for Cheshvan]: 

Shuriken Kedem

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