Zashiki-warashi

Tradition / Region: Japanese Mythology
Alternate Names: Zashiki-bokko, Kura-warashi, Warashi
Category: Yokai, Gnome


The Myth

In the farmhouses and old family homes of northern Japan, there lives a mysterious child spirit known as the zashiki-warashi. It appears as a young child—sometimes five or six years old, sometimes closer to twelve—often with a red face and long or cropped hair. Though it looks human, it is not. It belongs to the house itself.

A zashiki-warashi dwells in the inner rooms of prosperous households, especially among wealthy farmers or old, respected families. As long as the child spirit remains, the house flourishes. Crops grow well, money comes easily, and the family prospers. But if the zashiki-warashi leaves, misfortune soon follows. Wealth drains away, sickness appears, and families fall into ruin.

The spirit is playful and unpredictable. It may wander around beds at night, flip pillows, make footsteps in empty rooms, or rustle paper screens. Sometimes it laughs, sometimes it snorts, and sometimes it speaks openly with people. Guests may glimpse it crouching beneath a household altar or peeking from behind doors. In other homes, it remains unseen, known only through sounds and disturbances.

Some houses are said to host more than one zashiki-warashi. In certain villages, they are even ranked—some higher, some lower—each with a different temperament and influence. A few appear as boys, others as girls, and some are remembered as former princesses or noble children bound to the house by fate.

Many stories tell of disaster following their departure. In one tale, two zashiki-warashi were seen moving from a house to another; soon after, nearly the entire family left behind died from poisoned food. In another, a household fell into poverty the moment its spirit vanished. These stories serve as warnings: the spirit’s presence must be respected, never mocked or driven away.

Most strangely, zashiki-warashi do not reveal themselves to everyone. Often, only the head of the household can see them—and even then, only a few times in a lifetime. To others, the spirit remains invisible, known only by laughter in empty rooms or footsteps where no child should be.

Thus the zashiki-warashi endures as both blessing and omen: a child who brings fortune, a spirit bound to home and lineage, and a reminder that prosperity, once lost, may never return.


Gallery


Sources

TYZ-Yokai Blog contributors. (n.d.). 座敷童子 (Zashiki-warashi). In TYZ-Yokai Blog, from https://tyz-yokai.blog.jp/archives/1010654392.html


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