Elbow witch
Elbow witches are old women with awls in their elbows in the Ojibwa story of Aayaase (also known as "Aayaash" or "Iyash"), "Filcher-of-Meat". Blinded by cooking smoke, the sisters killed each other in their attempts to kill him for their meal.[1]
In popular culture[]
Elbow Witch is Monster in My Pocket #63, one of only three monsters derived from Native American mythology, the others being Wendigo and (to an extent) Bigfoot. The character's awls look very much like tusks.
References[]
- ^ Jones, William (1917-19). Ojibwa Texts, vol. ii. Truman Michelson, ed. Leyden, New York: G. E. Stechert & co., pp. 380-393
External links[]
- The Story of Iyash
- "Old Sisters" in The Legend of Iyash on K-Net.
- archive of "Elbow Witch", on Scott Andrew Hutchins's Monster in my Pocket page
Categories:
- Anishinaabe mythology
- Witchcraft in folklore and mythology
- North American mythology stubs