preview

Essay About Sey Vanu

Good Essays

A fairytale for the young and the young of mind

Once upon a time a little girl lived in a small village on an island in the middle of a vast, vast ocean. Her name was Sey-Tu. Sey-Tu was known on the island for her beautiful black hair and her inquisitive mind. But most of all she was known as the girl with the unusual large feet.
Sey-Tu lived in a small house with her father, mother, grandmother and her brother Vanu. The house was located at the edge of the small village, near the beach. In the garden there were large palm trees that would wave softly in the wind. The trees brought shade at day time and they waved in some cool air into the house at night.
Because of her large feet Sey-Tu always had troubles walking to the village school over …show more content…

She learned to swim faster and faster and dive deeper and deeper. Her grandmother therefore made special glasses for Sey-Tu so she could see under water, goggles. This was the best gift Sey-Tu ever received. Above the water Sey-Tu could see nothing with the googles on, everything was blurry. But as soon as she put her head under water, everything changed. She saw fishes in all the colours of the rainbow. Big fishes, small fishes, beautiful shells at the bottom, the coral. Sey-Tu was completely enchanted by the underwater …show more content…

Her grandmother said that surely she must have been mistaken. ’You can’t suddenly swim twice as fast’ she said to Sey-Tu. But Sey-Tu insisted, so her grandmother said to come to the beach with her in the morning to see. The next morning proved that Sey-Tu was right.
Grandmother burst out in tears after Sey-Tu circled the island in half an hour. Sey-Tu thought that she had made her grandmother proud, and that these were happy tears. But no, these tears were the saddest tears ever.
‘So it is happening’, said grandmother and Sey-Tu asked her what was happening.
‘Well’, said grandmother, ‘you know that we live on a small island in the middle of a vast ocean. The ocean separates us from other islands’. ‘Yes’, said Sey-Tu, ‘like the island of auntie, it takes us a whole day to sail there’.
Grandmother started explaining that on the world were many islands, even continents. That in all these places other humans live, 7 billion of them. This number didn’t mean anything to Sey-Tu, who could count to one hundred.
Grandmother continued to talk, and told about factories, airplanes, cars, trains and busses. About pollution, dirty water and food shortages. Sey-Tu and Vanu, who had just joined, were listening in amazement although there was much they did not

Get Access