write a bravary story
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Answer:
hyy mate ❤
In story I am going to tell about how some children is saved by a boy.
Once upon a time there lived a boy in Rampur who's name is Krishna. He was a poor boy. In the village everyone hated him because he was poor. His father died in an accident. And his mother was suffering from high fever. There was no money for her treatment. He always wanted to study but he can't because of lack of money. Once he was playing near a forest. He saw some children playing with a beautiful ball. So he wanted to play with them but when he asked if he can play they also denied to play with him. Then while playing in the forest they all got lost. They started crying. Then they saw a very huge venomous snake which was 12 feet long. the snake attacked one of the children. Listening their crying Krishna also went into the forest. He was holding a stick with him. He attacked the snake. then the snake ran away. And all the children said thanks to him they all become friends.
Thank uuhh mate ❤✌
Answer:
Ekalavya was a little boy, born in a poor family, many many years ago. His people lived a little away from Hastinapura, the capital of the Kuru kings. They used to clean other people’s dirt for a profession.
And for this reason they were shunned by society. Ekalavya and other kids of his group knew they too had to follow their parents’ professions.
Their parents often told them, “You are not meant to go to school. What use is school for carrying garbage which is your only job?”
“Don’t go near those people; they are high born, we are low born.”
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Ekalavya: Limits of the Mind - A story for kids
Fiction for KidsStories for Kids
Limits of the Mind
By Nitya Ramakrishnan
999 words | 8 mintue read | Flesch–Kincaid readability score: Grade 4
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Ekalavya was a little boy, born in a poor family, many many years ago. His people lived a little away from Hastinapura, the capital of the Kuru kings. They used to clean other people’s dirt for a profession.
And for this reason they were shunned by society. Ekalavya and other kids of his group knew they too had to follow their parents’ professions.
Their parents often told them, “You are not meant to go to school. What use is school for carrying garbage which is your only job?”
“Don’t go near those people; they are high born, we are low born.”
Limits of the Mind
Limits of the Mind [Illustration by Shinod AP]
Ekalavya didn’t understand.
“Why, but why?” he asked his mother. She replied “God set these limits.”
“God! Why would God want nice things for them and dirty things for us? Hasn’t God made all of us?” Ekalavya asked.
She sighed, “Darling I don’t know, but there are bounds we cannot cross, this is God’s rule.”
Ekalavya became quiet. From that day the only important thing for him was to understand the meaning of “limit”.
You know, kids (and grown ups) are sometimes cruel. One day Ekalavya and his friends trapped a little ant and were watching it try to escape. The ant tried and tried till it found a little opening at the edge of the trap and escaped.
Other children moved to trap it again but Ekalavya stopped them shouting, “The brave ant has broken the bounds. Limits are meant to be broken. I am free, free”.
One day, Ekalavya saw beautiful chariots come into the forest near his village. He saw boys of his age get out of the chariot one by one. What lovely clothes they wore!
Last, an old man with snowy white hair and spotless white clothes came out looking stern and calm. The boys seemed a little scared of the old man but with one dusky handsome boy, the old man’s behaviour was different, he smiled and patted this boy on the head.