LOGAN: Why?
KAYLA: 'Cuz she used to have a lover.
LOGAN: Ohhh. You tell this to the kids?
KAYLA: No.
KAYLA: His name was Keukuatsheu and they lived in the Spirit World together.
LOGAN: Oh, this is a true story.
KAYLA: Mmm-hmm.
LOGAN: All right.
KAYLA: And every night, they would wander the skies together.
LOGAN: Oh.
KAYLA: But, one of the other spirits was jealous.
LOGAN: Mm.
KAYLA: Trickster wanted the moon for himself, so he told Keukuatsheu that the moon had asked for flowers.
LOGAN: Mm.
KAYLA: He told him to come to our world and pick her some wild roses. But Keukuatsheu didn't know that once you leave the Spirit World, you can never go back.
LOGAN: Mm.
KAYLA: And every night, he looks up in the sky, and sees the moon, and howls her name.
KAYLA: But...he can never touch her again.
LOGAN: Wow. "Koo-koo-ka-choo" got screwed.
KAYLA: "Keukuatsheu."
[laughter]
KAYLA: It means "the Wolverine."
I presume this legend is made up. I couldn't find any evidence of it on the Web. But I was pleasantly surprised to find the name "Keukuatsheu." It's really a Native word for "wolverine." I gather it comes from the Innu of the Quebec-Labrador region.
About Kuekuatsheu
Information about Kuekuatsheu (Gulo gulo, carcajou, wolverine)
Wolverine myths and historical references
Leacock, Eleanor B. and Nan A. Rothschild (eds.). 1994. Labrador Winter: the Ethnographic Journals of William Duncan Strong, 1927-1928. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution. pp.67-68.
Kuekuatsheu Kutukuaniutshuahp, Quebec, Canada
Anyway, kudos to Wolverine for using a tiny bit of genuine Native lore. For more on the movie, see Debating Lynn Collins as Silver Fox and Wolverine Trailer.
3 comments:
Wolverines make a lot of playful snarly growls. Nothing like a howl that I know of.
The name comes from the Innu or 'Montagnais' people from Quebec and Labrador. Not the Inuit. The Innu and Inuit are really distinct peoples, with different languages, customs, myths, etc.
Okay, thanks. I've updated the posting.
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