Akui-Khalava

Tradition / Region: Brazilian Mythology
Alternate Names:
Category: Forest Dweller


The Myth

Among the Paresi people of western Mato Grosso, who live along the Buruti, Verde, Guaporé, Juba, Juruena, and Papagayo rivers, there is a forest being known as Akui-Khalava.

He is described as a forest man with long white hair and a handsome appearance. Though human in shape, he is said to be a cannibal. He sings constantly, repeating a refrain rendered as “Amm-lalala, amm-lalala.” He is fond of plums, songs, women, and local beer.

Akui-Khalava is believed to live in trees, especially fruit trees. From there he throws fruit pits—particularly plum pits—at people who pass beneath. He is known to enter villages and force his way into the homes of both single and married women, demanding beer and meat. Because his lips are pierced, he spills beer when he drinks, which is said to provoke annoyance among those who witness it.

After receiving beer, Akui-Khalava kills and eats women, carrying them away into the forest. He is described as ill-tempered and solitary, and he is never said to have a wife.

Some believe that Akui-Khalava originated from an old story about foreign sailors who somehow reached the Amazon. According to this idea, the name Akui-Khalava may have come from words frequently spoken by uninvited guests, which were distorted by people unfamiliar with the language. His love of beer, singing, and women is sometimes cited in support of this belief, though such explanations remain speculative.


Gallery


Sources

Bestiary.us contributors. (n.d.). Eterari. In Bestiary.us, from https://www.bestiary.us/eterari/


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
Other
  • How to Invite The Akui-Khalava

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