Angalapona

Tradition / Region: Madagascar Mythology
Alternate Names:
Category: Dwarf, River dweller


The Myth

The Angalapona is a human-like being smaller than a grown person, only slightly larger than a child. It lives in water but is never wet, dwelling in a cave beneath the water into which no water enters. It moves through the water by a turning door and passes back and forth without becoming soaked. Its hair is very long, nearly reaching the ground when it stands. It is regarded as a director of divination and the foretelling of fortunate days, and diviners call upon it when working oracles.

A woman named Renisoarahanoro was once in an uninhabited place when the Angalapona called to her by a name pleasing to it. It led her toward its dwelling, and they passed through the water without becoming wet. When they reached the cave, she refused to go farther and stayed at the entrance. She would not eat its food, such as raw eels and crayfish, and because she remained by the doorway her clothes became covered in water-plants. The Angalapona and his wife decided to send her home, but first they granted her the power of divination. After that, people consulted her for this purpose.

Another person, Rainitsimanahy, said that while he was in an uninhabited place, an Angalapona came to him at night and wished him to be its husband. When he refused, it followed him continually.

Many people say they have seen this being, especially those afflicted with a disease called jila.


Gallery


Sources

Sibree, J. (1896). Madagascar before the conquest: The island, the country, and the people, with chapters on travel and topography, folk-lore, strange customs and superstitions, the animal life of the island, and mission work and progress among the inhabitants. New York: Macmillan; London: T. F. Unwin.


Interpretive Lenses

Religious Readings
  • Christian Ascetic Deep Dive
Philosophical Readings
  • Nietzschean Deep Dive
Psychological Readings
  • Jungian Deep Dive
Esoteric Deep Dive
  • Hermetic Deep Dive
Political / Social Readings
  • Marxist Deep Dive

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