As Hawaii celebrates the 50th anniversary of statehood, the island’s public relations campaign is providing more insight to this awesome string of islands, and the culture that brought us the luau (the Polynesian Pig Pickin’!).  As I was reading through some trivia, something caught my eye… the mention of Kamapua’a, the Hawaiian “pig god”.  I mean really!  A pig god!  Wild pigs?  Hawaii? 

I love mythology, I love hunting hogs, and I love Hawaii.  I had to know more. 

Kamapua'a statue from Maui.OK, so Kamapua’a was not so much a god, but a demi-god in the wonderful lore of Hawaiian mythology.  He was powerful and popular in many stories from all the islands.  He even hooked up with Pele after a colorful and tempestuous courtship, earning her love and fathering a child… although he left her to swim the seas and inland waters as the humuhumunukunukuapua’a. 

According to the standard web research sources, such as Wikipedia, Kamapua’a was associated with fertility, and was considered a kupua, or trickster (e.g. the southwestern icon, Kokopelli, the Norse Loki, and the West African Anansi).   Many of his stories involve his clever tricks which he used to defeat and confound his enemies. 

It makes you wonder, is the pig a trickster too?  That would explain a lot.

As a fertility symbol, his union with Pele represented the traditional conmingling of fire and water, but also is used as an explanation for why her volcanic rock becomes fertile ground under the warm, island rains.  This myth also explains the starkly contrasting island ecosystems, with the harsh volcanic “desert” adjoining the lush jungle. 

There’s a really nice, condensed history of Kamapua’a on the Sacred Texts website, if you’d like to learn more, quickly.  Otherwise, there are all kinds of renditions of Kamapua’a stories, myths, and legends on the Internet… some even speaking to the present day.  It’s cool stuff, especially if you’re into mythology and folklore. 

Funny how we find stuff we never even looked for.

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