The Story of Anansi
The Story of Anansi
The Story of Anansi
PROFILE
Given Name: Kweku Anansi
Father: Nyame, the Great Sky God
Mother: Asase Ya, Earth goddess / Goddess of Fertility
Alias(es): Ananse, from the Twi language for spider. AKA:
Anansi / Annancy / Annansay /
Annancey / Anancyi / Anawnsy / Hanansi / Hanaansi / Compe
Anansi / John Anansi / Nansi /
Nance / Nancy / Mr. Nancy / Brother Anansi / Bro' Anancy /
Bra' Nancy / Bre-Nancy / Aunt Nancy
/ Miss Nancy / Anansi-Tori / Ti Malice / Uncle Bouki / The
Spider / Spider-man
Gender: Male
Race: Mixed (50% negroid, 50% supernatural)
Ethnicity: Akan
Specie: Deity-homo-arachnid
Date of Birth: Unknown (around the time when animals and
humans spoke to each other).
Day of Birth: Wednesday
Height: Little. Weight: Light.
Address(es): Kumasi, Ghana / Kingston and the counties of
Jamaica and other Caribbean
territories / The Sea Islands and South Carolina (Gullah),
USA / The island of Haiti / Paramaribo
and other districts within Suriname, South America /
Garifuna Communities, Belize, Central
America.
Country of Origin: Asanti, Ghana
Profession: Trickster
M.O. (Modus Operandi): Trickery; Quick-change-artist; Uses
his brains; Hustler; Outsmarts
persons larger than himself; Known to travel with
immigrants; Often gets in trouble for
a misdemeanor.
Main Enemy: Osebo the Leopard, A.K.A: "Bre'r Tiger",
Anansi the Spider
Ashanti
The Sky God said: "I am willing to sell the stories, but
the price is high. Many people have come to me offering to
buy, but the price was too high for them. Rich and powerful
families have not been able to pay. Do you think you can do
it?"
Anansi replied to the Sky God: "I can do it. What is the
price?"
"My price is three things," the Sky God said. "I must first
have Mmoboro, the hornets. I must then have Onini, the
great python. I must then have Osebo, the leopard. For
these thing I will sell you the right to tell all the
stories."
He went home and made his plans. He first cut a gourd from
a vine and made a small hole in it. He took a large bowl
and filled it with water. He went to the tree where the
hornets lived. He poured some of the water over himself, so
that he was dripping. He threw some water over the hornets,
so that they too were dripping. Then he put the bowl on his
head, as thought to protect himself from a storm, and
called out to the hornets: "Are you foolish people? Why do
you stay in the rain that is falling?"
The hornets thanked him and flew into the gourd through the
small hole. When the last of them had entered, Anansi
plugged the hole with a ball of grass, saying: "Oh, yes,
but you are really foolish people!"
He took his gourd full of hornets to Nyame, the Sky God.
The Sky God accepted them. He said: "There are two more
things."
Onini said: "It's useless and silly to argue when you can
find out the truth. Bring the pole and we will measure."
So Anansi laid the pole on the ground, and the python came
and stretched himself out beside it.
"When you stretch at one end, you get shorter at the other
end," Anansi said. "Let me tie you at the front so you
don't slip."
"Onini," Anansi said, "it turns out that my wife was right
and I was wrong. You are shorter than the pole and weaker.
My opinion wasn't as good as my wife's. But you were even
more foolish than I, and you are now my prisoner."
Anansi carried the python to Nyame, the Sky God, who said:
"There is one thing more."
Osebo, the leopard, was next. Anansi went into the forest
and dug a deep pit where the leopard liked to walk. He
covered it with small branches and leaves and put dust on
it, so that it was impossible to tell where the pit was.
Anansi went away and hid. When Osebo came prowling in the
black of night, he stepped into the trap Anansi had
prepared and fell to the bottom. Anansi heard the sound of
the leopard falling and he said: "Ah, Osebo, you are half-
foolish!"
When morning came, Anansi went to the pit and saw the
leopard there.
"I would gladly help you," Anansi said. "But I'm sure that
if I bring you out, I will have no thanks for it. You will
get hungry, and later on you will be wanting to eat me and
my children."
"Very well. Since you promise it, I will take you out,"
Anansi said.
"In that case," Anansi said, "you are not merely half-
foolish, you are all-foolish."
And he took his knife and cut the other rope, the one that
held the tree bowed to the ground. The tree straightened up
with a snap, pulling Osebo out of the hole. He hung in the
air head downward, twisting and turning. As he twisted and
turned, he got so dizzy that Anansi had no trouble tying
the leopard's feet with vines.
Anansi took the dizzy leopard, all tied up, to Nyame, the
Sky God, saying: "Here is the third thing. Now I have paid
the price."
Relation to Life