Kanaloa

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kanaloa is one of the four great gods of Hawaiian mythology, along with Kāne, , and Lono. He is the local form of a Polynesian deity generally connected with the sea. Roughly equivalent deities are known as Tangaroa in Aotearoa, Tagaloa in Sāmoa, Tangaloa in Tonga, and Taʻaroa in Tahiti.

In the traditions of ancient Hawaiʻi, Kanaloa is symbolized by the squid, and is typically associated with Kāne in legends and chants where they are portrayed as complementary powers (Beckwith 1970:62-65). For example: Kāne was called upon during the building of a canoe, Kanaloa during the sailing of it; Kāne governed the northern edge of the ecliptic, Kanaloa the southern; Kanaloa points to hidden springs, and Kāne then taps them out. In this way, they represent a divine duality of wild and taming forces like those observed (by Georges Dumezil, et al.) in Indo-European chief god-pairs like Odin-Tyr and Mitra-Varuna, and like the popular yin-yang of Chinese Taoism.

Interpretations of Kanaloa as a god of evil opposing the good Kāne (a reading that defies their paired invocations and shared devotees in Ancient Hawaii) is likely the result of European missionary efforts to recast the four major divinities of Hawaiʻi in the image of the Christian Trinity plus Satan.

[edit] See also

Tangaroa, the Māori god of the sea.

[edit] References

  • M. Beckwith, Hawaiian Mythology (University of Hawaii Press: Honolulu, 1970).
  • G. Dumezil, Mitra-Varuna (MIT Press: Cambridge, 1988).