Dimdima
Online Children's Magazine from India
 
					
					      A group of monkeys decide to go on a fast one day. 
	"Before we begin, I think we should  keep  the food with which we'll  break the fast ready," counselled the old monkey chief.
	The monkeys  nodded their heads in agreement. The youngsters were sent in search of food. They returned with  huge hands of  delicious-looking  bananas.  
 	"I think each of us should keep our share of bananas with us before we begin our fast, so that we don't  spend time  distributing them after we break our fast. You can imagine how hungry we all will be by then!" said the chief's wife. 
	The monkeys liked the idea and they collected their share of the bananas. 
	"Why don't we peel one banana and keep it ready to eat? " said one of the youngsters.
	"Yes, let's do that," shouted a fat  monkey in agreement. Just looking at the bananas was making him hungry. 
	"All right," said the monkey chief. "We shall  peel the bananas but under no condition  should we  eat them."
So the  monkeys peeled their bananas and carefully kept them ready for eating in the evening. 
 	"Can  I  keep the banana in my mouth? I promise not to eat it  till evening. Please!" a little monkey  asked his father.
	"Why don't we all put a banana in our mouth? That way  we can chew it immediately when we break the fast," said his father, who had agreed to go on the fast only because his wife had not given him a choice.  "As long as we don't eat it, it should be fine," he added. 
	So, the monkeys put the bananas in their mouths. One by one they eyed each other uncomfortably as they began their fast - and as you can imagine, within no time at all,  the bananas disappeared down their gullets. And that was the end of their fast!
 — A folktale from Karnataka, retold by Meera Nair
      
					
Dimdima is the Sanskrit word for ‘drumbeat’. In olden days, victory in battle was heralded by the beat of drums or any important news to be conveyed to the people used to be accompanied with drumbeats.
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Dimdima.com, the Children's Website of Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan launched in 2000 and came out with a Printed version of Dimdima Magazine in 2004. At present the Printed Version have more than 35,000 subscribers from India and Abroad.