A GREAT READ FOR ALL AGES!

This 260 page volume contains 84 stories about Bushman Myths and Legends, including interpretations of the natural world, animal fables, the story of the first man, and customs, superstitions, and more. There are stories about girls and frogs, hyenas that seek revenge, the wind, and the making of arrows. Unusually there are also stories about the origin of the stars Sirius and Canopus, the treatment of bones, prayers to the moon, and a man who mistakenly ordered his wife to cut off his ears and more.

Specimens of Bushman Folk-lore was published by Dr. W.H.I. Bleek only after hed overcome many great difficulties (and great they were in late 1800s South Africa). So complete is this volume that Dr. Bleek even provides explanations on how to make the many click sounds that are endemic to the Bushman language. Good luck wrapping your tongue around them!

Of special interest is the story of one Bushmans first ride on the train from Mowbray to Cape Town, which describes his treatment at the hands of the local police and the imposition of the white mans laws upon him and his people. Over 100 years later the old adage Everything changes, Everything stays the same comes to mind.

So curl up with this treasure of ancient Africa, this documentation of a changing world, and engross yourself in a culture that still has no place for MP3 players, video games, television or radio.

33% of the Publishers profit is donated to the Westville Boys High Scholarship Fund in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa which enables gifted but underprivileged South Africans to obtain a first class High School education.

NOTE: Rock art and archaeological evidence indicates that the San Bushmen once occupied countries as far north as Libya, Egypt, Sudan, and Ethiopia, with some evidence of occupation in Kenya. Over time, environmental conditions and the expansion of the Negroid races pushed the Bushmen further and further southtoday, they can now only be found in the countries of Southern Africa. Even now, the Bushmens traditional way of life is further threatened by government regulations and policies that seek to restrict their nomadic tradition and encourage them to assume a more pastoral lifestyle.