Japanese Prime Minister  Shinzo Abe has taken world leaders to the Shinto religion’s holiest site, as the Group of Seven (G7) summit begins in the country, according to BBC report.

Mr Abe said the visit was so that they could “understand the spirituality of Japanese people”

The two-day G7 meeting in Ise-Shima brings together industrialised nations.

On Friday, US President Barack Obama will visit Hiroshima – the site of the first atomic bomb – the first sitting US president to do so.The visit to the shrine is controversial because critics say Mr Abe is catering to his conservative supporters who want to revive traditional values.

The shrine is 2,000 years old but in line with Shinto practice the buildings are taken down and reconstructed regularly.

Followers of Shintoism believe that everything – rocks, fire, trees, the sky – has its own spirit or god.

The sanctuary is dedicated to the sun goddess Amaterasu Omikami who is prominent in Japanese creation myths.

Top of the agenda for the G7 nations – the US, Canada, Britain, Italy, Germany, France and Japan – will be concerns over the health of the global economy.Europe’s refugee crisis will also feature prominently at the meeting. European Council President Donald Tusk said on Thursday he would ask the G7’s support for more global aid for refugees.”If we (G7) do not take the lead in managing this crisis, nobody would,” Mr Tusk said to reporters.Terrorism, cyber security and maritime security are also on the agenda.

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Photo: AFP