Urasenke Hakobi Koicha, Furo (裏千家 の 運び濃茶 風炉)
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 6 ก.พ. 2025
- This is an unabridged recording of Japanese Tea Ceremony. There are many schools of tea that teach The Way of Tea, Chado or Chanoyu in Japanese. In this video I'm showing the ritual performed in accordance with Urasenke teaching.
Hakobi Koicha, is the serving of thick tea. It is one of the first procedures taught to students of Urasenke.
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Disclaimer:
This is NOT a official movie by Urasenke and has been created independent of Urasenke.
Thank you for sharing a bowl of tea with me. ❤
The overhead camera adds important information. Thanks.
Thank you for beautiful Otemae.
I always watch your movie before my lesson.
I love your beautiful action.
Thank you so much.
Thank you for your kind words, great to know that they bring value.
丁寧なお点前、美しいです。見習いたいです。
河南里
Thank you Marius, for your videos! After a couple of years break due to knee injuries, I come back to the tea ceremony. Some reminders are very very helpful!
this has been very useful! I will always refer to yr video before keiko!
凄く勉強になります。
On this path, we are all students forever.
Awesome!!!
When you took out the cloth for the first time, were you checking each of its edges to make sure it was clean? Thanks!
It is called yoho sabaki, the four sided fold, it is the standard folding of the cloth for thick tea. There are different interpretation to why this is done.
The actions are there, but the cultural sentiment and meaning is not. Not to criticise, but the tea ceremony is an inheritance, an understanding shared between two people who can interpret the feeling, knowledge, sentiment and like mindedness of culture and belief. It’s a language. It can be enjoyed by others, but cannot go further than that.
Well, I'm sure you can learn new languages. You can practice languages. Learning actually never stops.
The whole essence of tea is spirituality and hospitality. The three are inseparable. I don’t think you understand, but anyone learning tea already is aware of these things elements, for you can’t practice tea is you aren’t. This video is for educational purposes, not for show. The things you have listed are attributes of any tea gathering. The very act of learning tea teaches the Chajin this.
I think you have a narrow view of tea and of the training received. Tea was brought outside Japan by the head of the Urasenke school to spread peace. He thought it could be learned by anyone with a sincere heart.