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The Chief of the Well
(From Haiti)
To whom does the water belong?
There was once a drought in the country. The streams dried up and the
wells went dry. There was no place for anybody to get water. The animals
met to discuss the situation-the cow, the dog, the goat, the horse, the
donkey, and all the others. They decided to ask God for help. Together
they went to God and told him how bad things were.
God thought, then he said, "Don't bother your heads. They don't call
me God for nothing. I will give you one well for everyone to use."
The animals thanked God. They told him he was very considerate. God said,
"But you'll have to take good care of my well. One of you will have
to be caretaker. He will stay by the well at all times to see that no
one abuses it or makes it dirty."
Mabouya, the ground lizard spoke up saying, "I will be the caretaker."
God looked at all the animals. He said at last, "Mabouya, the lizard,
looks like the best caretaker. Therefore, I appoint him. He will be the
watchman. The well is over there in the mango grove."
The animals went away. The lizard went directly to the well. When the
other animals began to come back for water, Mabouya challenged them. First
the cow came to drink. The lizard sang out in a deep voice:
"Who is it? Who is it?
Who is walking in my grove?"
The cow replied:
"It is I, the cow,
I am coming for water."
And the lizard called back:
"Go away! This is God's grove,
And the well is dry."
So the cow went away and suffered from thirst.
Then the horse came and the lizard challenged him, saying:
'Who is it? Who is it?
Who is walking in my grove?"
The horse answered:
"It is I, the horse,
I am coming for water."
And the lizard called back:
"Go away! This is God's grove,
And the well is dry."
So the horse went away and he too suffered from thirst.
Each animal came to the well and the lizard challenged all of them in
the same way, saying
:"Go away! This is God's grove,
And the well is dry."
So the animals went away and suffered much because they had no water to
drink.
When God saw all the suffering going on, he said, "I gave the animals
a well to drink from, but they are all dying of thirst. What is the matter?"
And he himself went to the well.When the lizard heard his footsteps, he
called out:
"Who is it? Who is it?
Who is walking in my grove'?"
God answered:
"It is I, Papa God.
I am coming for water."
And the lizard said:
"Go away, Papa God.
The well is dry."
God was very angry. He said once more:
"It is I, Papa God.
I am coming for water."
And the lizard called back to him again:
"Go away, Papa God.
The well is dry."
God said no more to the lizard. He sent for the animals to come to the
well. He said, "You came to me because you were thirsty and I gave
you a well. I made Mabouya the caretaker. But he gave no thought to the
suffering creatures all around him. If a man has a banana tree in his
garden, it is his. If a man has a cotton tree in his garden, it is his.
But if a man has a well in his garden, only the hole in the ground belongs
to him. The water is God's and belongs to all creatures. Because Mabouya,
the lizard, became drunk with conceit, he is no longer the caretaker.
Henceforth, he must drink his water from puddles wherever the rain falls.
The new care-taker will be the frog. The frog will not say,'Go away, the
well is dry.' He will say,'This is God's well; this is God's well'."
So the animals drank at the well, while Mabouya, the lizard, went away
from it and drank rain water wherever he could find it. The frog is now
the caretaker. And all night he calls out:
"This is God's well!
This is God's well!
This is God's well!"
And it is a saying among the people:
"The hole in the ground is yours,
The water is God's."
(This story was taken from The Piece of Fire and Other
Haitian Tales, 1964 by Harold Courlander. Reprinted by permission of Harcourt,
Brace and Jovanovich, Inc., New York. Story came originally from West
Africa.)
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