Deep in the Amazon rainforest
in the river NeaâocoyĂĄ, lived,
according to Siekopai legend, a school
of particularly big and tasty fish. When the rains came and the water rose,
the fish appeared, swimming away as the waters fell again. The villagers along the river reveled
in this occasional bountyâ and wanted more. They followed them upriver deep
into the jungle to a lagoon that thundered
with the sound of flapping fish. The whole village set up camp
by the lagoon, bringing barbasco, a poison they would put
in the water to stun the fish. Meanwhile, their young shaman took a walk. He sensed he might not be
completely alone. Then, he came to a monse tree
humming so loudly he could hear it even above the thunder
of the fish. With that, he was sure:
spirits lived here. Back at camp, he warned his people
these fish had an owner. He would find the owner. Until he returned, no one should fish. He went to the humming tree. Inside was a hollow as big as a house,
full of busy weavers. Their chief invited him in, explaining that the juicy
little siripia fruits were ripening, and they were weaving
baskets to collect them. Though they looked and acted like people, the shaman knew they were juri,
or air goblins, who could fly and control the winds. They taught him how to weave. Before the shaman left, the goblin chief whispered
some cryptic instructions in his ear. Finally, he told him to tie
a pineapple shoot outside a hollow log and sleep inside that night. Back at camp, the villagers were fishing
with barbasco poison, cooking, and eating. Only the shamanâs little sister refrained. Then, everyone else fell
into a deep sleep. The shaman and his sister
yelled and shook them, but they wouldnât wake. It was getting dark,
so the shaman and his sister tied the pineapple sprout outside
the hollow log and crawled inside. A strong wind roseâ
the mark of the air goblins. It broke branches
and brought down trees. Caymans, boas and jaguars roared. The water began to rise. The fish flopped off the drying racks
and swam away. The pineapple sprout turned into a dog. All night it barked, keeping the jungle
creatures away from the fallen tree. When dawn broke, the flood receded. The fish were gone,
and most of the people were, too: the jungle animals had devoured them. Only the shamanâs relatives survived. When his family turned toward him, the shaman realized what the goblins meant
when they said the fruits were ripening: they werenât really collecting
siripia fruits at all, but human eyes. The shamanâs older sister called him over, trying to touch his face
with her long, sharp nails. He backed away and, remembering
the goblin chiefâs instructions, threw palm seeds at her face. The seeds became eyes. But then she transformed
into a white-lipped peccary and ran awayâ still alive, but no longer human. The shaman and his little sisterâs
whole community was gone. They went to live with another village, where he taught everyone to weave baskets,
as the air goblins had taught him. But he couldnât forget the last
of the goblin chiefâs words, which told him how to get revenge. He returned to the air goblinsâ home
carrying chili peppers wrapped in leaves. As the goblins watched
through their peepholes, the shaman made a fire
and put the chili peppers on it. The fire began to smoke the tree out. The goblins who had eaten
peopleâs eyes died. Those who hadnât
were light enough to fly away. So the goblins, like the humans,
paid a steep price. But they also lived to tell the tale,
like the shaman. In Siekopai legend, where the spirit
and human worlds meet, there are no clear victors, and even death
is an opportunity for renewal.
The theme of liminality pervades all cultures. It's cool that this one has goblins. 5 stars!