The first Hinamatsuri party I recall was when I was 4 or 5 years old. A classmate who had been hesitant to have me over for play dates invited me, perhaps out of obligation since Mama had had her over for waffles but that's another story. At her party we tasted special pastel-colored candies and sweet rice mochi in pink, white
and green, symbolizing grown-up ideas like purity, health, fertility and long
life. Boys were not invited to this party.
We assembled in front of the dolls displayed on seven steps
covered in red felt as the girl hosting the party showed them off, pointing and
naming each one. The Emperor and Empress
Dolls were positioned regally at the top, just above three “ladies in waiting” though
nobody told us what they were waiting for.
On the third step sat five musicians with instruments, and the guards rested
on the step below. The mamas escorted us
up close to get a good look, their hands hovering just over our shoulders, ready
to restrain us if things went awry and we lost control, reaching out to touch –
just once. These are not the kind of dolls that you play with, especially the way that preschool girls play with dolls.
It was years later before Mama purchased for me my own set of Hina dolls – but not the whole set…just
the top two dolls. She looked for a long
time, finally making a decision to really splurge, purchasing the nicest ones
she could afford. Many sets of dolls had
been destroyed in firestorms of the war, so Mama joined other Japanese families
as they re-assembled a collection for the next generations of daughters to pass
down.
So I will unpack my dolls again this year from their wooden
boxes. I will think about my mother, and the little girls in Japan who are unpacking and setting up their dolls. I will sing the Hinamatsuri song from memory, about lighting the lanterns and placing peach blossoms next to them. When it's all set up, I will take time to inspect their serene and delicate hand-painted faces, the thinnest lines for the eyes painted with a brush that couldn’t have had more than two to three hairs. The fine pink lips so tiny
and dainty, it looks like they were touched by no more than a butterfly
kiss.