
We are pleased to participate in the A to Z Blog Challenge for the month of April. The Story Crossroads theme for this year is “Becoming: Tales of Transformation & Calling.” We love exploring traditional tales from around the world within that theme.
About “Zebra & the Baboons”
This tale tells of a zebra foal raised among mares and shaped by both protection and conflict. When the young stallion grows, he must step into a world where old enemies—baboons—still claim authority over the land and water. The story follows a moment of confrontation that reveals identity not just by appearance, but by substance, voice, and action.
Symbolism and Themes
Becoming Through Identity Formation – The zebra stallion is shaped by care, but must ultimately define himself through courage and confrontation.
Calling Through Confrontation – His “calling” emerges when he speaks truth to power, refusing to remain passive in inherited conflict.
Transformation Through Recognition – The baboon’s challenge forces both characters to reveal what they truly are—milk-eater and gum-eater—exposing identity as lived reality rather than assumption.
50-word-or-less summary:
A zebra stallion, raised on mare’s milk, leads the herd to water but is blocked by baboons who claim the path. When a baboon mocks him, the stallion proves he is milk-fed, the baboon gum-fed, then seizes him and slams him onto hot rock, leaving a permanent scar.
Finding the Story:
This folktale appears in African oral tradition collections and public-domain folklore compilations. We did find this story in full text at sacred-texts.com called “The Zebra Stallion.”
Finding the Transformation:
This story is not a gentle coming-of-age—it is a story of identity tested in conflict. The foal becomes a stallion not simply by growing older, but by stepping into tension and refusing to be defined by the baboons’ control.
Transformation here is physical, verbal, and symbolic: the moment he speaks, he becomes. The baboon’s humiliation and lasting mark underscore a deeper truth in folklore—becoming often emerges through confrontation with inherited boundaries.
What defines us when we are challenged: ancestry, assumption, or the voice we choose in the moment we finally speak?
Share your thoughts in the comments! While you enjoy this blog, Story Crossroads has year-round offerings. See our popular links and upcoming events at our One-Stop.
As for our past A to Z Challenges…
While you enjoy this blog, Story Crossroads celebrates the 11th hybrid summit & festival on May 2 & 4-6, 2026 – yes, in-person and virtual – and would be honored for you to join us.
Thanks to funding from National Endowment for the Arts; Zoo, Arts & Parks (ZAP) of Salt Lake County; Creative West; Utah Division of Arts and Museums; City of Murray; Salt Lake City Arts Council; Utah Storytelling Guild; Murray City Library; Pleasant Grove Library; American Fork Library and people like you.


