- Lono
In
Hawaiian mythology , Lono is a fertility and music god who descended toEarth on arainbow to marryLaka . In agricultural and planting traditions, Lono was identified with rain and food plants. He was one of the four gods (with Kū,Kāne , and his twin brotherKanaloa ) who existed before the world was created. Lono was also the god of peace. In his honor, the great annual festival of theMakahiki was held. During this period (from October through February), all unnecessary work and war waskapu (forbidden).Lono and Captain Cook
Some Hawaiians may have believed that Captain
James Cook was Lono returned and indeed this fact may have ultimately contributed to Cook's death (see James Cook - Third voyage (1776-1779)). It is uncertain whether Cook was taken for the god Lono or one of several historical or legendary figures who were also referred to as Lono-i-ka-Makahiki. According to Martha Warren Beckwith, there was indeed atradition that such ahuman manifestation of the god [Lono] had actually appeared, established games and perhaps the annualtax ing, and then departed to "Kahiki," promising to return "by sea on thecanoes ʻAuwaʻalalua" according to the prose note. "A Spanishman of war " translates the queen, remembering a tradition of arrival of a Spanishgalleon beaten out of its course in the early days of exploration of thePacific ; "a very large double canoe" is Mrs. Pukui's more literal rendering, from ʻAu [hau] -waʻa-l [o] a-lua. The blue-sailedjellyfish we call "Portuguese man-of-war " Hawaiians speak of, perhaps half in derision, as ʻAuwaʻalalua. The mother honored Keawe's son, perhaps born propitiously during the period of the Makahiki, by giving him the name of Lono-i-ka-Makahiki, seeing perhaps in the child a symbol of the god's promised return.Beckwith 1951.]"Another and earlier Lono-i-ka-makahiki on the
ʻUmi line of ruling chiefs of Hawaii is better known to Hawaiian legendary history. This Lono was born and brought up not far from the place where were laid away the bones ofKeawe and his descendants, woven intobasket -work like those of his ancestors from the time ofLiloa , near the place where Captain Cook'sgrave stands, a monument to a brave but in the end too highhanded a visitor among an aristocratic race such as the Polynesian. This Lono cultivated the arts ofwar and of word-play and was famous as a dodger ofspears and expertriddle r. He too may have contributed to the tests of skill observed during theceremony of the Makahiki"."It is not, however, likely that either of these comparatively late ruling chiefs on the ʻUmi line was the Lono whose departure was dramatized in the Makahiki
festival and whose "return" the priests of the Lono cult on Hawaii anticipated so eagerly. Both were born in Hawaii, and no legend tells of either of them sailing away with a promise to return. A more plausible candidate for the divine impersonation is the legendary Laʻa-mai-Kahiki, "Sacred-one-from-Tahiti ," who belongs to a period several hundred years earlier, before intercourse had been broken off with southern groups. Laʻa came as a younger member of the Moikeha family of North Tahiti, older members of whom had settled earlier in the Hawaiian group. He brought with him the smallhand drum andflute of thehula dance. As his canoe passed along thecoast and the people heard the sound of the flute and the rhythm of the new drum-beat, they said, "It is the godKupulupulu !" and brought offerings. Kupulupulu is Laka, worshiped as god of the hula in the form of the floweringlehua tree and welcomed also as god of wild plant growth upon which the earliest settlers had subsisted and still continued to subsist to some extent during the coldwinter month s before staplecrop s were ready to gather. This Laʻa-mai-kahiki took wives in various districts, especially on Oahu, stronghold of Lono worship, from whom families now living claim descent. He seems to have sailed back to Tahiti at least once before his final departure. In this sojourner belonging to a great family from the south, who came like a god, enriched the festival of theNew Year with games anddrama , possibly organized the collection of tribute on a southern pattern, and departed leaving behind him a legend of divine embodiment, one is tempted to recognize a far earlier appearance of that Lono of the Makahiki in whose name the Kumulipochant was dedicated to Keawe's infant son and heir".Hunter S. Thompson
The late Gonzo writer
Hunter S. Thompson wrote that he believed himself to be the resurrected Lono while on assignment in Hawaii for "Running" magazine with artist and friendRalph Steadman . In a letter included in the book "The Great Shark Hunt", Thompson describes his arrival to Kailua Bay in 1981::The word traveled swiftly, up and down the coast, and by nightfall the downtown streets were crowded with people who had come from as far away as South Point and the Waipio Valley to see for themselves if the rumor was really true - that Lono had, in fact, returned in the form of a huge drunken maniac who dragged fish out of the sea with his bare hands and then beat them to death on the dock with a short-handled Samoan war club.
Thompson's writings on the experience have been compiled into a book, "
The Curse of Lono ", illustrated by Ralph Steadman. As Lono, Thompson is shown as wearing the head of amarlin as a mask, with his eyes doubling as the eyes of the fish.ee also
*
Rongo , Māori god of cultivated plants
*Lono, fictional Hawaiian hitman in the comic "100 Bullets "Notes
References
*Thompson, Hunter (1979). The Great Shark Hunt: Strange Tales from a Strange Time, 1st ed., Summit Books, 105-109. ISBN 0-671-40046-0.
*"The Kumulipō", commentary by Martha Warren Beckwith, 1951. URL: [http://www.sacred-texts.com/pac/ku/ku06.htm www.sacred-texts.com/pac/ku/ku06.htm] .
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