Thousand origami cranes





Thousand Origami Cranes (千羽鶴) is a group of one thousand origami paper cranes held together by strings.

An ancient Japanese legend promises that anyone who folds a thousand origami cranes will be granted a wish by a crane, such as long life or recovery from illness or injury. The crane in Japan is one of the mystical or holy creatures (others include the dragon and the tortoise), and is said to live for a thousand years. In Asia, it is commonly said that folding 1000 paper origami cranes makes a person's wish come true. This makes them popular gifts for special friends and family.

Cultural significance
A thousand paper cranes is also traditionally given as a wedding gift by the folder, who is wishing a thousand years of happiness and prosperity upon the couple. It can also be gifted to a new baby for long life and good luck. Hanging a Senbazuru in one's home is thought to be a powerfully lucky and benevolent charm. It is also used as a matchmaking charm for a Japanese girl when she turns 13 years old. She would make 1000 paper cranes and give it to an admired boy.

Sets of origami paper are sold widely in Japan, with Senbazuru sets including 1000 (or more, in case of mistakes) sheets of paper, string, and beads to place at the end of each string to prevent the cranes slipping off. Commonly the cranes are assembled as 25 strings of 40 cranes each. The size of the origami paper does not matter when assembling a thousand paper cranes, but smaller sheets consequently yield smaller and lighter strings of cranes. The most popular size for Senbazuru cranes is 75 x. Some people cut their own squares of paper from anything available, such as magazines.

Origami paper used for Senbazuru is usually of a solid color, though printed designs are also available. Larger size origami paper, usually 6x6 inches, often has traditional Japanese or flower designs, reminiscent of kimono patterns.

The Thousand Origami Cranes has become a symbol of world peace through the story of Sadako Sasaki, a Japanese girl who tried to stave off her death from leukemia as a result of radiation from the atomic bombing of Hiroshima during World War II by making one thousand origami cranes, having folded only 644 before her death, and that her friends completed and buried them all with her. (This is only one version of the story. Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum states that she did, in fact, complete the 1,000 cranes.)

Her story is told in the book Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes. Several temples, including some in Tokyo and Hiroshima, have eternal flames for World Peace. At these temples, school groups or individuals often donate Senbazuru to add to the prayer for peace. The cranes are left exposed to the elements, slowly dissolving and becoming tattered as the wish is released. In this way they are related to the prayer flags of India and Tibet.

In Western countries, the custom has been extended from giving a senbazuru to cancer patients, to using them at funerals or on the grave.

Renzuru
Renzuru - Hiden Renzuru Orikata The phrase or term Renzuru also refers to an origami technique whereby one folds multiple cranes from a single sheet of paper (usually square), employing a number of strategic cuts to form a mosaic of semi-detached smaller squares from the original large square paper. (Unlike Western origami purists, traditional Japanese origami often used paper cuts to add detail such as ears.) The resulting cranes are attached to one another, e.g. at the tips of the beaks, wings, or tails; or at the tip of the body, e.g. a baby crane sitting on its mother's back. The trick is to fold all the cranes without breaking the small paper bridges that attach them to one another; or in some cases, to effectively conceal extra paper.

Typical Renzuru configurations include a circle of four or more cranes attached at the wing tips. One of the simplest forms, made from a half square (2x1 rectangle) cut halfway through from one of the long sides, results in two cranes that share an entire wing, positioned vertically between their bodies; both heads and tails may face in the same or opposite directions. If made from paper colored differently on each side, the cranes will be different colors.

This origami technique was first illustrated in one of the oldest (1797) known origami books, the Hiden Renzuru no Orikata. (Updated diagrams from this early work can be found in a current book by Japanese origami master Kunihiko Kasahara).

In popular culture



 * A level of the video game We Love Katamari is based on this legend; in order to help a boy whose sick friend is in the hospital, the player must roll up as many paper cranes as they can before time runs out. The maximum number of cranes available is a thousand.
 * An episode of Japanese Ghost in the Shell: S.A.C. 2nd GIG anime series references both the legend and Sadako's story.
 * In an episode 1.10 "Six Months Ago" of the American Heroes series, Hiro Nakamura stops time long enough to fold 1000 cranes as a demonstration of his power and presumably makes a wish to save Charlie's life.
 * Nunnally Lamperouge of the Anime Code Geass was blinded and paralyzed after being caught in the crossfire during her mother's assassination. Throughout the first season of the show she can often be seen making origami paper cranes and she even references to Lelouch Lamperouge, her brother, that if she were to make 1000 of them then she would be able to be cured.
 * The play A Thousand Cranes, by Kathryn Schultz Miller, dramatizes the story of Sadako Sasaki. There is also a novel entitled Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes.
 * The song "Thousand Cranes" was sung by the American jazz fusion band Hiroshima.
 * The land god Senba from Nurarihyon no Mago can heal great illness with the offering of a thousand cranes.
 * {...}, a zombie from Tessa Stone's webcomic Hanna is Not a Boy's Name has amnesia and cannot remember anything from his life prior to his resurrection. A single origami crane is the only symbol he has of his previous life. He and the title character Hanna have decided to assemble one thousand paper cranes in hopes that it will help {...} recover his lost memories.