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Kachi kachi Yama
Kachi-Kachi Yama (Japanese kachi-kachi being an onomatopoeia of the sound a fire
makes and yama meaning "mountain"), roughly translates to "Fire-Crackle
Mountain", is one of the few Japanese folktales in which a tanuki is the
villain, rather than the boisterous and well-endowed alcoholic.
Story
The trouble-making tanuki
As the story goes, a man caught a troublesome tanuki in his fields, and tied it
to a tree to kill and cook it later. When the man left for town, the tanuki
cried and begged the man's wife to set him free, promising never to bother the
fields again. After much convincing, the wife set the animal free, only to have
it turn on her and kill her. But instead of just running off, the tanuki set up
something really nasty.
Using its shapeshifting abilities, the tanuki took on the form of the wife and
cooked up a soup, using the dead woman's flesh. When the man came home, the
tanuki served him the soup. After the meal, the man remarked that the soup was
good, and the tanuki, shifting back to his normal self, cried out mockingly, "It
was me that you were going to eat, but you've just eaten your own wife instead!"
With that, the cruel creature ran off, leaving the poor man in shock and
horrible grief.
Enter the rabbit
It just so happened that the unfortunate couple had been good friends with a
rabbit that lived nearby. When the rabbit heard about what happened, he
immediately came to the man and told him, "I'll avenge the death of your wife
for you!" So the rabbit set out and soon found the villainous tanuki. Pretending
to befriend the tanuki, the rabbit did all sorts of unpleasant things to him,
from dropping a bee's nest on him to 'treating' the stings with a peppery
poultice that burned.
The title of the story comes from the especially painful trick that the rabbit
played. The tanuki was carrying a heavy load of kindling on his back to make a
campfire for the night. He was so burdened that he did not immediately notice
when the rabbit set fire to the kindling. Soon, the crackling sound reached his
ears.
"What is that sound?" the tanuki asked.
"It is Kachi-Kachi Yama" the rabbit replied. "We are not far from it, so it is
no surprise that you can hear it!"
Eventually, the fire reached the tanuki's back, burning him badly, but without
killing him.
Boat of mud
After all the horrible things that the rabbit had put him through, the tanuki
challenged the rabbit to a life or death contest to prove who was the better
creature. They were each to build a boat, and race across a lake in them. The
rabbit carved his boat out of a fallen tree trunk, but the foolish tanuki
fashioned his out of mud.
The two competitors each got off to a great start, but as they approached the
middle of the lake, the tanuki's mud boat dissolved and came apart. As the
tanuki was struggling to stay afloat, the rabbit proclaimed that he was a friend
of the human couple, and that this was the tanuki’s punishment for his horrible
deeds. His boat gone, the tanuki drowned.
Modern-day references
There is a railway station in Japan, called the Shikoku Tanuki Train Line, that
adopts the slogan, "Our trains aren't made of mud", a direct reference to the "Kachi-Kachi
Yama" tale.
Momotaro
Kintaro
Urashima Taro Issun
Boshi Tamamo
no Mae Shita kiri Suzume
Kiyohime
Bancho Sarayashiki
Yotsuya Kaidan Kachi
kachi Yama Hanasaka Jiisan
Kamishibai
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