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The Clever Boy and the Terrible, Dangerous Animal

"The Clever Boy and the Terrible, Dangerous Animal" is a story adapted by Jeff Sapp and published in the Fall 2005 issue of Teaching Tolerance magazine.
Author
Jeff Sapp
Grade Level
K-2

Once upon a time there was a very clever boy. Nearby was a village he decided to visit.

Just outside that village he came upon a crowd of people standing in a field. As he drew near‚ he saw they looked quite frightened. He said‚ “What is wrong?”

“Oh!” they said. “There is a terrible‚ dangerous animal in this field‚ and we are frightened because it might attack us!”

“Where is the terrible‚ dangerous animal?” asked the boy.

“Oh! Be careful!” they screamed. And the people pointed to the middle of the field.

When the boy looked where they pointed‚ he saw a very large melon!

People  pointing at a large piece of fruit.

“That’s not a terrible‚ dangerous animal!” laughed the boy.

“Yes‚ it is!” cried the people. “Keep away! It might bite you!”

The boy said‚ “I’ll go kill this dangerous animal for you.”

“No!” they cried. “It’s too terrible and dangerous! It might bite you!”

But the boy went right up to the melon and soon was eating a large slice out of it. The people were astonished. “What a brave boy! He’s killed the terrible‚ dangerous animal!” As they spoke‚ the boy took another bite out of the large melon. It tasted delicious!

A boy eats fruit while a farmer works a field in the background.

“Look!” they cried. “Now he’s eating the terrible‚ dangerous animal! He is a terrible‚ dangerous boy!” As the boy walked toward them‚ the people ran away‚ saying‚ “Don’t attack us‚ you terrible‚ dangerous boy. Keep away!”

At that‚ the boy laughed again.

“What are you laughing at?” they asked.

“What you call a dangerous animal is just a melon‚” said the boy. “Melons are very nice to eat. We’ve got lots of them in our village‚ and everyone eats them.”

A boy eats fruit smiling.

The people wanted to know how they could get melons‚ and the boy showed them how to plant them.

Now they have lots of melons. They sell some‚ eat some and give some away. They even named their village Melon Village.

And just think: It all happened because a clever boy was not afraid when a lot of people thought something was dangerous just because they had never seen it before.

Source
Copyright © Teaching Tolerance.
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