PHOTO: Japanese villagers build giant gorilla to scare of Covid-19

Irobosa Osazuwa
3 Min Read

Some locals in aย  Japanese village have constructed a giant Gorilla they believe will scare off COVID-19 from their community.

Villagers in Chikuzen, Fukuoka Prefecture in the south-west of Japan spent two months building the life-like statue โ€“ which has eyes which glow red in the night and stands at an impressive 23 feet tall.

The structure has been called โ€˜Giant Straw Scarecrow Gorilla: Proud Gorilla 2020โ€™ and is due to stand watch over the town until the end of the month.

After being completed in December 2020, the giant statue has become something of a local attraction โ€“ pulling in crowds who gather around to inspect it; which might not help in the interests of reducing Covid-19 transmissions.

Japan Today reports that locals decided to build the structure in an attempt to ward off the pandemic.

The publication reports: โ€œThe likeness of a gorilla was chosen as a symbol of power and strength in the face of the prolonged coronavirus pandemic.โ€

While adding that the โ€œapeโ€™s lifelike hair was made from rice straw layered on top of a steel frameโ€ and was constructed as an: โ€œidol to worshipโ€.
Proud Gorilla has been regarded as a new offering of hope after Japanese nationals spent the past year worshiping the legend of Amabie โ€“ with their prayers falling on deaf ears.

Amabie is an ancient Japanese โ€˜yokaiโ€™ โ€“ a type of legendary monster that can bring good fortune or cause chaos.

Amabie herself is a mermaid-like creature with long flowing dark hair, a beak, glowing green scales and three fin-like legs.

First encountered in the 1800s, she became popular again last year for being a deity capable of warding off plagues.

The original legend saw Amabie encountered by a government official in 1846 โ€“ with the fish-creature warning that a pandemic would ravage Japan unless her image was drawn and show to as many people as possible.

The story โ€“ and an accompanying sketch โ€“ were subsequently published in national newspapers to spread the word and desperately fulfil the requirement to repeal the prophesied disease.

With the emergence of Covid-19 as a global pandemic last year, Amabie became popular once more โ€“ with Japanese businesses and members of the public frantically sharing her image in the hopes of turning fortunes around in the fight against the pandemic.

However, with seven of Japanโ€™s most populous prefectures declaring a state of emergency again in recent weeks as Covid-19 cases flare once more, she has fallen out of favour and hopes are now pinned on the 7-meter high Gorilla.

 

See Photo below;

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