This Thursday, the Tapí and Xoco hosted storytelling at the Tapí Camp. With Día de los Muertos approaching. Every tale stayed true to the theme and more than a few sent chills through the crowd, and some were unsettling enough to keep us glancing over our shoulders on the walk home.

Here follows the stories that were told.

Topless native woman reclines beside a villager on leaf-strewn ground in the jungle camp

Micke’s story

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.”

The Ghosts, an elite military special forces unit, were renowned for their ability to execute missions in hostile, uncharted territories. Led by the unflinching Captain Gavora, the team was deployed to the Amazon jungle with a clear objective: locate the wreckage of a military aircraft that had disappeared under mysterious circumstances. Initial intelligence suggested no survivors, but the plane’s cargo—top secret material”—was classified as a priority retrieval.

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Tribal woman in ornate attire lounges on a woven mat in the jungle camp

Goo’s story

/me looks around shyly, then takes a deep breath and begins her story. Her voice is more of a fragile tone, as if it were thin ice that could give way at any moment under the weight of her words.

“The story is called ‘The Feast of Roots’, and nobody can say whether it’s true or not.”

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Shirtless villager sits on a log among colorful flowers and candles in the jungle camp

Kart’s story – Holes


Once ago, there were two Tapirape fishermen. Jon-ass and his young son Poo. As the fishing grounds around the camp got more and more empty due to the arrival of pale men, Young Poo`s Fathers decided, to show his son, the old fishing grounds far out , from Mount Gedi. Filling their canou with nets and Spears and some water , they sailed south from the volcano. Into , the sun , smiled at them and soon the land gets out of sight. After a while , Jon-ass checked the wind , listened to the waves and smiled „here we are now where my grandfather fished the biggest amount on food ever“. Both eager to get more pray home than their ancestor, they throw out nets and tried to spear. Hour over hour they caught many fishes, even lobsters and clams. The tribe will no suffer from hunger anymore and they cheered, throwing again and again their nets. Pacha Mama, the earth mother, blessed them as it seems, but with all that fortunate work , they did not realize that darkness appeared around them.

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Topless native woman stands in the jungle camp with a monkey on her shoulder

Whisper’s story – Night songs of the Jungle

“That night, the moon rose swollen and red … not the gentle moon that watches over hunters and children, but the moon that sees everything the jungle tries to hide. The air was thick with the scent of orchids, smoke, and rain yet to fall. Even the frogs were silent.

“I sat by the fire. Zazulu twitched on a branch above me, tail coiled like a vine. “Wind…” he whispered, “the jungle’s holding its breath again.”

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Tribal woman in leaf attire stands among carved statues in the jungle camp clearing

Sara’s story – Kijimuna

The strange looking girl with bright red hair bows to the assembled people.”Hello! I am Kijimuna, a tree spirit of Okinawa.”
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Kijimuna are common in Okinawan folklore. They are known to be mischievous spirits, sometimes playing pranks on people. A common one is to lay on someone’s stomach while they sleep, keeping them from moving even when they wake up. If you see a strange light bouncing along the beach at night, maybe a Kijimuna stole your paper lantern as a prank.

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Native woman topless holds lantern surrounded by villagers in the jungle setting

Kwanita’s story – The Watchman of Souls

(Sound of wind whistling between the graves… distant percussion, like a slowly beating heart…)

In the small village of San Lucero, deep in the mountains, the Day of the Dead was always a time of celebration and remembrance.
The streets were covered with cempasúchil petals, the golden flowers said to open the path between the living and the dead.
The altars shone with candles, photos, pan de muerto, and small smiling figurines.
But this year… the sky was gray, the rain never stopped, and the wind blew like a lament.

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Person in skeleton suit and top hat stands in the jungle camp with mist and huts

Shui – The Egg
By: Andy Weir

You were on your way home when you died.
It was a car accident. Nothing particularly remarkable, but fatal nonetheless. You left behind a wife and two children. It was a painless death. The EMTs tried their best to save you, but to no avail. Your body was so utterly shattered you were better off, trust me.

And that’s when you met me.
“What… what happened?” You asked. “Where am I?”
“You died,” I said, matter-of-factly. No point in mincing words.
“There was a… a truck and it was skidding…”
“Yup,” I said.
“I… I died?”
“Yup. But don’t feel bad about it. Everyone dies,” I said.

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