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Koko le Matsianye Hen and Eagle

Written by Ann Nduku

Illustrated by Wiehan de Jager

Translated by Antonia Madi

Language Tswana

Level Level 3

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Bogologolo tala, Koko le Matsianye ba ne ba le ditsala.Ba agile ka kagiso mmogo le dinonyane tse dingwe.Go ne go se na epe e e ne e kgona go fofa.

Once upon a time, Hen and Eagle were friends. They lived in peace with all the other birds. None of them could fly.


Letsatsi lengwe, go ne go na le tlala mo lefatsheng.Matsianye o ne a ya kgakala go ya go batla dijo. A boe kong a lapile.”Go tshwanetse go bo go na le mokgwa mongwe o o bonolo go ka eta!” ga bua Matsianye.

One day, there was famine in the land. Eagle had to walk very far to find food. She came back very tired. “There must be an easier way to travel!” said Eagle.


Morago ga robala sentle bosigo, Koko ya nna le mogopolo o o botlhale.A simolola go kokoanya diphafa tse di wang go tswa mo ditsaleng tsotlhe tsa bone.”A re di rokelele mmogo mo godimo ga diphafa sa tsona,a bua.”Gongwe go ka dira go eta bonolo.”

After a good night’s sleep, Hen had a brilliant idea. She began collecting the fallen feathers from all their bird friends. “Let’s sew them together on top of our own feathers,” she said. “Perhaps that will make it easier to travel.”


Matsianye e ne e le fela ene yo o na le nnale mo motseng,o ile a simolola go roka lwa ntlha.O ne a itirela diphuka tse dintle le go fofela kwa godimo go le Koko. Koko ya adima nnale mme ka bonako ya lapa go roka.A tlogela nnale fa godimo ga lekase mme a ya kwa phaposing boapelo go baakanyetsa bana ba gagwe dijo.

Eagle was the only one in the village with a needle, so she started sewing first. She made herself a pair of beautiful wings and flew high above Hen. Hen borrowed the needle but she soon got tired of sewing. She left the needle on the cupboard and went into the kitchen to prepare food for her children.


Mme dinonyane tse dingwe tsa bona jaaka Matsianye a fofa. Ba kopa Koko go ba adima nnale go ka itirela diphuka le bone. Ka bonako ga nna le dinonyane tse di fofang mo loaping lotlhe.

But the other birds had seen Eagle flying away. They asked Hen to lend them the needle to make wings for themselves too. Soon there were birds flying all over the sky.


E rile nonyane ya bofelo e busa nnale e e adimilweng,Koko o ne a sio fao. Bana ba gagwe ba tsaya nnale ba simolola go tshameka ka yone. Fa ba lapa go tshameka, ba tlogela nnale mo mmung.

When the last bird returned the borrowed needle, Hen was not there. So her children took the needle and started playing with it. When they got tired of the game, they left the needle in the sand.


Morago mo tshokologong, Matsianye boa.A kopa nnale go baakanya diphafa tse di neng di tantologile mo loetong lwa gagwe.Koko ya leba fa godimi ga lekase.A leba mo phaposing boapelo. A leba mo jarateng. Mme nnale e se ka ya bonala gope.

Later that afternoon, Eagle returned. She asked for the needle to fix some feathers that had loosened on her journey. Hen looked on the cupboard. She looked in the kitchen. She looked in the yard. But the needle was nowhere to be found.


“Naya fela letsatsi,” Koko ya kopa Matsianye.”Go tswa foo o kgona go baakanya diphuka tsa gago o fofe go ya go tsaya dijo tsa gago gape.”Fa e kan moragi ga malatsi,” ga bua Matsianye. Fa o sa bone nnale, o ka tshwanelwa ke go naya lerama lengwe la gago.”

“Just give me a day,” Hen begged Eagle. “Then you can fix your wing and fly away to get food again.” “Just one more day,” said Eagle. “If you can’t find the needle, you’ll have to give me one of your chicks as payment.”


Fa Matsianye a tla letsatsi le le latelang, o fitlhela Koko e hatahata mo mmung mme go se nnale e e bonalang.Matsianye a fologela tlase ka bonako a mo phamola ka lengwe la lerama.A e tsholetsa a fofa. Go ya bofelong morago ga letsatsi leo, fa Matsianye e bonalang gone, e fitlhela Koko e fatafata mo mmung ka ntlha ya nnale.

When Eagle came the next day, she found Hen scratching in the sand, but no needle. So Eagle flew down very fast and caught one of the chicks. She carried it away. Forever after that, whenever Eagle appears, she finds Hen scratching in the sand for the needle.


Fa seriti sa diphuka tsa Mtsianye se fela fa fatshe, Koko e tlhagisa lerama la yone.”Tswa mo ....o omise lefatse.”Ba araba ba re:”Ga re ditlaela.Re tla sia

As the shadow of Eagle’s wing falls on the ground, Hen warns her chicks. “Get out of the bare and dry land.” And they respond: “We are not fools. We will run.”


Written by: Ann Nduku
Illustrated by: Wiehan de Jager
Translated by: Antonia Madi
Language: Tswana
Level: Level 3
Source: Hen and Eagle from African Storybook
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 International License.
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