Kamuy, Wolves, and Walking with Spirits: Ainu Culture at Lake Akan
Kamuy, Wolves, and Walking with Spirits: Ainu Culture at Lake Akan
A deep dive into Ainu culture at Lake Akan – the story of the Hokkaido wolf, the Lost Kamuy performance, and the unforgettable Kamuy Lumina night walk.
Before I visited Lake Akan, I knew very little about the Ainu. A name, a few museum exhibits, the vague understanding that they were the indigenous people of Hokkaido. But standing by the shore of that volcanic lake, watching the sun sink behind the hills, I realised that this place was not just a pretty landscape – it was a living repository of stories, beliefs, and a profound connection to nature that I had never encountered so directly.
What I learned there – about kamuy, about the Hokkaido wolf, about the power of storytelling – changed how I see Japan, and how I think about our relationship with the world around us.
🌿 The Land of Kamuy
Our guide Yoko‑san introduced us to the Ainu concept of kamuy (カムイ). It’s often translated as “god” or “spirit”, but that doesn’t quite capture it. A kamuy isn’t a distant deity; it’s a presence that dwells within everything – animals, plants, even the wind and water. The Ainu believe that all beings carry a spark of the divine, and that we must treat them with respect, gratitude, and humility.
This worldview stood in stark contrast to the modern Japan I knew – or thought I knew. It made me think about how often we treat nature as a backdrop, a resource, a photo opportunity. Here, it was something to be spoken to, listened to, thanked.
🐺 The Wolf That Vanished
One story from the Ainu hit me harder than I expected: the tale of the Hokkaido wolf. For centuries, the Ainu revered the wolf as a powerful kamuy – a hunter that kept the deer population in balance, a protector of the mountains. But as modern development spread across Hokkaido, wolves were seen as threats to livestock. They were hunted, poisoned, driven out. The last confirmed Hokkaido wolf died in 1889.
In Ainu belief, the extinction of an animal is not just a loss of a species. It’s a betrayal of trust. The kamuy gave themselves to humans; humans failed to reciprocate with gratitude. The wolves returned to the kamuy world, and they have not come back.
Standing by Lake Akan, I thought about that. About how easy it is to take without giving back. About the gifts we’ve been given – clean water, wild forests, the sound of birds at dawn – and how carelessly we sometimes treat them. The Ainu story of the wolf is not just a history lesson; it’s a mirror.
🎭 Lost Kamuy: A Performance That Pierced the Heart
That afternoon, we attended a cultural performance at the Lake Ainu Theater Ikor (formerly Icolo). The show was called “Lost Kamuy”. Through dance, music, and narration, it told the story of the wolf’s disappearance – and its potential return, if humans could learn to live in harmony again.
There were moments of pure joy: dancers in traditional robes, their movements mimicking cranes and bears, the rhythm of the mukkuri (a plucked idiophone mouth/jaw harp) filling the small hall. But there were also moments of silence, when the story turned to the wolf’s final days, and I felt the weight of what had been lost.
I sat in the audience, overwhelmed. It wasn’t just entertainment; it was an act of remembrance, a plea, a teaching. When the performance ended, we were invited to dance along, and for a few minutes, we were not tourists, but participants. The performers smiled, took our hands, and we moved together – a small, imperfect circle of gratitude.
✨ Kamuy Lumina: Walking the Forest at Night
After the performance, we boarded on a cruise to see the marimo, had dinner, then were given a glowing staff – a “rhythm staff” – and led into the darkness. This was Kamuy Lumina, a 1.2‑km interactive night walk created by the same team behind the world‑famous Nabana no Sato illuminations. But this was no ordinary light show. It was a story you walked through.
We became messengers, entrusted with a mission: to help restore balance to a world where animals were disappearing, returning to the kamuy. Along the path, projections of wolves, owls, and deer appeared among the trees. Their voices whispered through the staffs, urging us forward. The forest itself was the stage, and the stars above were the only light beyond the glowing installations.
I remember stopping at one point, looking up, and seeing a full moon perfectly framed by the trees. It felt orchestrated – but it was pure coincidence, or perhaps the kamuy were watching. For a moment, I believed in it all: the spirits, the urgency, the hope that humans could change.
The walk ended with a final message: that the wolves might return if we listen, if we learn to give back. I walked out of the forest with my staff still glowing, not ready to let go of the feeling.
💙 What I Carry Home
Lake Akan taught me that travel isn’t just about seeing beautiful places. It’s about encountering other ways of being in the world – ways that can change how we live, if we let them.
I can’t bring back the Hokkaido wolf. But I can remember its story. I can choose to be more mindful of the gifts I receive – from nature, from people, from moments of stillness. I can share what I learned, so that others might also feel the call to listen, to give thanks, to walk gently on this earth.
And one day, I will return to Lake Akan. I will walk Kamuy Lumina again, perhaps with friends or with someone I love. The river will be different, and so will I. But the hope that the wolves might return – that, I will carry with me always.
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