Sapporo, Japan – In a twist that feels ripped from a Miyazaki film, residents of a small Hokkaido town are on edge after a bear described by local authorities as 'extremely intelligent' has gone on a rampage, attacking four people in as many days. The animal, which has evaded traps and patrols, has become a symbol of the frayed boundaries between human and wild spaces in Japan’s shrinking countryside.
According to police, the first victim was found near a riverbank on Monday. Then, a farmer was mauled in his field. By Wednesday, the bear had breached a residential area, entering a home and attacking an elderly woman. The fourth victim, a hiker, sustained serious injuries before the bear vanished into the forest.
The phrase 'extremely intelligent' has circulated in news reports, quoting a wildlife official who noted the bear’s ability to avoid standard capture methods. This language taps into a deep seated human anxiety: the idea that animals can outsmart us. It’s a narrative that resonates in a country with a rich folklore of intelligent creatures, from tanuki to yokai. But here, the myth collides with modern reality.
Japan’s bear population has been increasing, and with it, human bear conflicts. As rural communities age and shrink, abandoned farmland and forests creep back, creating corridors for wildlife to wander into towns. The bears, once confined to deeper wilderness, are now learning that garbage bins and unlocked doors offer easy meals. They are adapting faster than our countermeasures.
The real story, however, is not just about a bear’s IQ. It’s about a society confronting its own decline. The elderly victims reflect a demographic crisis where those left behind in rural areas are the most vulnerable. The bear’s intelligence is a mirror to our own failure to manage the landscape. We have retreated, and nature is reclaiming what we left behind.
Locals are now divided: some demand culling, others advocate for relocation. But the bear’s continued elusiveness suggests that culling him won’t solve the deeper problem. Until we address the shrinking rural population and the changing land use, we will have more intelligent bears, more attacks, and more unease. The bear is not the intruder; he is a symptom of our own retreat.










