![]() Trusting his daughter the farmer presents the sultan with what his daughter recommended. They work through it, and she thinks she is certain she knows the answer. His oldest daughter comes to help him, and he tells her the riddle. In a distant province a poor farmer who had few sheep and many children half heartedly prepared to slaughter his finest animal to present to Wiil Waal. The men pick different parts to bring to the sultan with little success: a rib, a liver, a shoulder of meat. The sheep’s part should symbolize what can divide people or unite them as one.” The one who can do so will be honored as a wise man. Long ago Wiil Waal set forth a riddle, “bring me part of one of your sheep. Like all folktales though, this doesn’t claim to be a true story, but one filled with wisdom. He was known to be a great leader who was brave, and clever, and used riddles to unite people. ![]() The book starts with an author’s note explaining the tradition in East Africa of having a nickname and that Wiil Waal was the naanay of Garad Farah Garad Hirsi, a man who was a sultan for a brief time. ![]()
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