By: Chioma Madonna Ndukwu
Africa’s Talking Drum: The Tortoise Who Wore The King’s Voice
In a village where wind carried news faster than feet, the King’s voice was law. But age had made his words fragile, passing through too many mouths before reaching the people.
Tortoise found a broken royal horn in the forest. It still held authority in its silence, like thunder refusing to die. “I will speak for the King,” Tortoise said, turning the horn like a hidden crown.
And slowly, truth began to change its clothes in the village. At first, he only shaped words gently, like clay softened by water.
But soon, people stopped asking what the King said and began asking what Tortoise meant. Meaning became a weapon dressed as wisdom. And no one noticed the switch.
The birds warned from the iroko tree. “When voice is borrowed too long, truth forgets its owner,” they sang.
But comfort is a patient blindness. And the village chose ease over doubt. Tortoise did not grow louder, only more believed. That is how power disguises itself when it is still young.
One season, the King spoke directly, his real voice thin like dry leaf. But the village no longer trusted anything that did not pass through interpretation.
Even honesty sounded suspicious. Tortoise placed the horn down. But silence had already chosen sides.
And the village learned too late that stolen voice does not announce itself, it replaces the original softly.
MORAL:
When truth is filtered too many times, it stops being truth and becomes whatever power decides it should sound like.
ENGAGEMENT HOOK:
If truth must pass through many people before reaching you… do you still trust it the same way?
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