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Volker Schmidt

The Land of the White Birds

An environmental adventure that gives children hope and empowers them to create a better future

Pictures by Barbara Hahn – Activities by Erika Steinle

Not a preface but thanks.

It is very rewarding to see how many people have come to realise how important their own contribution is when it comes to help change our society's attitude towards our environment. Love of nature as well as an active responsibility to preserve it are concerns we all share; our children in particular will be called to take action in this area. Respect for creation, knowledge of the natural processes and a willingness to accept our duty of care to preserve a planet worth living on – all this must become a taken-for-granted part of our children's thinking and feeling. These are the very aims towards which this book seeks to contribute.

It has taken a long time for THE LAND OF THE WHITE BIRDS to see the light of day in its present form. Many people have generously provided advice, support and criticism, and more often than not a great deal of time. This is not the work of a few individuals – it is a book by many for many.

To list the names of all those who were involved would not be of great gain to most readers. We hope that everyone who holds the book in their hands, aware of their own contribution, will be glad to have been part of its creation. They can be sure of our gratitude – and a harmonious coexistence of human beings and nature in the future might be their reward.

The author

About the author

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Volker Schmidt has a background in biology, geography and teaching, and writes for the Fränkische Landezeitung. Alongside journalism, in his literary work he seeks to contribute to creating an awareness of the evolution of nature, people and society today and the many-faceted challenges facing us in these areas. His books are accessible too, and engaging for, adults and teenagers alike, and their scope reaches beyond narrow local concerns. The author spent significant periods of his life living and working abroad, and his literary fingerprint reflects this. His books straddle the divide between thought-provoking critique and fairytale.

On account of his many-layered and poignant environmental poetry and his original short stories, he has been dubbed – justifiably – a “Robin Hood with a witty pen” (Süddeutscher Rundfunk).

Volker Schmidt is married with grown-up children. He lives with his wife in a small rose paradise, in touch with nature, in the Frankonia region of Germany.

First edition 2015

Publisher: tredition GmbH, Hamburg

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or distributed in any way form or by any means without the prior written permission of the publisher or the author.

Translation Jochen Scherer

Responsible for all contents: Volker Schmidt, Landvogt Heinrich Straße 10, 91602 Dürrwangen, Germany

Typesetting and cover graphics: Hans Schmutterer, Oberkemmathen

Internal illustrations: Barbara Hahn und Erika Steinle

Printed on permanent, acid-free paper.

ISBN e-Book edition 978-3-7323-7304-8

ISBN Pocket edition 978-3-7323-7302-4

ISBN Hardcover edition 978-3-7323-7303-1

This book is also available in German, titled "Traumland am fernen Ufer"

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Contents

The First Evening

Mull

The Chamber of Keys

The Monster

Tummy Ache

The Children's Convoy

Nick's Dream

The Spring

The Black Dove

A Visitor from the Seaside

Precious Water

The singing trees

Emergency in the Forest

The Riddle

The Big Road

Fire Pipes

Home

The Land of the White Birds

The Miracle

Freedom

The Fortress

The Black Ghost

Nick's Question

Postscript

Tasks to go with the story

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The First Evening

Dong - dong - dong - dong - dong - dong – dong.

The church bell had just struck seven o'clock, and the red disk of the sun was slowly disappearing behind the trees on the edge of the wood. Soon, dusk would begin to fall.

"Koark – koark - koark," a distant cry could be heard. The crying became louder and clearer, it was coming closer, and now you could see a dark bird soaring over from the city. It alighted on a bare branch of an elder bush just beside a long hedgerow. Its plumage was inky, almost black, and the sinking sun made it shimmer marvellously in all colours of the rainbow. The bird's legs were shining black, so was its beak, and one of its eyes, like a mysterious diamond, was even more black and beautiful. This was Croak, the old raven, who came here every night at the same time.

"Has the bleeding finally stopped? Is your head still aching? Can you really not see anything at all with your injured eye?"

The one asking was Nick, a young hare, who had already been waiting under the elder bush for a while. Every night, the two would meet here for a chat. Nick was a very beautiful hare. His back glowed golden brown, his slim ears were white on the inside with funny black tips. The fur on his stomach flashed bright yellow, and he had a bunch of strong black whiskers under his nose. But the most beautiful thing about him were his eyes. They gleamed like two honey-coloured pieces of amber, with a coal-black circle in the centre of each. Nick still had both his eyes.

"Why must this happen to me?" wailed Croak. "Why should that boy hit me in the eye with his air rifle? I haven't done him any harm; I have neither stolen anything from him nor teased him, and really, I usually like them, those cheerful little humans!"

Nick couldn't understand it either. He was sorry to see Croak in pain, destined to live with one eye only, perhaps for the rest of his life, for an eye doesn’t grow back like a feather or a broken claw.

"Listen," Nick said, trying to get Croak to think of something else. "Have you heard the news from the hedgerow where I live? The Partridge family have fourteen children this year, the nightingale has returned from Africa and has already started building her nest, and many other birds have returned home from down south, too. There are lovely butterflies about and colourful beetles, and the bumblebees have settled in the mouse hole again, just like last year, and all along my hedgerow you can smell beautifully scented flowers and aromatic herbs. I have built three snug hollows to sleep in for myself there. They are warmed by the sun and well concealed so that neither the fox nor the hawk will find me; and a pretty young lady-hare has moved in just a few steps further down."

"Nice place you live in," groaned Croak, still in pain. "You know, there seems to be an evil spell on my park in the outskirts of the city. All the leaves on the trees are turning yellow already in mid-summer rather than in the autumn as they used to. There's a piercing stench all over the place and sometimes my feathers are covered in sticky dust. The noise in our town makes my ears ring, and all the birds are much more tired than in the past; we're just tired, tired, tired all the time. None of us any longer feels like playing around in the branches of the trees, let alone sing joyfully."

For a long while, Nick and Croak sat together silently, thinking of the park, the hedgerow and the boy with the air rifle. Countless stars had risen in the sky, there was a faint mist, and a cool smell of grass made the two feel sleepy.

"There aren't any more stars in the sky above my city either - almost none. There are only lights, neon signs and dirty black smog" Croak said, and with a frown he took off to return to the tree that was his sleeping place, in the park on the edge of the city.

Nick watched a bat zoom past and cleaned his eyes, ears and whiskers with his front paws. Then he lolloped leisurely towards his favourite spot under the blackthorn bush, where he would dream until the new day.

Mull

While Croak and Nick were talking, something eerie had been happening at the bottom of the elder bush. Small cracks had sprung up in the earth and a little mound of loose black soil had risen out of the ground as if pushed by some invisible hand. From the centre of this mysterious mound the tip of a tiny pink snout was now poking out, gentle and moist, with a pair of little nostrils sniffing the air cautiously. Little by little, a head was coming into sight, covered with a silver-black, soft and velvety fur. A few strong, stubby whiskers were recognisable in the twilight. This peculiar creature didn't seem to have any eyes - but of course, there they were, but they were such tiny little black dots that they were easily overlooked in the dark fur even from a short distance. The little ears, too, were hardly noticeable.

The head of this strange creature was moving slowly from side to side, pushing the loose soil steadily outwards until a circular hole had formed. Now, two cute pale yellow little paws were appearing, as tiny as the hands of the dolls which the little humans played with.

This was Mull, the very special mole of the area. He lived in a maze of subterranean corridors only he alone knew his way around. His residence boasted a bedroom, several pantries and larders, a proper toilet, a secret emergency escape route and even a well chamber, situated deep down in the earth and always filled with fresh, clean water from the ground.

His friends considered Mull very special because he understood the different languages of all sorts of creatures, those of plants, animals and humans - and also because he was very knowledgeable about the world, even when it came to that peculiar world of the humans living in their towns and in the countryside. And what's more, he was a very special mole because in observing what was going on in the world he was always full of hope and happiness. And then, as the other moles put it, he had a wise eye for the future. He had a foreboding, sometimes even a clear vision, of the things that would come to pass.

Mull couldn't talk, he had no speech, but he was an attentive listener whenever there was something to be listened to. Then his thoughts would wander off to years to come, pondering the meaning of current events in nature and in the human realm for the future of our planet. On such occasions, he would actually see pictures of tomorrow's world before his inner eye.

Mull enjoyed listening in on Nick and Croak's evening conversations. Virtually every time the two met for a chat, his curious head and the two pale-yellow paws could be seen appearing in the centre of the mole-hill.

Mull knew about the evil spell hanging over the town that Croak had just described to Nick. But his intuition told him that there was hope that perhaps the future would be different.

When the two parted, Mull would retire very quietly into his subterranean world. Of course, he never forgot to carefully cover the door hole with loose soil, because of the cold and in case it would rain during the night. But as well as that, he was eager to conceal the existence of a lived-in mole's house at the elder bush from his enemies, the fox, the buzzard and the weasel. Better to be safe than sorry!

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The Chamber of Keys

I nearly forgot to tell you about the most important thing in Mull's house. There was a curious small, square chamber, just big enough for Mull to turn around in comfortably, and on one wall of this chamber a lot of keys were fitted, making it look like the keyboard of one of the computers the humans use. Mull wasn't able to use his hands to press the keys because the keys were too small and Mull's hands too big and clumsy. Mull's hands were made for digging. But if he used the tip of his snout, Mull was able to press the keys individually.

Behind the keys there were many thin wires, red ones, green ones, blue and yellow ones, and those wires all ran into a strange box. Poking out of the box, a silver metal pole ran into the earthen wall of the chamber. Where did it lead? What was this peculiar keyboard for?

The metal pole ran steeply upwards through the earth. Just next to a boulder near Nick and Croak's elder bush it stuck out of the ground a little, well hidden among tufts of grass.

But the keys, what did a mole need such keys for? Admittedly, no other mole on earth had such keys in his home, but this was Mull and he did have them - after all he was a very special mole who understood all sorts of human and animal languages and could look into the future.

The small keys were a secret that our very special mole guarded anxiously. When he touched them carefully with his snout, words would form such as 'flower', 'tree', 'sun', 'Nick', 'Croak'. But the words didn't come out written on paper or on a computer screen; rather, via the silver metal pole, they went out into the air as dream images. They entered into children's heads, where they were transformed into proper thoughts the children would dream or think.

Mull often felt like sending messages to the children, in particular after listening to Nick and Croak's evening chats. Then he would make his way into his chamber of keys, think his message over again in his head, take a deep breath, and start on his task. To try and hit the keys properly with his little snout, without making any mistakes, was quite arduous for him. Therefore, an hour's typing left him quite tired and he would go to bed immediately - almost immediately, that is, because every time he had accomplished his task he would make his way to one of his three pantries and eat a particularly fat earth-worm as a reward.