Monday, July 21, 2014

The Samudrabans (author Siddhant Mehta 11 years, 2011, Illustrator by Ishita Singh 9 years 2013)

Foreword
“It is said that all plants were created from the hair of Brahma” – Brahma’s Hair by Maneka Gandhi. The KYE children inspired by the mythology and legends on Trees in this book decided to create their own set of folklore.


The Sunderbans is the third of this series of KYE folklore.

Mkhut the ostrich wandered around the tall grass with his flock of brothers, sisters, mum, dad, cousins, aunts and uncles looking for berries, seeds and insects. 




He spied a juicy worm and blinked his thickly lashed eyes with pleasure. Mkhut edged towards it lowered his long straw-like neck but the creature wriggled away.

Mkhut lowered his neck again and ‘peck’ the poor worm was never ever seen again. Mkhut turned his head back towards his group, but they too were nowhere to be seen. He scanned the landscape anxiously twisting his long neck and tried calling out to the rest of his family but there was no reply.

 Mkhut was scared but there was no time to use his mandarin sized brain, because at that very moment an arrow whizzed past his head missing it by a few inches. He noticed a man his dark well oiled skin gleaming in the sunlight. Dressed in lion cloth with a quiver of arrows slung on his back the tribal hunter was deftly stringing another arrow into his bow.




Mkhut’s extra small brain was packed with only one thought “run”. He lifted his strong, two-toed humongous feet taking gigantic leaps to evade the hunter. Leaving the familiar grass lands behind Mkhut found himself on a vast stretch of mud flats in the delta region of the Bay of Bengal where the great rivers emptied themselves into the sea.



After regaining his breath Mkhut observed much to his delight his entire family near the river. He rushed up to them in joy. 

Mkhut’s long throat was parched so he bent down and drank in long gulps.




 Suddenly a loud gushing sound made him stand erect just in time to see a colossal wave heading their way.







He and his family realized that they could not run fast enough to escape this threat and so they huddled together and lay down low as if to avoid detection











Their heads and necks were difficult to spot against the sandy soil. It almost looked as if all of them had put their heads in the ground hoping for the best.So when the wave hit them they broke its force and shielded the land from flooding and being washed away.




Although Mkhut and his family saved the day, he and his flock were rooted to the spot as the mud turned thick and swampy upon contact with the water. The tangle of beaks and necks exposed above the water especially at low tide began to look like intertwined roots leading to the nickname “walking tree”.


As time went by they spread into a dense and beautiful sea forest or ‘Samudraban’ or the “Sunderbans” or beautiful forests of coastal West Bengal.










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