top of page
Haiku web banner 2023-01.jpg
HaikuContest2023

Haiku Contest is Open to Anyone Anywhere!

Thank you for submitting your haiku!

Haiku Awards will be announced during the Japan Fair event on July 9th

and posted on the website later!

Prizes:

Winning haiku and honorable mentions will be selected for haiku in English and Japanese and will be displayed on the event website and also announced during the in-person Japan Fair event on July 9th, 2023. We are grateful to our sponsors for providing prizes, which will be announced soon. Please note that some prizes may not be available for winners outside the United States, due to geographical limitations.

How to submit:

  • Submit your haiku(s) online! - English / 日本語

  • You may submit up to two haiku, in English or Japanese.

  • All poems must be original, written by you, and not previously published.

  • The poems do not need to be 5-7-5 syllables in English, but please try to include a seasonal reference (for example, snow to suggest winter or tulips to suggest spring).

  • Submissions must be received by 11:59 p.m., June 16, 2023 (US Pacific Time)

Adjudication:

Haiku in English will be judged by Michael Dylan Welch. Haiku in Japanese will be judged by Hisao Mogi and members of Rainier Ginsha. (Please see "About the judges" below for more info.)

Winners will be announced at the at the Japan Fair event on July 9, 2023 and on the Japan Fair website later.
 

What is haiku?:

Haiku is a short poem from Japan that captures a moment of personal experience set in one of the four seasons. In English, haiku usually appear in three lines in a short-long-short pattern. Some people count 5-7-5 syllables, but that is not required. Instead, it’s more important to include a seasonal reference and to give the poem two parts. For example, here is a poem by Issa:

雪とけて村一ぱいの子ども哉
yuki tokete mura ippai no kodomo kana
 
snow melting . . .
the village is flooded
with children

Melting snow tells us it’s spring, and the last two lines are one “part” that is grammatically separate from the first line. Above all, don’t write about your feelings—instead, write about what caused your feelings. For more information, please see Becoming a Haiku Poet.

About the judges:

Michael Dylan Welch is the founder of National Haiku Writing Month (www.nahaiwrimo.com) and cofounder of the Seabeck Haiku Getaway, the Haiku North America conference, and the American Haiku Archives, webmaster for Haiku Northwest (www.haikunorthwest.org), and president of the Redmond Association of Spokenword. He was keynote speaker for the 2013 Haiku International Association conference in Tokyo and has been teaching haiku for thirty years. His haiku have won numerous prizes and have been translated into at least twenty languages, and he has published 75 books. Michael’s website, devoted mostly to haiku, is www.graceguts.com.

日本語の選句をしていただくレニア吟社の皆様:

Rainier Ginsha is a Seattle-based Haiku club since 1934. Hisao Mogi has been served as the president of Rainier Ginsha since 2012. He is also a photographer and submitting haiku to Hototogisu, the traditional haiku club founded by Kyoshi Takahama in 1897. Mitsuyo Sakai has been a member of Tachibana Ginsha in California since 1998 and has been a member of the Rainier Ginsha since 2011. She is also an executive member (dojin) of the Haiku Society Dancho in her hometown, Aomori. A monument with her Haiku was built at the gateway of the Shirakami Mountains. Mitsuko Nakata joined Rainier Ginsha in 2008. All the judges are the authors of the monthly article “Kongetsu-no-kigo (seasonal word of the month)” on the community paper “Soy Source.”

Visit Rainier Ginsha Website!

HaikuWorkshop2023
Haiku Contest Google form banner 2023 E-01 SM.jpg

Thank you for joining “Haiku Targets,”

a free all-ages public online workshop!!
May 30th, 2023   6:00 pm to 8:00 pm (US Pacific Time)

About the haiku workshop:
Learn more about haiku (it’s not just counting syllables) at “Haiku Targets,” a free all-ages public Zoom workshop led in English by Michael Dylan Welch. You will learn some of the key “targets” (not rules) for haiku, such as the kigo (season word), kireji (cutting word, dividing the poem into two parts), and other techniques. We’ll enjoy haiku in English and Japanese and you’ll have an opportunity to try writing and sharing your own haiku (optional).

About the instructor:
Michael Dylan Welch is a founder of National Haiku Writing Month and the Seabeck Haiku Getaway, cofounder of the Haiku North America conference and the American Haiku Archives, webmaster for Haiku Northwest (www.haikunorthwest.org), and president of the Redmond Association of Spokenword. He was keynote speaker for the 2013 Haiku International Association conference in Tokyo and has been teaching haiku for thirty years. His haiku have won numerous prizes and have been translated into at least twenty languages. Michael’s website, devoted mostly to haiku, is www.graceguts.com.

bottom of page