JUFUKU-JI

Jufuku-ji is the 3rd highest ranked among Kamakura´s 5 principle temples of Zen sect.  It was founded the year after Minatomo Yoritomo´s death (died 1199) when his widow Hojo Masako invited Myó-an Eisai (1141-1215) to be the founding priest. Eisai was born in Japan, became a Buddhist  monk and went to China twice.  There he met a Chan teacher and several years later when he returned to Japan he  was the first Zen priest to preach  in Japan. Subsequently, he founded the Rinzai sect in Japan  in 1191. He is also famous for introducing the custom of green tea drinking in Japan. It was first used more as a medicine than as a beverage.  After Eisai himself brought tea seeds with him from China, the tea plant began to to be cultivated in Japan.  He wrote “KISSAYDÓJOKI” = How to Stay Healthy by Drinking Tea.  

As Jufuku-ji is not open to the public, ever, I was glad that these lovely Japanese girls in kimonos willingly posed on the cobbled approach and surrounded by trees this makes a nice picture 
Chumon – Middle gate – this is just as far as we can get – no entry is permitted beyond this gate 
The Main Hall as it is seen from the Middle gate. 18th Century. Previous halls on this spot were destroyd by fires