Momoka Kagura ((exclusive)) -

Legend holds that Momoka was not born a shrine maiden. She was the daughter of a peach orchardist. When a wasting plague swept through her village, the local daimyō blamed the spirits of the orchard and ordered every peach tree burned. Momoka watched as her family’s livelihood—and the thousand pink blossoms that had marked every spring of her life—turned to ash and cinder. That night, she climbed the mountain to the dying shrine and did not pray for salvation. She danced . What defines the Momoka Kagura is its radical rejection of narrative. Traditional kagura tells a story: the hiding of the sun goddess Amaterasu, the feats of Susanoo. Momoka’s dance has no beginning, middle, or end. It is a single, sustained gesture of mono no aware —the bittersweet awareness of transience.

It was rediscovered in 2015 by a folklorist, Dr. Yuki Soma, who found a faded scroll in a temple attic: a series of charcoal sketches showing a dancer in mid-fall, surrounded by stylized peach petals shaped like tears. Working with butoh dancer Aoi Tanaka, Soma reconstructed the Momoka Kagura not as an authentic artifact, but as a "ghost tradition"—a performance that acknowledges its own loss. momoka kagura

The dancer (always a woman, always barefoot) wears a hanten coat dyed the faded pink of old peach petals, not the stark white and red of classic miko . She carries no halberd, no gohei (paper wand). Her only instrument is a single peach branch, dried and brittle, which she holds like a broken fan. Legend holds that Momoka was not born a shrine maiden