Okunoin
Okunoin or Oku-no-in is a sacred Buddhist site and cemetery on Mount Kōya, in Wakayama Prefecture, Japan. Opened in 835, it houses the mausoleum of Kūkai, founder of the Shingon school of esoteric Buddhism. It is considered the largest cemetery in Japan, with more than two hundred thousand graves and memorial monuments.
The site
Located on the outskirts of the settlement of Koya, the cemetery spans over in length and is immersed in a forest of tall conifers. The earliest planting records of these trees, belonging predominantly to the genera Cryptomeria and Chamaecyparis, date back to 1012 AD. The area surrounding Kūkai's mausoleum was initially left to its wild state, but only a small area of natural forest remains nowadays, as a large portion of the vegetation was cut during the Meiji era, in the late 19th century.According to popular belief, after being laid in his mausoleum in 835 AD, Kūkai entered into an eternal samadhi and is still alive on Mount Kōya, waiting for Maitreya, the Buddha of the future. His resting place in Okunuin has since become a place of pilgrimage, and Buddhist monks bring him ritual offerings and meals twice a day.
The cemetery
The entrance of the site is marked by the . From there, a paved with cobblestones guides the visitors to the mausoleum, passing through a site that holds more than 200,000 graves, of which a large number belong to monks and feudal lords.The marks the entrance to the inner sanctum of Okunoin. Here visitors pour water over the bronze statues of the, to pray for the souls of their ancestors.