Episode Synopsis "32 – Why Tigers never Attack Men Unless they are Provoked"
Listen "32 – Why Tigers never Attack Men Unless they are Provoked"
More episodes of the podcast West African Folk Tales
- 01 – How We Got The Name Spider Tales
- 02 – How Wisdom Became The Property Of The Human Race
- 03 – Anansi and Nothing
- 04 – Thunder and Anansi
- 05 – Why the Lizard Continually Moves his Head up and Down
- 06 – Tit For Tat
- 07 – Why White Ants Always Harm Man’s Property
- 08 – The Squirrel and the Spider
- 09 – Why We See Ants Carrying Bundles As Big As Themselves
- 10 – Why Spiders are Always Found in Corners
- 11 – Anansi and the Blind Fisherman
- 12 – Adzanumee and her Mother
- 13 – The Grinding-stone that Ground Flour by Itself
- 14 – Morning Sunrise
- 15 – Why the Sea-turtle When Caught Beats Its Breast with Its Forelegs
- 16 – How Beasts And Serpents First Came Into The World
- 17 – Honourable Minu
- 18 – Why the Moon and Stars Get Light from the Sun
- 19 – Ohia and the Thieving Deer
- 20 – How the Tortoise got its Shell
- 21 – The Hunter and the Tortoise
- 22 – Kwofi and the Gods
- 23 – The Lion and the Wolf
- 24 – Maku Mawu and Maku Fia
- 25 – The Robber and the Old Man
- 26 – The Leopard and the Ram
- 27 – Why the Leopard Can Only Catch Prey on Its Left Side
- 28 – Quarcoo Bah-Boni
- 29 – King Chameleon and the Animals
- 30 – To Lose an Elephant for the Sake of a Wren is a Very Foolish Thing to Do
- 31 – The Ungrateful Man
- 32 – Why Tigers never Attack Men Unless they are Provoked
- 33 – The Omanhene Who Liked Riddles
- 34 – How Mushrooms First Grew
- 35 – Farmer Mybrow and the Fairies