Oral tradition African folktale
A tale that shows we should never underestimate a person who is different to us.
Story
A blind man is frequently asked how he is so wise. He smiles and replies, “because I see with my ears.” His sister marries a hunter who mocks the man for his blindness. The blind man asks the hunter to take him hunting. Eventually the hunter agrees and finds that the blind man can see more than he thought.
Why we chose it
The Blind Man was one of the stories in our original audio story collection. These stories are particularly suitable for learning to retell.
Where it came from
Like many folk stories passed down through an oral tradition, this has many possible sources. It has been attributed to West Africa and as a Ndebele story from Zimbabwe.
Where it went next
Hugh Lupton includes a version in Tales of Wisdom and Wonder. Alexander McCall Smith includes it in his collection The Girl Who Married A Lion and Other Tales from Africa.
Associated stories
Stories where blind people have abilities which people with sight don’t have are common in many cultures. Zatoichi is a blind blademaster in one of Japan’s longest running series of films and television series, a little like James Bond. Other blind characters with incredible skill and wisdom are Toph Bei Fong in the cartoon Avatar: The Last Airbender (2005-2008) and the Marvel superhero Daredevil who appears in comics and his own TV show (Daredevil, 2015-2018).
Oral tradition African folktale