Ik moest meteen denken aan de Aboriginals, na wat Marenubium zei.
Ik wil graag een verhaal met jullie delen wat ik tegen kom, tis een australisch kindersprookje afgeleid van een legende (die ik in het kort daaronder heb weergegeven) dus lees goed
Long, long ago, only the moon and stars lit the Earth. No one had ever felt the warmth or seen the light of the sun.
The spirits who lived in the sky looked down on all the birds and beasts, and they were concerned that the creatures were not happy. One day a generous spirit decided the world needed more light, and so this spirit gathered others, and together they collected wood, and this they began to stack, higher and higher and higher. When the wood was stacked so high they could no longer see the top, they decided to light a fire.
"The creatures of the Earth will delight in our light," the spirits said, "but we must announce its arrival."
The spirits sent a star out into the sky 一 the first morning star and instructed it to announce the arrival of the light that would soon warm the world.
The star shimmered and sparkled, but few noticed it there in the dimly lit sky, and when the birds and beasts first saw the light of the great fire, they were shocked. Soon, though, they began to delight in its warmth, but seldom did they notice that tiny morning star.
The spirits decided they must find another way to announce the dawn.
"We'll need a noise," one of the spirits said.
"Yes, something loud. Something unusual, something startling," the others agreed.
Time passed, and the morning star shone more brightly, but still many creatures did not notice the star and were startled by the sudden light of the great fire.
Then one day, just after the morning star began to shine, the spirits heard a most amazing sound. Kookaburra peered down at the ground and spied a mouse. He launched himself from his perch in the treetops, and when he had conquered his prey, he began to laugh. He laughed like no creature in the world laughed.
When the spirits heard that sound, they knew that Kookaburra must become the world's morning trumpeter.
That very night the spirits visited Kookaburra in his home inside the gum tree.
"Kookaburra," they said, "every day, just as the morning star begins to fade, you will laugh as loudly as you can. It is your laughter that will wake all the sleepers before our fire lights the sky."
Kookaburra laughed when he heard this. "What if I say no?" he asked.
"If you say no, we will send no more light to the Earth. All the creatures will again live in the darkness."
Kookaburra realized that he could become a hero, and oh, how he would love to be important and respected. "I'll take the job," he said, and the very next day, just as the morning star began to fade, Kookaburra looked up at the sky and began to laugh, "Garooagarooagarooga ..." БυЫ)
When the spirits heard that sound, they lit their fire, and slowly the Earth below began to glow. The warmth seeped down slowly, building as the fire blazed higher and higher.
Many years passed, and every morning Kookaburra laughed loudly, and every morning the spirits lit the fire to warm the Earth below.
When the Creator brought people into the world, the spirits instructed them. "You must never tease Kookaburra," they said. The elders instructed their children: "If Kookaburra hears you making fun of him, he will never laugh again. Then we will no longer have light or warmth."
So all the people learned, just as the beasts and birds had learned, that Kookaburra must be respected, and to this day he prepares all the people to greet the dawn.
Bron:
www.fairy-tale.info
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Legende:
http://www.austourism.com.au/aboriginal_art/pages/kookaburra.htm
Liefs, the moon