Showing posts with label Week 9. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Week 9. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 22, 2017

Week 9 Storytelling: The Vengeance of a Mother

In an Eskimo village a long time ago, there lived a man named Papik. Now he was happy as a single man, but the day he met Akna all that changed. Papik knew he wanted to her to be his wife and after a few months of wooing, he won her heart. The two lovebirds were married. They were so happy it was as if they were living in a dream; little did they know a true nightmare was about to come.

Akna received word from her family that her mother was ill and asked if they could come and stay. Papik had never met Akna’s family, but of course he was there to support his wife so the next day they were off to travel to the village where Akna’s mother lived. When the couple arrived, they were warmly welcomed by Akna’s mother, Anna, and her brother, Ailaq, and shown to the room Anna had made up for them. Much to her children’s delight, Anna’s health had taken a turn for the better and she had almost made a full recovery.

Ailaq went out to hunt and gather food for the family’s meals. He was widely known for his hunting prowess all throughout his village and the surrounding villages. Papik soon realized that there seemed to be nothing that Ailaq could not do. He would flaunt his talents while taunting Papik and nagging him on why he was so inferior. At first Papik saw this as a joke and played along, but as time went on his resentment grew and his anger simmered. One can only take being degraded for so long before it becomes too much. It didn’t help that Akna decided that they should spend the winter with her mother and Papik didn’t want to disappoint her so he silently endured his merciless brother-in-law.






One afternoon on one of their hunting excursions, Ailaq was setting up a trap when it misfired and stabbed him through the chest and left him pinned to the ground. He cried out in pain and urged Papik to help save him. Papik rushed to help him, but just before he reached Ailaq he lurched to a stop. All the harsh abuses and torment that Ailaq had inflicted upon him these past months ran through his mind and his feet seemed to be frozen to the snowy ground. He slowly backed away and plugged his ears while he ran away so he didn’t hear Ailaq’s curses and cries as he bled to death. Papik returned a few minutes later to find Ailaq’s body. He could not believe what he had done and immediately regretted his actions, but he knew he would be too ashamed to ever tell anyone what happened.

Late that night Papik returned home. Alone. He told Akna and Anna that he had gotten separated from Ailaq and despite searching everywhere he could not find him. Anna started shrieking hysterically that she could sense his guilt and his lies. She then vowed to come back to haunt him and avenge her son’s death before collapsing herself on the floor.

Akna did not know how to comprehend the death of her brother and her mother all in the same day. She could not forget his mother’s words especially when she saw the strange way Papik had been acting since he had returned. She knew her mother’s ancestors possessed dark magic and she feared for her husband’s life. She went in search of Papik to warn him that they should leave and return to their village, but as she was searching she came across the words “vengeance” written in blood in the snow. Her heart was racing, but she kept walking. She came across a foot, then a few yards an ear, then a couple more feet what appeared to be a leg. Akna fell down where she stood, for she knew she was looking upon pieces of her husband.


Author's Note:

In the original story, Papik killed Ailaq because he was envious, but I wanted to build on that more and give a backstory. Also in the original story, the mother turns into a monster that comes back to kill Papik. I still made the mother the one who avenged her son's death, but I left it more up to interpretation as to how she did it. I also made the death more of an accident where Papik failed to act to save Ailaq rather than straight cold blooded murder. In my story I gave the wife more of a role as well.

Bibliography:

Reading Notes: Eskimo Folk Tales , Part B

Papik, Who Killed His Wife's Brother:
-Papik married into a family of great hunters
-he was always competing with his brother in law Ailaq
-he began plotting his revenge on Ailaq, but one day when they were out hunting he snapped and murdered his brother in law
-he tried to cover it up as if an animal had killed him but his mother in law knew the truth and vowed to seek revenge
-she had a heart attack the next week from the stress, but on her death bed said she would come back to haunt and kill Papik
-years later a monster was heard to roaming the village, but no one ever got a close look
-then when Papik when out to hunt and did not return his wife knew something was wrong
-he had been murdered and his boyd mutilated with the words vengeance written in the snow beside him in blood


The Wife Who Lied:
-have a grandma telling this to her grandchildren
-about a young girl who went back to her own village and told lies of how her husband mistreated her
-war broke out between the two tribes
-the one tribe at first killed all the women while the men were away, but the other tribe avenged their deaths by retaliating and conquering the first tribe
-the girl who had told the lie and started all of this death a lonely and painful death
-this story was told to little children to illustrate the importance of the truth not only for yourself but also for others' sake




The Eagle and the Whale:
-seven brothers lived with their two sisters
-the sisters were content to live there as a family, but the brothers had become convinced that they would never be happy until they were settled and married
-they chose two suitors for the sisters who they thought were respected and mighty but they did not know how demanding and overbearing they would be as husbands
-soon the sisters were homesick and unhappy
-they all began plotting on how to escape their husbands and return home
-the brothers had to fight the husbands with the help of their sisters to gain the sister's freedom back



Bibliography:

Eskimo Folk Tales by Knud Rasmussen

Monday, March 20, 2017

Reading Notes: Eskimo Folk Tales Unit, Part A

The Coming of Men, A Long, Long While Ago:
-two old women held the power and whatever they spoke was what happened
-back in this day there was no light/sun and no death
-the two women were talking and thought it would be better if the world was not so crowded so they sent a flood
-thus death was introduced
-the two women wanted to see all the creation and thought that it would be better for the world to bask in warm sunshine
-thus light was introduced
-shows the respect given to women in this tribe

Nukúnguasik, who Escaped from the Tupilak:
-several brothers all lived together on an island
-they each had their own role to contribute to the family
-Nukunguasik was the youngest brother who had been sick as a baby and always got the easiest of jobs
-not much was ever expected of him and he lived a pretty carefree life while the others worked
-the middle brother resented him for this and plotted to kill him
-he went to visit the sorcerer on the another island to make an evil monster to kill his younger brother
-it ended up backfiring and killing him instead
-Nukunguasik never told his other brothers the truth when he finally discovered what really happened





The Insects That Wooed a Wifeless Man:
-a man who was plagued with misfortune and perpetual sleepiness
-he never had success at hunting like all the other men in his village so no one wanted to marry him
-one day he went out to the water to fish and helped out a mysterious stranger in need
-the stranger turned out to be a magic man who said he would make his troubles go away because he had helped him
-the only condition was that he could never speak of who gave him these hunting powers
-he later became the leader of the village and married 
-but then lost it all when he could no longer keep the secret inside



Bibliography:

Eskimo Folk Tales by Knud Rasmussen