
This delightful little folktale is beautifully presented in 32 pages on an AR 1.7 level. Perfect for little ones to listen to and early readers to tackle on their own. The pictures are fun and engaging and the story teaches a great lesson of right and wrong in a silly memorable fashion.
A childless woman asks Allah to bless her with a child, even if it is just a cooking pot, and “Willa! She had a child! And it was a little pot!”
At first taken aback, the little pot professes her love for mama and thus the woman decides to take care of the little pot. Every day the little pot bumps against the walls as she rolls and jumps around making the sound, Tunjur.
One day the pot wants to go to the market by herself. Mama refuses as she is too young and doesn’t know right from wrong, but alas she talks her mom in to it, and off she goes.
She meets a rich man who wants to fill her with honey for his wife. The pot loves honey so she doesn’t protest, but she refuses to release her lid when the man gifts the pot to his wife. Angrily he throws the pot out the window and the little pot finds her way home. Mama assumes the honey seller sent it as a gift and little pot says nothing at all.
The next time little pot heads out she finds herself filled with the queen’s jewels and when she returns Mama is not happy that her little pot has taken things that do not belong to her.
When little pot heads out again to apologize, the rich man takes her to the king and queen for a reward, and they fill her with something to teach her a lesson. When she comes home to Mama, she has definitely learned her lesson.
The women in the story seem to wear hijab, most notably the wealthy man’s wife. The Mama asks Allah swt for a child, but other than that there is nothing religious in nature in the book and seeing as I checked it out from the public library, I think it appeals to all kids.