One sunny day the fox was in her burrow thinking of how
to spend the day when she (the fox is feminine in Tigrinya) heard a nock on the
door.
“Who is it?”
“It is your old friend hyena.”
“What do you want?”
“Please help me, I can’t open my eyes.”
The fox opened the door and let the hyena in. Then she
examined his eyes.
“Oh my God!” said the fox, “This is serious, you need
medical help”
“What is it?” the hyena asked trembling.
“Well, I’ll be damned if I knew, but on second thought,
you don’t need to go to the doctor, I will cure you myself,” said the fox. And
saying that she instructed him to go to the woods and put some drops of tree
fluid (raisin of the kintchib tree) onto his eyes.
The hyena went to the woods and put three drops of the
white sticking tree fluid directly into his eyes. Result: His eyesight
worsened.
So he went back to the fox and told her that he could
see no better than before.
“Fine!” said the fox. “Just lean over a glowing charcoal
until the sticking fluid in your eyes gets less gluey.”
The hyena did what he was told and went completely
blind.
He hurried back to the fox and told her of the new
situation.
“Help me Aunt Foxy, I am now blind and I don’t know what
to do,” he whined.
“No problem!” exclaimed the fox. “I have a job for you.”
The fox had a farm, and she always wanted a farmhand. So
she thought of using the blind hyena to pull the plow for her.
So she harnessed the hyena and made him pull the plow
just like an ox.
“If you want to eat, you have to work,” she told him.
The hyena worked so hard and for so long a time that
after a month he collapsed and began to groan in pain.
The fox knowing he was done for left him lying in the
field and went to her lair. She had already plowed and sowed her field and had
no use for an ailing hyena now.
On that day there was a heavy downpour. The streams were
filled with water and sudden floods rolled down dry riverbeds.
Alas! The unconscious hyena was carried away by a flood
and was left half dead on a bank of a river far from the fox’s grain-field.
On the same day, in the evening, a villager was
returning home from a market day in another village when he saw something lying
on his path. First he thought it was a person, but after looking closely he
said to himself:
“Hurrah! I have found a sheep for the holiday”
He carried the half-dead hyena on his shoulder and
continued on his way to his house where his wife was waiting for him.
“Look honey,” he shouted. “ Here is the sheep I promised
I will bring you for Easter celebration.”
The wife was very happy. She took the hyena, thinking it
was a sheep, into the kitchen put him near the oven and tied his legs. They
planned to slaughter him the next day for the feast.
Sprawled in the kitchen, the hyena got warmer and warmer
because the oven had been used only a few hours earlier. Coming back to his
senses he started to howl:
“Oongoooi…. Oooooongooooi…..”
The husband and wife froze in their bed.
“What is it?” stammered the wife shaking all over.
“I don’t know,” answered the husband outdoing his wife
in trembling.
“It’s coming from the kitchen,” gasped the wife.
“Why don’t you go and check?” suggested husband shaking
like a feather.
“Why should I?” retorted the wife covering her head with
the blanket.
However, she decided to wait till morning when some
ladies from the neighboring houses would come asking for fire.
Early in the morning, a woman’s voice was heard from
outside the fence:
“May I borrow a piece of glowing charcoal for brewing coffee,
please?”
To the wife, this was an answer to a long prayer.
“Go to the kitchen, it is open, and take a glowing
charcoal from the oven,” shouted the wife lying in bed beside her shivering
husband. And she added:
“And would you please untie the hyena…ahem, I mean.. the
sheep which is lying near the oven? For we will be slaughtering it soon for the
Easter”
So the lady from the neighboring house got inside the
kitchen and tried to untie the hyena thinking it was a sheep.
The hyena looked around and was perplexed. As was his
habit he took away a chunk of the lady’s breast before making his getaway and
ran as fast as he could straight before him into the open field.
(To him who forgets this story, may death also forget
him forever. But as to him who remembers it, may they treat him to a bowl of
porridge garnished with melting butter).
Come
Down, Zingbaba
Zingbaba was a beautiful little girl who lived with her
stepmother in a small hut. The youngsters of the village admired her beauty and
wanted to marry her. But, her stepmother was cruel and she wanted her to work
in the house for her all the time, just like Cinderella.
One day, her father thought of marrying her off before
she got too old and lost her youth and charm.
Zingbaba knew that her father wanted her to marry a
person of his choice. She preferred to continue working in the house like a
slave rather than marry someone she did not like.
The father made arrangements for the marriage and
everything that was needed for the big wedding feast was ready including a cow
to be slaughtered and suwa to be
drunk.
A week before the wedding feast, one moonlit night,
Zingbaba left her house and went into the woods and hid in a sycamore tree.
When her father found out that she was no more in the
house, he sent a searching squad to look for her.
“Zingbaba! Zingbaba! Where are you!” shouted the
searching party, but they found no trace of her.
They kept on looking, checking every bush and tree,
every nook and cranny. Finally they spotted her sitting in a sycamore tree,
sobbing.
“What’s the matter with you Zingbaba?” they asked her.
“I don’t want to get married now,” Zingbaba sobbed.
“What’s the reason?” they wondered.
“I don’t want to marry someone I don’t love,” she
whined.
The searching party tried every means to persuade her to
come down, but the more they pleaded with her, the firmer she became.
Finally, her stepmother arrived and sang her the
following:
My Zingbaba. My
darling.
Don’t you know
that..
The suwa is getting sour in the pot
The ingera is getting dry in the pantry
The food is
burning in the clay bowl
Please, come down
my sweet Zingbaba
But Zingbaba wouldn’t have any of such pleading and
refused to get down and the people who came to look for her decided to leave
her alone.
Zingbaba kept wailing and sobbing perched on a branch of
the sycamore tree.
“Stop crying,” murmured the sycamore tree.
Zingbaba had a fright. She looked right and left and
said:
“Who is speaking?”
“It is me,” said the sycamore tree. “I want you to
listen to me.”
The sycamore tree told Zingbaba to ask for any kind of
fruit she wanted and it would be granted.
“You should only say ‘ Sycamore tree of my father and
mother give me this and that’ and it will be given to you” intoned the sycamore
tree.
Zingbaba had only to wish for something to eat, and she
would get it.
But, Zingbaba was a kind girl. She remembered her cruel
life with her stepmother and decided to help the poor shepherds who happened to
be around watching over their flock near the sycamore tree.
Every time she spotted a very poor looking shepherd, she
would say:
“Sycamore tree of my father and mother give me a
basketful of guava” and puff! a basketful of guava would pop up within her
reach.
Or it was a basketful of grapes, or corn on the cob or
even blueberry, and she would drop it on the ground for the poor and the now
bewildered shepherds to fill their stomachs with.
Zingbaba told the poor shepherds, under oath, not to
tell anybody about the whole thing.
But, eventually, the secret was made public.
Meanwhile Zingbaba had grown very old and died in her
sleep. The sycamore tree stretched out her branches and buried her under its
shade.