It is a myth of the
Amazon waters, assuming a serpent shape, huge and dark
that swims as though it were a big trunk. It is able to
morph in to a canoe, a sail boat, a transatlantic and
more seldom in a woman. Its prestige is limited by its
own voracity.
No one devotes any
cult to it in the zone where the people believe in its
sightings. Many myths have converged to the one of
Boiúna such as those of the Phantom Boat and the one of
the Mother of Water, event hough it does not have any
beauty or sensual attractiveness. The Boiúna simply owns
the river. For the Indians, killing Boiúna is worse than
meeting the snake, because that means the doom and the
own ruin as well as the one of all the tribe.
The myth would have
derived form the sucuri or sucuriju,
a serpent from the Amazon waters that "hugs" small
animals and even the cattle. There are reports in the
Amazon of big serpents called jararacas that were
found so fat in the middle of the forest because have
they swallowed a whole person. In the Northern State of
Patá, there's a common belief that when the Boiúna wakes
up and swims to the sea, the city of Belém will
disappear. When the Boiúna moves, the land always
quakes.
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
|
click on the images
to enlarge |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|