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Kyoto, Japan, shrine gauges the amount of worshipping

JAPAN NEWS / YOMIURI

Bankers dressed in white garments counted bills and coins collected from offering boxes at Fushimi Inari Taisha shrine in Kyoto.

KYOTO >> The counting of money offered in the first three days of the New Year has started at Fushimi Inari Taisha shrine in Fushimi Ward, Kyoto, known as a shrine for good business.

About 10 bankers clad in white garments count bills and coins collected from about 50 offering boxes for about five days.

Thanks to good weather, the shrine drew many visitors on the first three days of 2019.

In the boxes were checks stipulating amounts using numerals to create word puns — such as 11104, which could be read as “ii toshi” (good year) and 29451, which could be pronounced as “fukuyo koi” (I wish for good luck).

The shrine said it has collected many foreign bills, such as China’s renminbi, in recent years, reflecting the increase of foreign visitors.

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