We all know the famous Aesop fables story of Hare and the
Tortoise, How Hare tries to trick Tortoise but tortoise beats him in his own
game. The little furry animals, Rabbit and Hare played a very important role in
lot of mythological incidents for cultures where agriculture was developed and
they were a farming community or forest inhabitant. Like Native Americans who
farmed corn, Japanese's farmed rice, African Tribes who were forest
inhabitants, etc. Rabbits and Hares are both related to each
other but they differ in several ways. The ears and hind legs of Rabbits are
much shorter than those of Hares. At birth, Rabbits are hairless and blind,
while Hares are furred and their eyes are open. Rabbits also were used as
a gift to express love, since they are cute little animals. There is lot more
to the Rabbits and Hares.
Rabbit The Hero of Japanese Mythology
In the tale of Kojiki, the Rabbit is the hero who cleverly fought
crocodiles. In the story, he tricks a group of crocodiles into
helping him across to the mainland from Oki. The Rabbit lost his fur in the
process but was helped by Okuninushi, a young man who used pollen to restore
his white hair. The grateful Rabbit then helped Okuninushi win the hand of a
princess
In one popular Japanese's story Rabbit fights a Badger to help a
farmer. The badger ruins the old farmer’s field, digging holes and gnawing
on the vegetables and rice until the poor man has nothing to show for his
hard work. After laying a series of traps, the farmer finally catches the
badger, binds his feet to hang it upside down from the roof. The farmer warns his
wife not to release the animal and he would make a badger soup of the badger.
While the husband is in the fields, the badger pleads the old woman that he
will help her with the housework and not run away. The old woman kindly lets
him loose, but as the badger is set loose he badger kills her, cuts her up, and
makes a soup of her. Then he assumes the old woman’s form. When the farmer
returns, his “wife” greets him at the door, offering him some badger soup. Just
as he sits down to eat, the badger turns back into his real form to boast about
killing the farmer’s wife. He then escapes to the hills. The horrified farmer
cries long and bitterly, catching the attention of a kind Rabbit. Trying to
comfort the farmer, the Rabbit encourages him to tell the terrible tale, then
figures out a way to punish the badger. By setting the badger’s bundle of dry
grass on fire, then applying a pepper ointment to his wounds, and finally by
drowning him in a clay boat.
The Trickster in Native American Mythology
In Native American mythology Hare is also a Hero performing marvelous deeds.
Michabo (the Great Hare) was the principal deity, creator, and culture hero of
Algonquian-speaking tribes. The Hare is considered as the grandson of
Grandmother Earth is the hero in Ho Chunk mythology in which he performs many
marvelous deeds.
The Rabbit commonly figures as a trickster in Native American tales, such as
the Ojibway Missapos, who changed his form in order to trick people and
animals,For the Cherokee, Rabbit (Tsistu) was a trickster and deceiver who was
often beaten at his own game by his intended victims. Among the
Algonquian-speaking people of the Northeast, Mahtigwess the Rabbit was
considered a powerful trickster with magical powers. Another Algonquian tradition
held that Wabose, the third brother of the culture hero Manabozho, was changed
into a Rabbit.
The Trickster is also The Great Giver
In cultures across the North American continent, corn played a major role
mythology. Many tales describe how corn came into being and how people learned
to cultivate it. Usually personified as a woman, corn was frequently given to
humans by a woman or women, such as the Corn Maidens, the Corn Mothers,
Kanenhagenat, or Moon Woman. Not all stories say that the giver of corn was a
woman. A dwarf named Fas-ta-chee, whose hair and body were made of corn, gave
corn to the Seminole and taught them how to cultivate and grind it. The culture
hero Ioskeha brought corn to the Huron. Tavwots, a Rabbit, stole corn and gave
it to the Ute (people speaking Ute language).
In another adventure of the Rabbit Tavwot he is on a journey to fight the
Sun. Angry because his back became sunburned while he was taking a nap, Tavwots
set off for the Sun’s home. On the way, He discovered and stole corn and
tricked both the Bear and the tarantula. He shattered the Sun into many pieces,
which started a fire that covered the entire world. Unable to escape, Tavwots
was burned so badly that only his head was left. His eyes burst open and tears
poured out, causing a great flood that put out the fire. In a Paiute legend,
Tavwots was the father of the Cinauau, two creator brothers.
In a Netsilik Inuit tale about the origin of light, A Hare whose words had
magical powers won a verbal duel with Fox who preferred darkness. The Hare was
awarded daylight, but in order to please both animals, night always followed.
Possessor of the Elixir (Drink of Immortality) in Chinese
Mythology.
Rabbit, is a common animal in the Yangtze valley and northern China and was
often used in myth and folklore as a symbol of longevity. One legend about the
Moon says a Hare was employed there by the gods to mix the right combination of
drugs to create the elixir of life. (Ancient Chinese believed that they could
see a Rabbit on the Moon, formed by the craters and shadows.) A Taoist
legend claimed that a Hare spent his time on the Moon mixing the Elixir of
Eternal Life.
Messenger of Death in African Mythology
In a myth about the origin of death, when someone died, Abradi told the people
that the person would come to life again the next day if they just set the body
aside. So it was—anyone who died came back to life the next morning. Once,
however, when a man died, a Rabbit reached the people before Abradi did.
Rabbits did not get along with people, and this Rabbit wanted to cause
mischief. It told the people to bury the dead man or else Abradi would destroy
them. Frightened, the people buried the man. When Abradi found out what they
had done, he decreed that from then on death would be permanent.
In a myth of the Luyi of Zambia. The Supreme God, Nyambe, sent a chameleon to
tell humans that they would have eternal life. However, a Hare arrived first
with the message that once dead, humans would remain dead.
A Hare was also the cause of death in a tale told by the Khoikhoi of South
Africa. The Moon sent the Hare to humans with the message that as the Moon died
and was reborn, humans would also be reborn after they died. The Hare became
confused and inserted the word not in the message. It told
humans that as the Moon died and was reborn; they would die and not be reborn.
When the Hare admitted what it had done, the angry Moon struck it in the face,
splitting its lip. That is why Hares have a split upper lip.
The Hare was also a trickster in some African Mythologies,
Kadimba was the trickster Hare of the southern Bantu-speaking peoples of
Angola, Botswana, and Namibia. Like other tricksters, Kadimba was lazy, clever,
mischievous, and greedy. In one tale, a man named Dikithi repeatedly stole
cattle and ate all the meat himself, so the other people had no food. Kadimba
placed fireflies on Dikithi’s clothes. When Dikithi went to steal cattle, he
thought that the fireflies were Kadimba’s eyes watching him. Thwarted in his
attempted theft night after night, Dikithi finally went away.
In another story Kadimba tricked to get his field ploughed with no effort .
Kadimba the Hare’s field needed to be cleared before he could plant a crop.
That was a lot of work for the Hare. He soon came up with a way to get his
field cleared without having to do it himself. Hare stretched a long rope
across his field and waited in the bushes. Soon an elephant came along. Hare
bet the elephant that he could beat him in a tug of war. The elephant laughed
at the idea but picked up the rope with his trunk. Hare then hid across his
field and hid behind bushes on the other side. Soon a hippopotamus came by.
Hare challenged the hippo to a tug of war. The hippo thought the idea was
ridiculous, but he picked up the rope with his teeth. Hare then hopped into the
bushes and gave the rope a tug. When the elephant and the hippo felt the tug,
each of them began pulling hard. They pulled the rope back and forth all day
and into the night. Finally, they gave up, each one wondering how the small
Hare could have beaten him. Hare was delighted with the results: Each time the
elephant and hippo had dragged the rope back and forth, it
had ploughed another row in Hare’s field.
The monsters in Arabic mythology
Al-Miraj is a mythical beast from Arabic poetry said to live on a
mysterious island called Jezirat al-Tennyn within the confines of
the Indian Ocean. Al-Mi'raj is a large, harmless-looking
yellow Rabbit with a single,
2-foot-long, black, spiraling horn protruding from its forehead,
much like that of a unicorn. Al-Miraj is actually a
ferociously territorial predator known to be able to kill animals and people
many times their own size with a few stabs of its horn. The people of the
island were so terrified of Al-Mi'raj eating them and their livestock that they
would turn to witches to help them ward away as soon as the rumor of
a Miraj met their ears.
The looks can surely be
deceiving. one little animal such as rabbit or hare , These Vegan animals
feeding on grass, carrot, corn, etc, can be also dangerous at times,
tricky and also at the same time be the great one. This is really an
enlightening insight into the role of this animal in Mythology.
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