Kakure Kirishitan (隠れキリシタン, Japanese for "Hidden Christian") is a modern term for a member of a sect of Japanese Roman Catholicism that went underground after the Shimabara Rebellion in the 1630s.
In some cases, the communities drifted from Catholicism. They lost the meaning of the prayers and their religion became a version of the cult of ancestors in which the ancestors happened to be their Christian martyrs.
Many Kakure Kirishitans, some of whom had adopted these new ways of practicing Catholicism, came out of hiding when religious freedom was re-established in the mid-19th century and rejoined the Roman Catholic church after renouncing their unorthodox practices. However, there were those who decided not to rejoin, and they are known as the Hanare Kirishitan (離れキリシタン, separated Christians).
There is some debate on whether or not Kakure Kirishitans still exist, even now practicing the rituals in secret. The fear of detection is integrated into the culture of this sect. Even some of those that have come out of hiding still maintain shrines that do not have any markings of Christianity like crosses or images of the Virgin Mary or Jesus.
Catholics not in communion with Rome | Christianity in Japan | Edo period
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It uses material from the
"Kakure Kirishitan".
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