Wendigo .... Native American reaper/destoyer/monster/powerful being
This is a painting by Norval Morrisseau, an Indigenous painter from northwestern Ontario and part of the Indigenous group related to where I'm from. We have lots of stories Wendigo ... we also call it many names but the stories and legends are all mostly the same ... it's a being that was once a man and turned into a monster. It's a freaky story for kids, especially when out alone with your family in the wilderness. The legends were basically that because this was once a man, they were skilled hunters and trappers that gathered animals but now turned their skills to hunting and trapping people ... many of the stories are peppered with details of a Wendigo hunting and trapping like any other hunter but that they are actually following or pursuing a person or their family.
The hollywood style Wendigo is a modern creation with antlers and skeletons and all that ... the majority of all Indigenous depictions are stories describing a being of all types and kinds because the being is an infection or affliction so the final character can look like anyone or anything.
Which is why Morriseau's painting depicts a man eating a person because that is what they are ... a deranged human that has become a monster.
And it's not just one being or persona ... it's a sickness or illness that infects people to become a Wendigo. So as a legend, the being can disappear but the suggestion is that anyone at anytime can be infected with this affliction and become a Wendigo ... it's a story from the past but if you believe the legends, it can become real again.