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The Legend of the Dancing Baobab Tree is an old folktale from Africa. It takes place in the savanna in a time when there was a great drought that threatened to destroy the earth. The animals were suffering from great hunger and thirst as all the rivers, lakes and streams had dried up. But the mighty baobab tree kept all the water stored inside its big, fat trunk and would not share with the rest of the creatures or plants.¿ This left the animals with no choice but to pull the baobab tree from the ground and try to get the water out. But the baobab tree went flying up in the sky and returned…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The Legend of the Dancing Baobab Tree is an old folktale from Africa. It takes place in the savanna in a time when there was a great drought that threatened to destroy the earth. The animals were suffering from great hunger and thirst as all the rivers, lakes and streams had dried up. But the mighty baobab tree kept all the water stored inside its big, fat trunk and would not share with the rest of the creatures or plants.¿ This left the animals with no choice but to pull the baobab tree from the ground and try to get the water out. But the baobab tree went flying up in the sky and returned back to earth upside down! In many legends across Africa, the baobab tree is now known as the upside-down tree. This version of the story will leave young readers with an open discussion about sharing, fairness and how to ensure that every creature, every plant and every person has what they need to live a happy and healthy life on our shared planet.
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Autorenporträt
Wakanyi is a global nomad living in the Netherlands. She was born in Nairobi and grew up next to the world's only indigenous forest in a capital city, not far from the Nairobi National Park, or the famed Ngong Hills in the film Out of Africa. Wakanyi is fond of storytelling and recalls a childhood spent running through the forest, away from monkeys that were keen to steal her lunch box on the way to school! Telling nature stories became a favourite pastime with her friends and it nurtured the talent from an early age.Wakanyi is passionate about preserving these stories and promoting theAfrican indigenous way of oral storytelling through the African Folktales Project (www.africanfolktalesproject.com), a space she founded to curate, reimagine and reincarnate old African folktales for the world's future children. She is also the podcast host of Folktale Fridays ,a space where she shares these stories, and she also blogs about being a global nomad on www.aglobalnomadshome.com. She is also the author of The Twelve Days of Christmas Safari, an adventure story that captures the sights and sounds of the African savanna during the Christmas holiday. Wakanyi is a mother to four global nomad kids and together with her husband, they have raised their children in 7 countries so far, namely: Kenya, the US, Nepal, The Philippines, Ethiopia, Thailand and The Netherlands, where they currently reside. The Legend of the DancingBaobab Tree is her second book, and when not writing, Wakanyi teaches and performs folktales to a global audience. She mostly prefers to be out in the forest, taking a long walk.