Thinking of demons or ogres as the personification of bad luck, many people celebrate by throwing beans (long associated with good luck in Japanese culture) at a member of their family wearing an oni mask. Local shrines and temples have stepped up to provide a communal location for the festival, and in Kyoto, Kitano Tenmangū is one such shrine.

Led by a procession of priests and local elders bearing plum branches, the festival begins with a ritual chant and invocation before the masked demon makes its appearance. In the style of a kyōgen play (a sort of shorter, comedic nō variant), the head priest and other participants banish the demon by throwing beans (mamemaki) at it and chasing it off the shrine stage while also scattering beans cheerfully at those gathered around the stage. Geiko and maiko from the nearby Kamishichiken geisha district also make an appearance to perform a traditional dance before the hundreds gathered. The main event for visitors to participate in is the scattering of the packets of lucky beans into the grasping crowd. Test if your luck is good enough to catch some, and don’t forget – “oni wa soto, fuku wa uchi!”