HOMELESS
AND DESOLATE GHOSTS
The spirits of the dead,
according to a summary of ancient Hawaiian statements, were divided into
three classes, each class bearing the prefix "ao," which meant either
the enlightened or instructed class, or simply a crowd or number of
spirits grouped together.
The first class the Ao-Kuewa,
were the desolate and the homeless spirits who during their residence in
the body had no friends and no property.
The second class was called
the Ao-Aumakuas. These were the groups of ghost-gods or spirit-ancestors
of the Hawaiians. They usually remained near their old home as helpful
protectors of the family to which they belonged, and were worshipped by
the family.
The third class was the
Ao-o-Milu. Milu was the chief god of the Under-world throughout the
greater part of Polynesia. Many times the Under-world itself bore the
name of Milu. The Ao-o-Milu were the souls of the departed of both the
preceding classes who had performed all tasks, passed all barriers, and
found their proper place in the land of the king of ghosts.
The old Hawaiians never
intelligently classified these departed spirits and sometimes mixed them
together in inextricable confusion, but in the legends and remarks of
early Hawaiian writers, these three classes are roughly sketched. The
desolate ghost had no right to call any place its home, to which it
could come, over which it could watch, and around which it could hover.
It had to go to the desolate parts of the islands or into a wilderness
or forest.
The homeless ghost had no
one to provide even the shadow of food for it. It had to go into the
dark places and search for butterflies, spiders, and other insects.
These were the ordinary food for all ghosts unless there were
worshippers to place offerings on secret altars, which were often
dedicated to gain a special power of praying other people to death. Such
ghosts were well cared for, but, on the other hand, the desolate ones
must wander and search until they could go down into the land of Milu.
There were several ways
which the gods had prepared for ghosts to use in this journey to the
Under-world. it is interesting to note that all through Polynesia as
well as in the Hawaiian Islands the path for ghosts led westward.
The students of New Zealand
folk-lore will say that this signified the desire of those about to die
to return to the land of their ancestors beyond the western ocean.
The paths were called
Leina-a-ka-uhane (paths-for-leaping-by-the-spirit). They were almost
always on bold bluffs looking westward over the ocean. The spirit unless
driven back could come to the headland and leap down into the land of
the dead, but when this was done that spirit could never return to the
body it had left. Frequently connected with these Leina-a-ka-uhane was a
breadfruit-tree which would be a gathering-place for ghosts.
At these places there were
often friendly ghosts who would help and sometimes return the spirit to
the body or send it to join the Ao-Aumakuas (ancestor ghosts). At the
place of descent it was said there was an owawa (ditch) through which
the ghosts one by one were carried down to Po, and Lei-lono was the gate
where the ghosts were killed as they went down. Near this gateway was
the Ulu-o-lei-walo, or breadfruit-tree of the spirits. This tree had two
branches, one toward the cast and one toward the west, both of which
were used by the ghosts. One was for leaping into eternal darkness into
Po-pau-ole, the other as a meeting-place with the helpful gods.
This tree always bore the
name Ulu-o-lei-walo (the-quietly-calling-breadfruit-tree). On the island
of Oahu, one of these was said to have been at Kaena Point; another was
in Nuuanu Valley.
The desolate ghost would
come to this meeting-place of the dead and try to find a ghost of the
second class, the aumakuas, who had been one of his ancestors and who
still had some family to watch over. Perhaps this one might entertain or
help him.
If the ghost could find no
one to take him, then he would try to wander around the tree and leap
into the branches. The rotten, dead branches of the tree belonged to the
spirits. When they broke and fell, the spirits on them dropped into the
land of Milu--the under-world home of ghosts. often the spirit could
leap from these dead branches into the Underworld.
Sometimes the desolate
spirit would be blown, as by the wind, back and forth, here and there,
until no possible place of rest could be found on the island where death
had come; then the ghost would leap into the sea, hoping to find the way
to Milu through some sea-cave. Perhaps the waves would carry the ghost,
or it might be able to swim to one of the other islands, where a new
search would be made for some ancestor-ghost from which to obtain help.
Not finding aid, it would be pushed and driven over rough, rocky places
and through the wilderness until it again went into the sea. At last
perhaps a way would be found into the home of the dead, and the ghost
would have a place in which to live, or it might make the round through
the wilderness again and again, until it could leap from a bluff, or
fall from a rotten branch of the breadfruit-tree.
A great caterpillar was the
watchman on the eastern side of the leaping-off place. Napaha was the
western boundary. A mo-o (dragon) was the watchman on that side. If the
ghost was afraid of them it went back to secure the help of the
ghost-gods in order to get by. The Hawaiians were afraid that these
watchmen would kill ghosts if possible.
If a caterpillar obstructed
the way it would raise its head over the edge of the bluff, and then the
frightened ghost would go far out of its way, and wandering around be
destroyed or compelled to leap off some dead branch into eternal
darkness. But if that frightened ghost, while wandering, could find a
helpful ghost god, it would be kept alive, although still a wanderer
over the islands.
At the field of kaupea
(coral) near Barbers Point, in the desert of Puuloa, the ghosts would go
around among the lehua flowers, catching spiders, butterflies, and
insects for food, where the ghost-gods might find them and give them aid
in escaping the watchmen.
There are many places for
the Leina-a-ka-uhane (leaping-off-places) and the Ulu-o-lei-walo
(breadfruit-trees) on all the islands. To these places the wandering
desolate ghosts went to find a way to the Under-world.
Another name for the
wandering ghosts was lapu, also sometimes called Akua-hele-loa (great
travellers). These ghosts were frequently those who enjoyed foolish,
silly pranks. They would sweep over the old byways in troops, dancing
and playing. They would gather around the old mats where the living had
been feasting, and sit and feast on imaginary food.
The Hawaiians say: "On one
side of the island Oahu even to this day the lapu come at night. Their
ghost drum and sacred chants can be heard and their misty forms seen as
they hover about the ruins of the old heiaus (temples)."
The fine mists or fogs of
Manoa Valley were supposed t( conceal a large company of priests and
their attendants while roaming among the great stones which still lie
where then was a puu-honua (refuge-temple) in the early days. If any one
saw these roving ghosts he was called lapu-ia, or one to whom spirits
had appeared.
The Hawaiians said: "The
lapu ghosts were not supposed to watch over the welfare of the persons
they met. They never went into the heavens to become black clouds ,
bringing rain for the benefit of their households. They did not go out
after winds to blow with destructive force against their enemies. This
was the earnest work of the ancestor-ghosts, and was not done by the
lapu."
Another name for ghosts was
wai-lua, which referred especially to the spirit leaving the body and
supposed to have been seen by some one. This wai-lua spirit could be
driven back into the body by other ghosts, or persuaded to come back
through offerings or incantations given by living friends, so that a
dead person could become alive again.
It was firmly believed that
a person could endure many deaths, and that if any one lost
consciousness he was dead, and that when life stopped it was because the
spirit left the body. When life was renewed it was because the spirit
had returned to its former home.
The kino-wai-lua was a ghost
leaving the body of a living person and returning after a time, as when
any one fainted.
Besides the ghosts of the
dead, the Hawaiians gave spirit power to all natural objects. Large
stones were supposed to have dragon power sometimes.
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There are two meanings to the first part
of this word, for "au" means a multitude, as in "auwaa" (many canoes),
but it may mean time and place, as in the following: "Our ancestors
thought that if there was a desolate place where no man could be found,
it was the aumakua (place of many gods)." "Makua" was the name given to
the ancestors of a chief and of the people as well as to parents.
The aumakuas were the ghosts who did not
go down into Po, the land of King Milu. They were in the land of the
living, hovering around the families from which they had been separated
by death. They were the guardians of these families.
When any one died, many devices were
employed in disposing of the body. The fact that an enemy of the family
might endeavor to secure the bones of the dead for the purpose of making
them into fish-hooks, arrow-heads, or spearheads led the surviving
members of a family either to destroy or to conceal the body of the
dead. For if the bones were so used it meant great dishonor, and the
spirit was supposed to suffer on account of this indignity.
Sometimes the flesh was stripped from the
bones and cast into the ocean or into the fires of the volcanoes. that
the ghost might be made a part of the family ghosts who lived in such
places, and the bones were buried in some secret cave or pit, or folded
together in a bundle, and these were called unihipili. The unihipili
bones were used in connection with a strange belief called pule-ana-ana
(praying to death).
When the body of a dead person was to be
hidden, only two or three men were employed in the task. Sometimes the
one highest in rank would slay his helpers so that no one except himself
would know the burial-place.
The tools, the clothing, and the
calabashes of the dead were unclean until certain ceremonies of
purification had been faithfully performed. Many times these possessions
were either placed in the burial-cave beside the body or burned so that
they might be the property of the spirit in ghost-land.
The people who cared for the body had to
bathe in salt water and separate themselves from the family for a time.
They must sprinkle the house and all things inside with salt water.
After a few days the family would return and occupy the house once more.
Usually the caretakers of a dead body
would make a hole in the side of the house and push it through rather
than take it through the old doorway, probably having the idea that the
ghost would only know the door through which the body had gone out when
alive and so could not find the new way back when the opening was
closed.
After death came, the ghost crept out of
the body, coming up from the feet until it rested in the eyes, and then
it came out from the corner of one eye, and had a kind of wind body. It
could pass around the room and out of doors through any opening it could
find. It could perch like a bird on the roof of a house or in the
branches of trees, or it could seat itself on logs or stones near the
house. It might have to go back into the body and make it live again.
Possibly the ghost might meet some old ancestor-ghosts and be led so far
away that it could not return; then it must become a member of the
aumakua, or ancestor-ghost, family, or wander off to join the homeless
desolate ghost vagabonds.
Sometimes dead bodies were thrown into
the sea with the hope that the ghost body would become a shark or an
eel, or perhaps a. mo-o, or dragon-god, to be worshipped with other
ancestor-gods of the same class.
Sometimes the body or the bones would be
cast into the crater of Kilauea, the people thinking the spirit would
become a flame of fire like Pele, the goddess of volcanoes; other
spirits went into the air concealed in the dark depths of the sky,
perhaps in the clouds.
Here they carried on the work needed to
help their families. They would become fog or mist or the fine misty
rain colored by light. With these the Rainbow Maiden, Anuenue, delighted
to dwell. They often lived in the great rolling white clouds, or in the
gray clouds which let fall the quiet rain needed for farming. They also
lived in the fierce black thunder-clouds which sent down floods of a
devastating character upon the enemies of the family to which they
belonged.
There were ghost ancestors who made their
homes near the places where the members of their families toiled; there
were ancestor-ghosts to take care of the tapa, or kapa, makers, or the
calabash or house or canoe makers. There were special ancestor-ghosts
called upon by name by the farmers, the fishermen, and the bird-hunters.
These ghosts had their own kuleanas, or places to which they belonged,
and in which they had their own peculiar duties and privileges. They
became ancestor ghost-gods and dwelt on the islands near the homes of
their worshippers, or in the air above, or in the trees around the
houses, or in the ocean or in the glowing fires of volcanoes. They even
dwelt in human beings, making them shake or sneeze as with cold, and
then a person was said to become an ipu, or calabash containing a ghost.
Sometimes it was thought that a ghost-god
could be seen sitting on the head or shoulder of the person to whom it
belonged. Even in this twentieth century a native woman told the writer
that she saw a ghost-god whispering in his ear while he was making an
address. She said, "That ghost was like a fire or a colored light." Many
times the Hawaiians have testified that they believed in the presence of
their ancestor ghost-gods.
This is the way the presence of a ghost
was detected: Some sound would be heard, such as a sibilant noise, a
soft whistle, or something like murmurs, or some sensation in a part of
the body might be felt. If an eyelid trembled, a ghost was sitting on
that spot. A quivering or creepy feeling in any part of the body meant
that a ghost was touching that place. If any of these things happened, a
person would cry out, "I have seen or felt a spirit of the gods."
Sometimes people thought they saw the
spirits of their ghost friends. They believed that the spirits of these
friends appeared in the night, sometimes to kill any one who was in the
way. The high chiefs and warriors are supposed to march and go in
crowds, carrying their spears and piercing those they met unless some
ghost recognized that one and called to the others, "Alia [wait]," but
if the word was "O-i-o [throw the spear]!" then that spirit's spear
would strike death to the passer-by.
There were night noises which the natives
attributed to sounds or rustling motions made by such night gods as the
following:
Akua-hokio (whistling gods).
Akua-kiei (peeping gods).
Akua-nalo (prying gods).
Akua-loa (long gods).
Akua-poko (short gods)
Akua-muki (sibilant gods).
A prayer to these read thus:
"O Akua-loa! [long god]
O Akua-poko! [short god]
O Akua-muki! [god breathing in short, sibilant breaths]
O Akua-hokio! [god blowing like whistling winds]
O Akua-kiei! [god watching, peeping at one]
O Akua-nalo! [god hiding, slipping out of sight]
O All ye Gods, who travel on the dark night paths!
Come and eat.
Give life to me,
And my parents,
And my children,
To us who are living in this place. Amama [Amen]."
This prayer was offered every night as a
protection against the ghosts.
The aumakuas were very laka (tame and
helpful). It was said that an aumakua living in a shark would be very
laka, and would come to be rubbed on the head, opening his mouth for a
sacrifice. Perhaps some awa, or meat, would be placed in his mouth, and
then he would go away. So also if the aumakua were a bird, it would
become tame. If it were the alae (a small duck), it would come to the
hand of its worshipper; if the pueo (owl), it would come and scratch the
earth away from the grave of one of its worshippers, throwing the sand
away with its wings, and would bring the body back to life. An owl
ancestor-god would come and set a worshipper free were he a prisoner
with hands and feet bound by ropes.
It made no difference whether the dead
person were male or female, child or aged one, the spirit could become a
ghost-god and watch over the family.
There were altars for the ancestor-gods
in almost every land. These were frequently only little piles of white
coral, but sometimes chiefs would build a small house for their
ancestor-gods, thus making homes that the ghosts might have a kuleana,
or place of their own, where offerings could be placed, and prayers
offered, and rest enjoyed.
The Hawaiians have this to say about
sacrifices for the aumakuas: If a mo-o, or dragon-god, was angry with
its caretaker or his family and they became weak and sick, they would
sacrifice a spotted dog with awa, red fish, red sugar-cane, and some of
the grass growing in taro patches wrapped in yellow kapa. This they
would take to the lua, or hole, where the mo-o dwelt, and fasten the
bundle there. Then the mo-o would become pleasant and take away the
sickness. If it were a shark-god, the sacrifice was a black pig, a dark
red chicken, and some awa wrapped in new white kapa made by a virgin.
This bundle would be carried to the beach, where a prayer would be
offered:
"O aumakuas from sunrise to sunset,
From North to South, from above and below,
O spirits of the precipice and spirits of the sea,
All who dwell in flowing waters,
Here is a sacrifice-our gifts are to you.
Bring life to us, to all the family,
To the old people with wrinkled skin,
To the young also.
This is our life,
From the gods."
Then the farmer would throw the bundle
into the sea, bury the chicken alive, take the pig to the temple, then
go back to his house looking for rain. If there was rain, it showed that
the aumakua had seen the gifts and washed away the wrong. If the clouds
became black with heavy rain, that was well.
The offerings for Pele and Hiiaka were
awa to drink and food to eat, in fact all things which could be taken to
the crater.
This applies to the four great gods,
Kane, Ku, Lono, and Kanaloa. They are called the first of the ancestors.
Each one of these was supposed to be able to appear in a number of
different forms, therefore each had a number of names expressive of the
work he intended or was desired to do. An explanatory adjective or
phrase was added to the god's own name, defining certain acts or
characteristics, thus: Kane-puaa (Kane, the pig) was Kane who would aid
in stirring up the ground like a pig.
This is one of the prayers used when
presenting offerings to aumakuas, "O Aumakuas of the rising of the sun,
guarded by every tabu staff, here are offerings and sacrifices--the
black pig, the white chicken, the black cocoanut, the red
fish-sacrifices for the gods and all the aumakuas; those of the
ancestors, those of the night, and of the dawn, here am I. Let life
come."
The ancestor-gods were supposed to use
whatever object they lived with. If ghosts went up into the clouds, they
moved the clouds from place to place and made them assume such shapes as
might be fancied. Thus they would reveal themselves over their old
homes.
All the aumakuas were supposed to be
gentle and ready to help their own families. The old Hawaiians say that
the power of the ancestor-gods was very great. " Here is the magic
power. Suppose a man would call his shark, 'O Kuhai-moana [the
shark-god]! O, the One who lives in the Ocean! Take me to the land!'
Then perhaps a shark would appear, and the man would get on the back of
the shark, hold fast to the fin, and say: 'You look ahead. Go on very
swiftly without waiting.' Then the shark would swim swiftly to the
shore."
The old Hawaiians had the sport called "lua."
This sometimes meant wrestling, but usually was the game of catching a
man, lifting him up, and breaking his body so that he was killed. A
wrestler of the Ina class would go out to a plain where no people were
dwelling and call his god Kuialua. The aumakua ghost-god would give this
man strength and skill, and help him to kill his adversaries.
There were many priests of different
classes who prayed to the ancestor-gods. Those of the farmers prayed
like this:
"O great black cloud in the far-off sky,
O shadow watching shadow,
Watch over our land.
Overshadow our land
From corner to corner
From side to side.
Do not cast your shadow on other lands
Nor let the waters fall on the other lands
[i.e., keep the rains over my place]."
Also they prayed to Kane-puaa (Kane, the
pig), the great aumakua of farmers:
"O Kane-puaa, root!
Dig inland, dig toward the sea;
Dig from corner to corner,
From side to side;
Let the food grow in the middle,
Potatoes on the side roots,
Fruit in the centre.
Do not root in another place!
The people may strike
You with the spade [o-o]
Or hit you with a stone,
And hurt you. Amama [Amen]."
So also they prayed to Kukea-olo-walu (a
taro aumakua god):
O Kukea-olo-walu! Make the taro grow.
Let the leaf spread like a banana.
Taro for us, O Kukea!
The banana and the taro for us.
Pull up the taro for us, O Kukea!
Pound the taro. {p. 255}
Make the fire for cooking the pig.
Give life to us--
To the farmers--
From sunrise to sunset
From one fastened place to the other fastened place
[i.e., one side of the sky to the other fastened on each side
of the earth]. Amama [Amen]."
Trees with their branches and fruit were
frequently endowed with spirit power. All the different kinds of birds
and even insects, and also the clouds and winds and the fish in the seas
were given a place among the spirits around the Hawaiians.
The people believed in life and its many
forms of power. They would pray to the unseen forces for life for
themselves and their friends, and for death to come on the families of
their enemies. They had special priests and incantations for the
pule-ana-ana, or praying to death, and even to the present time the
supposed power to pray to death is one of the most formidable terrors to
their imagination.
Menehunes, eepas, and kupuas were classes
of fairies or gnomes which did not belong to the ancestor-gods, or
aumakuas.
The menehunes were fairy servants. Some
of the Polynesian Islands called the lowest class of servants "manahune."
The Hawaiians separated them almost entirely from the spirits of
ancestors. They worked at night performing prodigious tasks which they
were never supposed to touch again after the coming of dawn.
The eepas were usually deformed and
defective gnomes. They suffered from all kinds of weakness, sometimes
having no bones and no more power to stand than a large leaf. They were
sometimes set apart as spirit caretakers of little children. Nuuanu
Valley was the home of a multitude of eepas who had their temple on the
western side of the valley.
Kupuas were the demons of ghost-land.
They were very powerful and very destructive. No human being could
withstand their attacks unless specially endowed with power from the
gods. They had animal as well as human bodies and could use whichever
body seemed to be most available. The dragons, or mo-os, were the most
terrible kupuas in the islands.
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