By: Chioma Madonna Ndukwu
Africa’s Talking Drum: The Village That Borrowed Tomorrow
In the flourishing kingdom of Endara, life was once simple. Farmers tilled their land. Blacksmiths forged tools beneath glowing fires. Traders crossed dusty roads with baskets of salt, grain, and cloth.
The people worked hard, and though no one was truly rich, the village stood firmly on its own feet.Then one season, strangers arrived from across the sea.
They came in shining wagons carrying gifts the villagers had never seen before, mirrors brighter than river water, machines that sang, and lamps that turned night into day.
The people were amazed. “We can make Endara greater than ever,” the strangers promised. “Take what you need now, and repay us later.” The King was thrilled.
Soon, new roads appeared. Giant halls were built. Festivals became grander than ever before. Everywhere, banners celebrated “The New Age of Prosperity.”
At first, the people rejoiced. But after many seasons, the collectors arrived. They carried long scrolls filled with debts. The strangers demanded payment, not only in gold, but in land, harvests, and control over the kingdom’s busiest trade routes.
The villagers were shocked. “How can we owe so much?” they cried. The old Accountant Tortoise, who had quietly kept records for years, stepped forward. “We borrowed for celebration,” he said sadly, “but not for strength.”
Silence fell across Endara. The roads were beautiful, yet farms were weaker. The halls were taller, yet the people were poorer. The kingdom had spent tomorrow’s wealth to impress today.
As the burden grew heavier, many young people left the village searching for opportunity elsewhere. Traders struggled under new taxes. Farmers surrendered portions of their harvest to repay debts they never fully understood.
One evening beneath the moonlight, the elders gathered. “What destroyed us?” a young hunter asked.
Tortoise looked toward the glowing palace and replied: “A future cannot survive when it is continuously traded away for applause.” From that day forward, Endara changed its ways.
The people began investing in their farms, skills, and markets instead of endless celebrations. Slowly, the kingdom learned to build with patience rather than pride. And though recovery took years, the people never forgot the lesson.
Moral: A nation that keeps borrowing without building true value may eventually lose control of its future.
Do you think societies sometimes confuse development with appearance? Why or why not?
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