Bonsai trees strengthen U.S.-Japan friendship [photo gallery]

Arboreal diplomacy

Bonsai trees are one important example of the role trees have played in U.S.-Japanese relations.

In 1912, Tokyo Mayor Yukio Ozaki sent the United States 3,000 cherry blossom trees. Planted near the National Mall in Washington, they became a major springtime attraction that now draws 1.5 million viewers each April.

Blue atlas cedar bonsai growing downward from plant stand (© Stephen Voss/National Bonsai Foundation)
This cascade-style bonsai appears as if it grew on a cliffside. (© Stephen Voss/National Bonsai Foundation)

Japanese Prime Minister Kishida Fumio donated an additional 250 cherry blossom saplings (to replace trees that will be lost during Mall renovations) during his visit in April.

The U.S. has responded in kind. In 1915, President William Howard Taft and, in 2000, his grandson Bob Taft, then governor of the U.S. state of Ohio, sent dogwoods to Japan. In 2012, the U.S. Department of State sent 100 dogwood trees to Japan to mark the centennial anniversary of Japan’s gift of cherry blossoms.

The National Bonsai & Penjing Museum maintains a “sister relationship” with Japan’s Omiya Bonsai Art Museum. The museums share bonsai exhibitions and host visiting experts on the craft of growing and pruning small trees.

Visitors to the museum in Washington learn that a windswept tree signifies strength through adversity, that roots grown over rocks signify old age, and that a tree grown in an upright style conveys balance. Of course, “a bonsai is a work of art, and like any art, its meaning is up to some interpretation by the viewer,” says James.

 

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