hero media

How Nagasaki blends the best of Japan and Europe

A journey to ‘hell’ and back in Japan’s Nagasaki prefecture will leave you looking on the bright side.

There is not a breath of breeze in the makeshift stadium in front of the Suwa-Jinja shinto shrine in Nagasaki as a band of costumed dancers takes to the stage, prancing around and high-stepping like marionettes.

 

A few high clouds scud through the sky as a large kasabako (parade float) shaped like a Dutch sailing ship is pulled clockwise at high speed by men wearing geta (traditional Japanese footwear) and hachimaki (headbands), much to the delight of the appreciative crowd.

 

It’s one of the most dramatic performances of the annual Nagasaki Kunchi Festival, which has been celebrated for about 400 years at the shrine, which was destroyed by Christians in the 16th century and rebuilt by the government in 1614 (the same year the first Shōgun of the Edo period declared an edict against Christianity).

Nagasaki
Japan is the land of festivals, and Nagasaki is no exception.

The festival is, says our local tour guide and interpreter Miyuki Ogawa, one of the most anticipated events on the country’s cultural calendar, with five to seven of the 59 odori-cho (neighbourhoods) that define Nagasaki’s downtown district performing once every seven years on rotation.

 

“The first Europeans to Japan brought Christianity with them and this festival was created by the government of the day to drive the religion underground and keep Japanese culture alive," Miyuki says.

 

“Nagasaki is the most international city in Japan, heavily influenced by the Chinese, Dutch and Portuguese. These foreign cultures can be seen in the costumes, performances and floats that parade around the streets and also in the art, architecture, religious sites and local cuisine," says Miyuki, whose family hail from nearby Nagayo, in the southern part of Nagasaki prefecture.

Spotlight on culture

“Moo ikkai (once more) … Moo ikkai (once more)," shouts an elderly man from the wings who is wearing an orange hachimaki, which identifies him as being from the Jedo-machi district.

 

The crowd joins in the chorus for an encore and the lion dancers dutifully return to the stage in sync with the dull thudding of a drum. It’s the final performance of the day and the hubbub sweeps through the horseshoe of a stadium and spills into the streets, now busy with performers, spectators, hawkers and floats.

 

The rich East-West connection that was so evident onstage dates as far back as the 1540s when Portuguese explorers and Catholic missionaries first arrived. Although the Shōgun expelled all foreigners from Japan in 1641, the Dutch East India Company and trading post remained on the manmade island known as Dejima, in Nagasaki Bay.

Nagasaki Castles
The architectural style of Japan is distinctive and beautiful.

It’s while eating at Attic, a rustic restaurant nearby to the restored Dutch-Japanese buildings of Dejima, that you can see the precise moment when the Japanese shook hands with Europe and Asia. It’s in the twirl of Nagasaki spaghetti that sidles up to the Turkish curry rice topped with a panko-crumbed pork cutlet.

 

“This mixed plate or ‘combination plate’ is a collision of Japanese and Western culture and it’s only available in Nagasaki," smiles Miyuki. The Japanese, Portuguese and Chinese influences also combine in the dish known as shippoku-ryori, the Nagasaki version of kaiseki – a dainty degustation of sorts that leans into the seasons and which we enjoy at the Fukudaya ryokan in Unzen Onsen (a hot spring resort town).

 

Castella cake is another Nagasaki treat that can be traced directly back to Portugal.

Eggs and soldiers

When it comes to consuming the intricacies of a culture, it’s difficult to beat eating onsen tamago (a hot spring-soft-boiled egg) with the smell of sulphur filling the air near the geothermal waters of Unzen Onsen, in Nagasaki prefecture. The town on Japan’s Shimabara Peninsula is well known for its hot spring dubbed ‘Unzen Jigoku’ (Unzen Hell), which bubbles, belches and seeps through the very pores of the pockmarked landscape.

 

After the gentle act of picking off the fragments of eggshell and biting into the egg, we arrive at a monument dedicated to the execution of 33 Kakure Kirishitan (‘Hidden Christians’) who lost their lives here 350 years ago when they were thrown into the hot springs after refusing to renounce their faith.

 

The alien feel of this place seems somehow heightened by the everyday act of eating a boiled egg near to the murky cauldrons that swallowed the bodies of the martyred Christians.

 

It’s one hell of a history lesson. There are many such macabre tales that percolate below the surface in the Nagasaki prefecture, which was the centre for Japanese Christians from 1580 to 1614, when the nationwide ban on the religion was lifted.

Of ‘Silence’ and ‘speaking up’

The more time spent in Nagasaki the sharper the image of the city and broader prefecture becomes. The horror stories surrounding the clandestine worshippers and their crypto-Christian traditions, as told in Martin Scorsese’s film, Silence, are also being kept alive at the Twenty-Six Martyrs Museum, on a site where a further 26 Christians were crucified.

 

But the capital of the prefecture that occupies the westernmost part of the island of Kyushu remains best known for being all but obliterated by an atomic bomb on 9 August 1945. Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum invites visitors to stare into this dark past – which deals with the devastating effects of nuclear warfare – before emerging into the tranquil surrounds of the Peace Park.

Nagasaki Gardens
Traditional Japanese gardens are a great mental and physical escape.

As Miyuki explains, the park honours “the resilience of the people of Nagasaki" who have risen from the ashes and rubble of the city’s past and transformed into a ‘City of Sunshine, Gardens and Peace’.

 

Although the Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum highlights the city’s tragic past, life in Nagasaki rolls on. “The people of Nagasaki want to be the last city in the world to have experienced atomic warfare," she says.

Reaching great heights

Resilience and optimism also reverberate around Mt Aso, where some 50,000 people live within the caldera of one of the most active volcanoes in Japan in the neighbouring prefecture of Kumamoto. Those who live in the shadow of the volcano were left devastated when two earthquakes rocked their communities in 2016, destroying lives, homes and livelihoods.

 

One of the earthquakes, which registered a 6.2 magnitude, also damaged nearby Shimabara Castle. Masuda Kazumasa considers himself one of the lucky ones: while his successful restaurant was destroyed, his wife and children were safe.

 

The chef has since conceptualised Life with Volcano tours designed to help those affected by the disaster to turn ‘the good life’ they have long enjoyed into a sustainable tourism business.

 

Masuda has teamed up with: baker Soh Hisanaga who owns a cafe inside the deserted Minamiaso Choyo Station; photographer Takano Atsushi who runs star-gazing tours; and Makoto Sasaki, who has created a ‘tree-climbing’ experience overlooking the sprawling grasslands.

 

“It’s hard to stand up by yourself," says Kazumasa. “The people whose lives were destroyed want to do business so we made a recovery group called Reaso, which means Again Aso. I love the people here. We want to share what life is like living with a volcano," he says.

 

It’s in a helicopter ride over the mouth of Mt Nakadake, which resembles a sunken hearth, that we get some perspective on the communities that live in the narrow plains of the range where the volcano sleeps. Kazumasa says the volcano has been revered as a god for centuries.

 

“The mythology surrounding the volcano is unique to Aso. There are some dangerous things that come from the volcano, but we believe God kicked the mountain over there to let the lake out and make it into a fertile place to farm and live," he says.

Weekly travel news, experiences
insider tips, offers,
and more.

Looking to the future

There’s no sugar-coating the natural and manmade disasters that have affected the prefectures of Nagasaki and Kumamoto: from the devastation wreaked by earthquakes, to the persecution of Hidden Christians and fallout from nuclear warfare.

 

All of these horror stories seem to fade away during the gentle act of making a paper crane – a symbol of peace – alongside our guide Katsuya Fukamaki.

 

The art of origami dates back thousands of years. But it’s not until I’m enjoying a moment of stillness, with the palms of my hand cradling the pink paper crane, that I realise this symbol of peace is the enduring story to come out of Nagasaki and Kumomoto prefectures.

 

And it’s one that will continue to unfold.

 

For more on the best of Japan travel, visit our Japan guide for all the essentials.

Want to see more stories from International Traveller in your Google search results?

  1. Click here to set International Traveller as a preferred source.
  2. Tick the box next to "International Traveller". That's it.
hero media

These community homestays are changing how travellers experience Nepal

    After youth-led protests in 2025, this year Nepal elected a 35-year-old former rapper as Prime Minister. In a country where tourism is its biggest industry, what’s next for travellers? 

    In 1986, Nepal changed its clock. It had used India Standard Time since 1920 so, to differentiate, it wound its clock 15 minutes ahead of, not behind, its big-brother neighbour. Boss move. “Nepal is strongly opposed to the idea that our identity is connected to India,” says Community Homestay Network (CHN) guide Bikal Khanal.  

    Tharu dance
    Tharu dance is traditionally set to hand drums. (Credit: Kate Lewis)

    Today, Nepal is the only independent country with a 45-minute deviation to universal time; an oddity that’s become a symbol of national pride. The quirk is nearly as endearing as Kathmandu’s Tribhuvan airport where carved varnished wood and shiny red bricks rule. One sign points to a ‘Travelator’ and another to a ‘Grievance Handling Desk’ while visas are noisily stamped at customs for US dollars, cash only. When am I?  

    Nepal gray langur
    Spot the endemic Nepal gray langur. (Credit: Simon Urwin)

    The 15 or 45 minute anomaly sees me tap out completely on timezone calculations. Why bend my brain calculating if it’s quarter to or quarter past elsewhere when I’m in the honking here and now of Kathmandu where the air is high-altitude crisp, the prayer flags flutter and the street dogs howl?  

    How tourism is changing in Nepal

    Bardiya National Park
    Bardiya National Park is rich with wildlife. (Credit: Simon Urwin)

    India is not the only association many Nepalis would like to shake. With eight of the world’s 10 tallest mountains, including Mount Everest and Annapurna, Nepal has long attracted mountaineers and trekkers, and expedition numbers are continuing to rise.  

    Tourism is one of the country’s biggest sources of foreign currency, so this growth is not negative, per se. But according to Ang Tshering Lama, who co-founded Phaplu Mountain Bike Club, being reduced to a mere trekking destination is limiting.  

    “Trekking is just one layer of our identity,” says Ang. “When it becomes the dominant narrative, it limits how we’re seen and how we see ourselves.” Nepal’s recent success, however, in diverting trekkers to less-trafficked areas such as Manaslu mofuntain, where visitor numbers rose by 117 per cent last year, offers hope that tourism can diversify even more radically.   

    Local men in Bhada village
    Local men in Bhada village. (Credit: Simon Urwin)

    The founder of CHN, Shiva Dhakal, wants that change. “The whole idea of the Community Homestay Network is to promote experiences outside of trekking,” he says. “Community tourism changes lives and helps kids stay home instead of coming to the city or migrating to the Middle East.”  

    Ang grew up seeing people leave, “not because they wanted to but because there weren’t enough opportunities to stay”, he states. Yet from remote villages to living traditions; food, art, music and emerging subcultures, “there’s so much that’s not being seen.” 

    CHN is opening some of those doors. It doesn’t own, or fund, any homes. Rather, it promotes homestays to travellers on a single, slick platform, while fostering entrepreneurship in places where women, marginalised castes, Indigenous people and the youth stand to benefit the most.  

    A new generation demanding more

    Dalla Town Hall
    Dalla Town Hall, where volunteers discuss anti-poaching tactics. (Credit: Bheem Thapa)

    The future prospects of next-gen Nepalis can no longer be ignored. On a Kathmandu tour with 33-year-old guide Monica K.C, we pass buildings torched in the September 2025 ‘Gen Z protests’, including the Supreme Court and Parliament House. Seventy-two people died. “They were anti-corruption protests,” says Monica. “Politicians’ children are living a lavish life but the airports are crowded with youngsters leaving to find work.”  

    We stop in ‘little Tibet’ at the wondrous sixth-century Boudha Stupa. “The wheel of life is Buddhism in a nutshell,” says Monica. “Things such as hate, ignorance and anger keep you rotating around the wheel, so you must follow the principles of Buddhism to detach. If you can’t, there’s no nirvana for you.”  

    Boudha Stupa's prayer wheels
    Boudha Stupa’s prayer wheels are used to recite Buddhist prayers. (Credit: Kate Lewis)

    In a sun-drenched twist to the usual temple visit, we ascend the stupa’s sloping plinth and roam its whitewashed dome. Tendrils of diaphanous prayer flags stream from a steeple-like structure where the Buddha’s unblinking eyes stare out. No nirvana for you… 

    bouda stupa prayer flags
    Tibetan-style prayer flags embellish the whitewashed dome of Bouda Stupa, a Buddhist temple. (Credit: Kate Hennessy)

    The dome is delightfully free of guard rails or chiding from security. There is, however, a stern ‘No TikTok’ sign, perhaps in response to the youth’s newly flexed power. The booted-out Prime Minister, K.P. Sharma Oli, was replaced in a resounding election victory in March by 35-year-old Balendra Shah of the Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP) – a former rapper and mayor of Kathmandu. The RSP’s manifesto indicates tourism is a priority, and that Nepal’s cultural identity in areas such as gastronomy will be strengthened.  

    Boudha Stupa vendors
    Vibrant souvenir shops and cafes around Boudha Stupa. (Credit: Kate Hennessy)

    A more confronting stop awaits at Pashupatinath Temple. Today is Bala Chaturdashi, a Hindu festival where thousands of devotees gather to honour their dead ancestors. Vendors hauling foam mattresses do a lucrative trade as people set up for a night of vigil. This includes burning the bodies of recently deceased relatives on bamboo pyres in the Bagmati River, which flows into the sacred Ganges.  

    A woman at annual Hindu festival Bala Chaturdashi
    A woman at annual Hindu festival Bala Chaturdashi, in Kathmandu. (Credit: Kate Hennessy)

    Wrapped in a shroud, the bodies are positioned with their heads facing north to the Himalayas where Lord Shiva resides. They’re covered with flowers and straw and set alight by male family members.  

    Hours later, the ashes are swept into the river where devotees will take a holy dip the next day. As much as Monica assures us it’s not voyeuristic to watch, I struggle to do so. “Here you see the reality of life because everyone ends up there,” she says, gesturing to the river.  

    Life unfiltered in the Terai region

    tharu woman
    Tharu woman and master weaver Parbati Chaudhary in Bhada Village. (Credit: Bheem Thapa)

    The reality of life needs processing time, which the western Terai region delivers in spades. The Terai is largely separated from India by the Karnali River and Bardiya National Park, where elephants, rhinos and the elusive Bengal tiger roam.  

    Once a nomadic tribe, the Indigenous Tharu people are now the largest ethnic group here. “They didn’t know their daily life was interesting for international travellers but they’re starting to understand now,” says CHN founder Shiva.  

    safari through Bardiya National Park
    Take a Jeep safari through Bardiya National Park. (Credit: Bheem Thapa)

    We fly Buddha Air to Dhangadhi airport and drive five hours to stay in Tharu homes. The journey to Bhada village is a blur of roadside fruit stalls, traffic-stopping sacred cows and fields sown with wheat, rice, mustard, spinach, cauliflower and potatoes. Nepal’s agriculture feeds only Nepal.  

    Marigolds
    Marigolds are an important part of Hindu rituals. (Credit: Simon Urwin)

    “The only thing we export is young people,” says our guide Bikal. As the light dims and we plunge evermore rural, mysterious mounds of compacted hay – some house-sized – loom like the creatures from Where The Wild Things Are. Even our trusty driver gets flummoxed by a dirt road that abruptly ends and we find ourselves hurtling across a paddock.  

    On arrival, some are ferried to mud-walled cottages greened by gourd creepers, with thatched roofs and rustic-chic mosquito nets. Myself and two others are ushered to the home of corner store owner, mechanic and mushroom farmer Man Kumar Chilaruwa and his wife Rajkumari.  

    community homestay entrance
    A warm welcome at a community homestay. (Credit: Simon Urwin)

    They escort us to a bunker-esque back building with steel doors and a folding security gate, behind which is gleaming linoleum, dolphin-printed tiles and a shower cavity that must be gingerly stepped through to reach the toilet.  

    The ceiling lights emit a rainbow of colours (the bathroom light gets stuck in, frankly, a quite frightening red). We’re nevertheless touched that our hosts invested in all this bling when the average salary is around $275 a month.  

    In the coming days, we participate in Tharu traditions such as making moonshine, dancing, weaving straw handicrafts and gold-panning. We’re fed well with staples of rice, mustard greens, lentil pancakes, daal, curried chicken and tomato chutney served on antibacterial saal leaves.  

    food at community homestay
    Dig in. (Credit: Kate Hennessy)

    Sonara community homestay president Indradevi Tharu tells us river snails are often served, and the boiled and pickled flesh of rats hunted in the rice fields. “Perhaps next time?” we say and all have a laugh.  

    The power of community homestays 

    community homestay owners in Nepal
    Barda community homestay owners Parbati Chaudhary and Ram Krishni Devi Chaudhary. (Credit: Simon Urwin)

    Immersing Western visitors in foreign cultural practices is not new. But with the Tharu, I never get that uneasy sensation that I’m being performed for. Despite being the only tourists, there’s no ‘othering’; just warm, composed and ultra-dignified welcomes. Like we’ve always been here.  

    “I love to have travellers in my village so I can see the world,” says local woman Parbati Chaudhary. “Why would I travel the world when the world comes to me?” 

    The graceful acceptance the Tharu offer, as well as the slow pace, works miracles on my frazzled nervous system. One day I even take a nap on a vacant homestay bed. 

    Sonara community room
    An authentic stay in the Sonara community. (Credit: Kate Hennessy)

    Roosters strut and goats bray as we sit on the ground in al fresco kitchens, rolling rice flour into cylinders steamed to make dhikri (dumplings). When water is needed, we fetch it using a hand-operated pump as a family of ducks strolls by, side-eying us like curious neighbours.  

    Animal lovers will delight in Tharu villages. Kind and resourceful inventions are everywhere, such as snacking stations where two posts lean together, with leafy boughs dangling on rope for baby goats to forage from.  

    CHN’s CEO, Aayusha Prasain, nods knowingly when one in our group says she cried when she left her host, Shayam Chaudhary, in Bhada. Shayam’s 17-year-old son, Prashant, had translated, which deepened the connection.  

    “Community tourism turns travel into a relationship, not a transaction,” says Aayusha. “It places decision-making power in the hands of local communities, especially women and youth.” Since 2018, CHN has hosted more than 4000 travellers from 52 countries in 408 households, and estimates women’s participation has increased by 381 per cent.  

    Elephant watch
    Elephant watch. (Credit: Simon Urwin)

    In the Bardiya community, where vexing human-animal conflict has been a balancing act for decades due to elephants raiding crops, long-time homestay operator Salik Ram Chaudhary says young people keep the older ones on their toes.  

    Gathering greens
    Gathering greens. (Credit: Bheem Thapa)

    “We can’t keep homestays stagnant,” he says. “We have to upgrade our service and redefine our product or young people won’t see it as an attractive business. If we can keep evolving with this travelling trend we’re confident the youths will stay and continue it.” 

    Back in Kathmandu, Monica explains that after the deaths of young protestors in September, a determination had spread to not let their sacrifice be in vain. “We want to keep holding the government accountable,” she says. “We don’t know what situation we’re facing, but we’re ready to face it.”  

    Interested in Nepal but prefer to experience it in total comfort? Read our guide to luxury travel in Nepal