If you want to guide Taito Ward, you can think of the guide point from the tool shop street of Aiwabashi to Asakusa Roku Ward, Senso-ji Temple, Nakamise, and Kaminarimon, and then to a Japanese-style store in Asakusabashi by subway.
Looking back at the map again, I think that there is a place close to Japanese gardens, fish food culture, traditional performing arts and Japanese Buddhism. To explain specifically in proper nouns, let's guide you by combining Hamarikyu Garden and Tsukiji Outer Market (although it is closed) Kabukiza and Tsukiji Honganji.
Kabukiza is newly opened in the spring of 2013 (it will surely have a tour course!) By that time, I hope that the shuniness to visit Japan due to concerns about earthquakes and radioactivity will be weakened.
Based on the above, I went to Tsukiji Honganji on April 15 (Fri). main hall is under construction until the end of September, but worship is possible every day from 9am to 5pm. You can be impressed by the appearance of ancient Indian-style stone alone, but by visiting (if there are no religious restrictions on the guest side), you will be able to enjoy a more extraordinary feeling. The Japanese tombs should also stimulate their exoticism, and if you are a kabuki fan who knows Chushingura, you may wish to have a commemorative photo of the grave of Shinroku Hazama, one of the 47th masters in Harakiri. But if you take pictures side by side, I think the tombstone of Genseki Habu (pictured above) will shine. (Is this unscrupulous?)
In addition, while there are stone monuments on the precincts, the sphere on the large curved pedestal, which is called "the spirit of the deceased Taiwanese", shines in a contemporary art style (pictured below). When I went to the back of the monument and read the origin, I found that at first, "13,000 Japanese (omitted) were stored in various parts of Taiwan", but after that, "postwar home (* Taiwan) The remains of those who died after being withdrawn or those who returned to their pre-war home country and died in September 1985. Therefore, it is a monument that I would like to show you to our guests from Taiwan. However, I think it would be nice to have a Chinese explanatory sign at least, without saying Taiwanese.