Shimenawa

Shrine & Temple Buildings

Shimenawashimenawa / 注連縄

A rope of twisted rice straw marking the boundary of a sacred space, hung on torii, trees, and buildings.

Shimenawa are sacred ropes woven from rice straw or hemp, hung to demarcate holy spaces from the everyday world. The white paper streamers (shide) threaded into the rope symbolize purity. Shimenawa are found on torii gates, sacred trees, buildings, and sacred rocks throughout shrine grounds.

Most regular ropes are twisted clockwise, but shimenawa are twisted counterclockwise — this reversal signals that the rope belongs to the divine rather than the mundane world. The shimenawa's origin traces to the myth of Amaterasu: when the sun goddess emerged from her cave, a rope was stretched across the entrance to prevent her from hiding again. The New Year's “shimekazari” decorations hung on Japanese doorways are a household form of shimenawa.