Haunted Kasha House of Kaimuki
Japanese Kasha
In ancient Japan, the literal translation of the name, “Kasha” is “Fire cart.” It is a creature that frequented populated areas where its dietary sustenance consisted of fresh human corpses. According to the lore, these creatures are a type of Bake-Neko living among human beings under the guise of a common house cat or stray. They are bipedal and larger than most people, and they are accompanied by flames from hell where they make their advent in the evening during rainy or stormy weather. It is only during funerals that their true forms are revealed and as a result, they are known to snatch corpses and spirit them to hell for punishment. A Kasha will animate a corpse as a puppet or simply eat it as a meal. More often than not, the Kasha is known to indulge in the latter.
1942 Police Called to Shoo Ghost from Kaimuki
On August 13, 1942, an article appeared in our Honolulu Star-Bulletin that described a haunting incident that they blamed on the “evil” doings of Kahuna. Answering a call at 1:25am, Police Sergeant Moseley Cummins and Patrolman Robert Anseth found a 10-year-old Hawaiian boy and his to sisters, ages 18 and 20, on their living room sofa, shrieking in fear. The mother -- also shrieking -- was waving ti leaves and sprinkling Hawaiian salt to ward off ghosts. The mother stated that at 10pm, her 10-year-old son detected the odor of a ghost in their Kaimuki home. And apparently, angry at being found out, the spirits attacked him and, subsequently, his two sisters, repeatedly attempting to strangle them.
“My husband, who left me, is to blame,” the mother added.
After a struggle that lasted for a good hour and a half, the police yielded the troubled home to a Kahuna and took the woman to her sister’s home for safety around 3am. The Hawaiian woman’s earlier use of Ti leaf, water, and salt to ward off the harmful spirit proved to be fruitless as she now pointed out to the one police officer's arm, “Look, you’re covered with goose pimples!”
1972 Spook Stories
Fast forward to an October 31, 1972 Halloween editorial about local ghost stories that describes a call to HPD regarding a haunted house. Whether it’s the same house from the previous story from 1942 is unknown, because no address was given for either location.
What is known is that the urgent call comes from three girls who are sharing a house that the neighborhood considered haunted. The girls heard strange noises in the house like someone was moving around and talking. One of the girls said she felt unusual physical sensations of someone resting their hand on her arm. Consequently, their call to HPD involved a request for the officers to follow the girls to Papakolea where one of them lived. The girls got into their car and the officer got into his car and then drove down Waialae Avenue. Suddenly, the girl driving pulled the car into the Oasis Cafe parking lot... where the public storage on Waialae & Kapahulu is now.
According to the report that the police officer would later file, the girl sitting in the middle of the front seat began fighting off something that was strangling her, however, there was nothing there. The officer left his car and reached into the girls’ car to assist, but said that he was grabbed by a big calloused hand that was not there. It was completely invisible but it twisted his arm; that’s when he ran back to his squad car and radioed for assistance.
The officer then put the hysterical girl in his car and urged her friends to follow him but the squad car wouldn’t start. The second he placed the girl back in her own car, the other officer tried the motor and it immediately started. The two cars drove about five yards and suddenly, the door of the girls’ car flew open and the same girl fell out onto the road. She was tearing at her throat as if someone was choking her. Together, the two policemen were not strong enough to pull her hands away.
The Hawaiian sergeant ran into the Oasis cafe and came out with a handful of Hawaiian salt and a glass of water, which he sprayed on everybody. Calm was immediately restored.
Although this editorial was meant for Halloween, the contributors, Charles Kenn and Rubellite Johnson, are highly respected Hawaiian historians who also shared personal accounts in the same editorial. So... The fantastic-sounding story may be based on some fact.
Obake Files by Glen Grant
Fast forward again to 1994 when a book about obake and ghost stories in Hawai‘i is written and published by a professor of American history at Tokai International College in Honolulu. The book is a story about a fictional character named, “McDougal” who is a hardened private eye with the Honolulu International Detective Agency. Glen told me himself that McDougal is fictional, as it says so right in the book.
The tale is written in the old pulp novel style with a no-nonsense edge to it; through his partner, Kats Oyama, the unwitting detective becomes involved in a world of sex, betrayal, and the supernatural. Without going through the entire account, (because you should read it yourself) I will tell you that McDougal becomes an eyewitness to the horrific deeds of the Kasha. In this tale at least, the Kasha tears people limb from limb until there are literally only pieces left. At one point in the story, McDougal himself is nearly killed twice by the Kasha.
There seems to be two different versions here of what the function of the Kasha is supposed to be. Is it a collector and consumer of dead corpses or is it a super poltergeist-like being that is conjured by a Japanese curse-like sutra to tear its victim's limb from limb?
In the newspaper case, it is a 10-year-old boy who smells the presence of a ghost that ends up harassing his sisters in the first case. Later, three teenage girls are assaulted by a ghost in a Kaimuki house. In the first instance, it sounds like it is indeed a clear-cut case of a Poltergeist who uses the 10-year-old boy as a human agent with which to interact physically with whoever is present. Remember also, that at the time of the 1942 article, the Hawaiian woman is under adverse circumstances because she states that her husband has abandoned her and the children. In the editorial episode, it would seem that one of the teenage girls in the second story is an agent of a poltergeist because it also assaults the very police officer who is trying to help them.
But in either case, it is not a formless fog of black smoke that tore people apart.
As per the location of the actual Kaimuki home? If you take careful note of the Kasha story in Glen Grant's book, the exact location of the house is never mentioned. Neither is it mentioned in the two newspaper articles which were printed thirty years apart from one another. Where then, is the real Harding Avenue house that has become a real estate nightmare? A consensus will tell you that it was the house on 8th and Harding. There was indeed a documented case of a murder that took place in that house, and it could very well be haunted, but does that make it THE actual Kasha house in Kaimuki?
Personally, I can tell you that on a Saturday back in 1999 when Glen Grant drove me along the route of the old Ghosthunters Bus Tour, he pointed to the second to the last house on the left of 2nd Avenue and Harding. He briefly mentioned that there might have been a headstone in the back of that house where the ghost of the mother-in-law in the infamous Kasha story was buried. That house according to Glen was THE “Kasha house of Kaimuki.”
It was said that from either one of the haunted houses in question, one had a direct view of Pu‘u ‘o Kaimuki and Diamond Head. If you think about it, it’s a very general description because years ago you could have witnessed the same view from most places in Kaimuki. One conclusion by that description is that in the years past when houses in Kaimuki were condemned to make room for what is now the freeway, the Kasha house may have been one of those condemned homes that fell victim to progress. Therefore, the house may no longer exist except in online blogs that will reincarnate this story time and time again, thanks to the account of a fictional detective from a bygone era.
However, there is a 1967 ad in the Honolulu Advertiser for a 2 bedroom house for $155 a month. Although it doesn’t give an address, per the advertisement, the house was haunted.
Today, the homes on 2nd Avenue as well as the house on 8th Avenue are like old memories that are fished out of boxes filled with archaic photographs depicting times, places, and people who are no longer with us. Those houses are gone, replaced by duplex-style monster houses. Even the stories that made them famous are like shadows that dissipate as the light appears in the east. Yes, it is said that in every story of fiction there is a morsel of truth.
The truth is that the Kasha sometimes took on the form of a “Bake-Neko” which is a common house cat or a stray. Did anyone happen to notice several stray cats that populate the Kaimuki area?
Take Hawaii’s #1 Ghost Tour with Lopaka in person!
Check out our TOURS page and schedule your date with Hawaii's longest-running ghost tour! Visit some of Hawaii's Most Haunted sites with The Ghost Guy himself!