Indigenous communities have kept alive some of the world’s oldest traditions for ringing in a new year. In Hawai‘i, there’s the months-long new year celebration known as Makahiki, which begins in November when the constellation Makaliʻi first appears in the night sky. For the Hopi, there’s the 16-day Soyal Ceremony, where ritual dances revive the sun from its winter sleep. For Sri Lanka’s Sinhalese people, the new year, Avurudu, in mid-April, begins with the lighting of the hearth and the eating of traditional foods. What unites all these traditions, though, is reflecting back on the year that’s past and moving joyfully forward into the year to come.

In line with that ethos, Atlas Obscura has reflected back on some of our favorite stories about indigenous communities from 2021. From saving the mighty bankhar dogs of Mongolia to exploring Costa Rica’s rainforests for mischievous forest spirits, these stories celebrate indigenous voices from around the world.


Can the Māori Connection to Antarctica Help Safeguard the Continent’s Future?

by Gemma Tarlach, Senior Editor/Writer

Long before European explorers set their sights on the icy waves and bare rock summits of Antarctica, Polynesian navigator Hui te Rangiora had explored the snowy tundra. In 650, he named the continent Te tai-uka-a-pia, “frozen ocean.” He came with no intention of planting a flag or extracting natural resources. He came as a kaitiaki, a “guardian.”

A group of New Zealand scientists, historians, and other scholars consider what we can learn from the continent’s first explorers. By looking back, we might just learn how to “walk into the future backwards,” as a well-known Māori phrase goes—something perhaps we could all stand to learn as we move into a new year.

Local residents and visitors gather around a fire in a Boruca community of Costa Rica to share stories of <em>nímbulos</em>, the Mountain of Death's mischievous forest spirits.
Local residents and visitors gather around a fire in a Boruca community of Costa Rica to share stories of nímbulos, the Mountain of Death’s mischievous forest spirits. TREVOR RITLAND

In Search of Nímbulos, Guardians of Costa Rica’s Mountain of Death

By Trevor Ritland and Priscilla Palavicini

When you’re alone, conducting field research high up in Costa Rica’s Talamanca Mountains, the last thing you want to hear is the sound of children laughing in the middle of the night. But that’s exactly what awoke researcher Paola Muñoz one evening. She was told it was the nímbulos, child-like forest spirits said to inhabit the forests around Cerro de la Muerte, the Mountain of Death.

Nímbulos have a long history rooted in indigenous folklore, but more recently the spirits have become threatened along with the old growth forests they call home.


How a Rebellion Planted Seeds of Revival in Rural Mexico

by Romina Cenisio

Just a few hours drive from Mexico City are the lush tropical forests of Cherán, an indigenous Purépecha community of about 24,000 people. But a few years ago these verdant highlands were under threat. Toward the end of the 20th-century, illegal logging cartels began cutting down the region’s towering forests.

In 2011, a group of Cherán women kidnapped the loggers, locked them in the church, and began their revolution. This is the story of what happens next to the women brave enough to go up against the cartel.

Adelaida Cucué Rivera, Doña Adela to her friends and family, and her husband at their ranch in Cherán. Rivera helped fight off illegal logging cartels that moved into her community.
Adelaida Cucué Rivera, Doña Adela to her friends and family, and her husband at their ranch in Cherán. Rivera helped fight off illegal logging cartels that moved into her community. ROMINA CENISIO

Assam’s Unique Mobile Drama Tradition Takes the Stage in a Changing World

by Sanskrita Bharadwaj

From reenactments of the Hindu epic The Ramayana to adaptions of James Cameron’s Titanic, Assam’s traveling theater troupes have been adapting to local tastes since the 15th century. In Assam, these traveling theaters, known as bhramyaman, filled a need for local entertainment in rural areas where electricity is often unreliable. The theaters are so wildly popular that almost every show sells out. Or at least they did, before the pandemic, and before the influence of Bollywood and Western films began pushing the form from its Assamese roots. Now these unique indigenous art performances are in a precarious spot, and the theaters are tasked once again with reinventing themselves.


It Takes a Village to Feed Cambodia’s Ravenous Ghosts

by Diana Hubbell, Editorial Fellow, Gastro Obscura

It’s September and Cambodian chef Rotanak Ros is up before dawn; she needs to feed the ghosts. Every September and October during Cambodia’s Pchum Ben, the gates of hell open up, and the spirits are very hungry. In a country still reeling from the murder of 1.2 to 2.8 million people by the Khmer Rouge in the late 1970s, this annual ritual has become a way to mourn and take care of those who died violent, unnecessary deaths.

The King Kaumuali‘i statue piko blessing and groundbreaking ceremony were held at noon on the spring equinox 2021.
The King Kaumuali‘i statue piko blessing and groundbreaking ceremony were held at noon on the spring equinox 2021. COURTESY KEAO NESMITH

Excavating the Hawaiian History of Kaua‘i’s ‘Russian’ Fort

by Sarah Durn, Editorial Fellow

Two centuries ago, King Kaumuali‘i was faced with an impossible decision: relinquish his island kingdom or doom his people to slaughter. With savvy diplomacy and a lot of careful maneuvering, Kaumuali‘i was able to avoid either fate. History has largely forgotten the man who would become the last ruler of Kaua‘i, though a local organization is determined to change that. The king’s statue now overlooks the site of his royal compound and an adjacent star-shaped, basalt fort on the Hawaiian island—a fort whose Hawaiian history has long been overshadowed by the few months it spent under the Russian flag.


Podcast: Newark Earthworks

An ancient ceremonial site in central Ohio has stood for thousands of years. Built by indigenous people between 100 B.C. and A.D. 500, the Newark Earthworks are part cathedral, part cemetery, part astronomical observatory, and, today, part golf course.


Can the Mighty Bankhar Dogs of Mongolia Save the Steppe?

by Shoshi Parks

For 15,000 years, bankhar dogs have been the fuzzy, beloved guardians of the Mongolian steppe. The dogs, who are more like family members than pets for nomadic herders, are integral to life on the steppe, protecting livestock from wolves, eagles, and even snow leopards.

Soviet-era campaigns sought to eradicate the dogs and the nomadic way of life they helped to sustain. But since the revival of the nomadic lifestyle in the 1990s, the dogs are making a comeback. Herders once again are in need of their beloved, furry protectors.