Z = Zebra & the Baboons (South Africa)

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.

Cap’s Off to You! – Mother Mary Carter Smith (Posthumously) and Celebrating Story

Mary Carter Smith—affectionately known as “Mother Griot”—did not simply tell stories; she carried them, lived them, and offered them as gifts to anyone willing to listen. Rooted in the African griot tradition, she understood storytelling as sacred work: the remembering and sharing of history, culture, and human truth. Whether in classrooms, on stages, or over the airwaves, she met people where they were and reminded them that their own stories mattered. For many, she was the first to model storytelling not just as art, but as identity and inheritance.

Her journey into storytelling was not born from ease, but from a life shaped by profound loss, movement, and resilience. As a child, she experienced the death of her mother and was raised by her grandmother, whose voice and presence helped plant the seeds of story. Those early experiences—of grief, listening, and witnessing—became the foundation of her work. She once described how stories lived in her body long before they became her profession. By the time she stepped fully into storytelling after a 31-year career as a Baltimore City teacher, she had already been practicing it all her life.

In the classroom, she was ahead of her time. When African and African American history were largely absent from curriculum, she brought them in—through stories, poems, songs, and presence. She dressed in African clothing, immersed herself in cultural study, and even traveled to Ghana to deepen her understanding. Her teaching extended beyond academics; she nurtured confidence, imagination, and pride. Former students remembered not just what she taught, but how she made them feel seen, capable, and connected to something larger than themselves.

What sets Mother Mary apart is not only what she built—co-founding organizations like the National Association of Black Storytellers and helping elevate storytelling nationally—but how she lived her values. After the devastating loss of her only child, she chose a path that few can comprehend: forgiveness. Grounded in her faith, she transformed personal grief into a message of healing, often sharing that story so others might find a way forward through their own pain. Her life reminds us that storytelling is not just about what we say, but how we live.

To know Mary Carter Smith is to encounter a woman of deep humility and unwavering purpose. She often spoke of herself simply, insisting that what mattered most was not appearance or acclaim, but the person within. Her daily prayer—asking that her life touch others for good—was not just words, but practice. And perhaps that is her greatest teaching: that each of us is already part of the story, already carrying something worth sharing. Through her voice and her example, Mother Mary invites us not only to listen—but to remember, to honor, and to tell.

If you have links to add – video, audio, articles – please share by emailing info@storycrossroads.org or commenting on this blog post.

You can see more details on Mother Mary Carter Smith with the Story Artists Memorial.

Do you know a Story Artist who has passed on and want others to remember them? Memories? Pictures? You can submit names and memories of Story Artists who have passed on through our online form. 

While I did not meet Mother Mary Carter Smith, I have heard her name for decades. And it will be decades more. Yes, for founding the National Association Storytellers of Black Storytellers. But also the founding of storytelling in our hearts. Many people to this day honor her, sing her name, and share stories that solidifies again her legacy. Truly, I look forward to meeting her after earth time.

Mother Mary Carter Smith still has a story. You have a story. We all have stories.

Y = Yvain the Knight of the Lion (Arthurian Legend)

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 Yvain the Knight of the Lion:

The story of Yvain comes from the Arthurian romances of Chrétien de Troyes, written in the 12th century. As part of the larger world of King Arthur and his knights, this tale follows Yvain’s journey through honor, failure, madness, and restoration. Yvain’s path is not just about heroic deeds, but about what happens when identity breaks—and how it can be rebuilt.

Symbolism and Themes:

Becoming Through Loss – Yvain loses his honor and sense of self after breaking a promise, and this loss becomes the beginning of his transformation.

Calling Through Redemption – His journey becomes one of repairing what he has broken, answering a deeper call to integrity rather than glory.

Transformation Through Relationship – His bond with the lion reflects loyalty and courage, showing how connection can shape who we become.

50-word-or-less summary:

Yvain kills a knight guarding a magical spring and marries his widow, Laudine, but breaks his promise to return. Driven mad and cast out, he is healed by a noblewoman, rescues a lion from a serpent, and, through heroic deeds, proves his worth and wins Laudine back.

Finding the Story:

You can read Yvain, the Knight of the Lion in Yvain, ou le Chevalier au Lion by Chrétien de Troyes translated by William Wistar Comfort in Project Gutenberg. HeroOfCamelot.com website also has this story.

Finding the Transformation:

Yvain’s transformation unfolds through breaking and rebuilding. He begins certain of who he is, but when he fails to keep his word, that certainty collapses. What follows is not immediate redemption, but disorientation and loss—even madness. Through acts of service, courage, and quiet repair, Yvain reshapes himself. The presence of the lion marks a shift—from seeking recognition to embodying loyalty and strength. His becoming is not a return to who he was, but an emergence into someone more grounded and aware.

What if transformation requires the loss of identity before it can be truly claimed? What if the call is not to avoid failure—but to answer what comes after?

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.