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The controversies surrounding Yasukuni Shrine are related to the choice of Japanese people who are honoured at this nationally significant Shinto shrine and war museum in central Tokyo. Most of the venerated dead served the Emperors of Japan during wars from 1867 to 1951 but they also include civilians in service and government officials. It is the belief of Shintoism that Yasukuni enshrines the actual souls of the dead, known as kami in Japanese. The kami are honoured through liturgical texts and ritual incantations known as Norito.

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  • Controversies surrounding Yasukuni Shrine (en)
  • Controverses sur le sanctuaire Yasukuni (fr)
  • 靖国神社問題 (ja)
  • 야스쿠니 신사 논쟁 (ko)
  • 靖國神社爭議 (zh)
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  • 야스쿠니 신사를 관련한 논쟁이 많이 이루어지고 있다. 특히, 일본 정치인들의 야스쿠니 신사의 참배와 관련하여 일본의 일부였던, 한국과 일본과 교전한 중국등 서로간의 입장 차이에서 발생되는 국제적인 문제가 주된 논쟁이다. (ko)
  • 靖国神社問題(やすくにじんじゃもんだい)は、政教分離の原則との関連や、戦争責任などの歴史認識、周辺国との外交関係の配慮などを理由とした、靖国神社への参拝をめぐる諸問題を指す。「靖国問題」と略称されることが多い。 (ja)
  • 靖國神社爭議,是靖國神社在日本國內與國際社會所引發的爭議。1978年甲級戰犯奉入靖國神社後,日本內閣总理大臣(首相)與顯貴參拜靖國神社變得敏感:如以私人身份或者其他頭銜參拜,屬於信仰自由,基本上不會引起爭議;但若以官銜參拜,則可能會引起紛爭,包括了國際上與中华人民共和国和韓國的、及日本國內的政教分離爭議。 (zh)
  • The controversies surrounding Yasukuni Shrine are related to the choice of Japanese people who are honoured at this nationally significant Shinto shrine and war museum in central Tokyo. Most of the venerated dead served the Emperors of Japan during wars from 1867 to 1951 but they also include civilians in service and government officials. It is the belief of Shintoism that Yasukuni enshrines the actual souls of the dead, known as kami in Japanese. The kami are honoured through liturgical texts and ritual incantations known as Norito. (en)
  • Le Yasukuni-jinja est un sanctuaire shinto au centre de controverses internationales entre le Japon et ses voisins coréens et chinois. Il est dédié aux personnes mortes au combat en servant l'empereur du Japon au cours des différents conflits de 1867 à 1951. Cela inclut des civils en service et des fonctionnaires du gouvernement. Le sanctuaire est censé accueillir les âmes réelles des morts en tant que kami (« esprits/âmes »). Il est de plus, pour tradition, que tout acte mauvais ou immoral commis par le défunt est pardonné lors de l'entrée au sanctuaire. Ces cérémonies sont strictement religieuses depuis la séparation du shintoïsme d'État et du gouvernement japonais. Les prêtres du sanctuaire ont une indépendance religieuse totale pour décider du choix de l'entrée des défunts. La consécra (fr)
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  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Junichiro_Koizumi_(cropped)_during_arrival_ceremony_on_South_Lawn_of_White_House.jpg
  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Yasukuni_Shrine_2012.jpg
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