The Blue Jackal — Short Story with Vocabulary for Kids

The Blue Jackal — Short Story with Vocabulary | English1to5.com
📖 Moral Stories

The Blue Jackal — Short Story with Vocabulary for Kids

A jackal falls into blue dye and pretends to be king — don’t pretend to be someone you’re not!

📖 360 words ⏱️ 4 min ⭐⭐ Medium (Grade 2-3) 📚 15 vocabulary 📖 Story 10 of 45

📖 The Blue Jackal

In the ancient forests of Rajasthan, there lived a jackal named Changu. He was not a very brave jackal. In fact, the other animals often bullied him because he was small and weak.

One evening, Changu was being chased by a pack of dogs. He ran and ran until he came to a village. In the village, he saw a large tub filled with blue dye that a washerman used for colouring clothes.

Without thinking, Changu jumped into the tub to hide from the dogs! SPLASH! The dogs ran past without seeing him.

When Changu climbed out, he was completely blue! His fur, his tail, his ears — everything was bright blue!

“What happened to me?” he gasped, looking at his reflection in a puddle. Then a cunning idea came to his mind.

Changu went back to the forest. When the other animals saw him, they were amazed.

“What kind of animal are you?” asked the deer. “We have never seen anything like you!”

“I am a divine creature sent from heaven!” announced Changu in a loud, commanding voice. “I have been sent to be your king!”

The animals were scared and impressed. A blue animal? He must be special! They made him their king. The lion, the tiger, the elephant — everyone obeyed Changu.

Changu lived like a king. He ate the best food, slept in the best spot, and gave orders to everyone. He even banished all the other jackals from the forest so nobody would recognize him.

But one night, a pack of jackals outside the forest began to howl at the moon. “Awooo! Awooo!”

Changu heard the howling. And instinctively, without thinking, he lifted his head and howled too! “AWOOOO!”

All the animals stared at him. “He’s howling like a jackal!” said the tiger. “He IS a jackal! He’s been deceiving us!”

The animals chased the blue jackal out of the forest. Changu ran away, ashamed and alone.

“I should have been happy being myself,” thought Changu sadly. “Pretending to be someone else never lasts.”

And so Changu learned: the truth always comes out. Be proud of who you are.

💡 Moral of the Story

“Don’t pretend to be someone you’re not. The truth always comes out.”

📚 Vocabulary — 15 New Words

ancient
प्राचीन
Very old, from long ago
“India has many ancient temples and monuments.”
bullied
तंग किया
Treated someone cruelly, picked on
“It’s wrong to bully smaller children at school.”
dye
रंग/रँगाई
Substance used to colour things
“The artist used natural dye to colour the fabric.”
completely
पूरी तरह
Totally, entirely, 100%
“The homework is completely finished!”
reflection
प्रतिबिम्ब
Image seen in a mirror or water
“She saw her reflection in the calm lake.”
cunning
चालाक
Clever in a sneaky, tricky way
“The cunning fox tricked the crow into dropping the cheese.”
amazed
चकित/हैरान
Very surprised, full of wonder
“We were amazed by the magician’s tricks.”
divine
दिव्य
From God or heaven, holy
“The temple had a divine atmosphere.”
commanding
आदेशपूर्ण
Speaking with authority and power
“The captain spoke in a commanding voice.”
impressed
प्रभावित
Feeling admiration
“The teacher was impressed by the neat handwriting.”
obeyed
आज्ञा मानी
Followed orders or rules
“The dog obeyed its owner and sat down.”
orders
आदेश
Commands, instructions to follow
“The captain gave orders to the team.”
recognize
पहचानना
Know someone from before
“I didn’t recognize him with his new haircut!”
deceiving
धोखा देना
Making someone believe something untrue
“Deceiving your friends is never a good idea.”
ashamed
शर्मिंदा
Feeling guilty or embarrassed
“He felt ashamed for cheating on the test.”

🔄 Words in Context

  • The ancient fort in Jaipur is over 400 years old.
  • Don’t bully anyone — treat everyone with kindness and respect.
  • Meera was amazed when she saw the Northern Lights in a documentary.
  • The new student was too ashamed to admit he didn’t understand the lesson.
  • Priya didn’t recognize her cousin because he had grown so tall!

❓ Comprehension Questions

1. Why did Changu jump into the tub?
2. What did Changu tell the animals he was?
3. Why did Changu banish other jackals?
4. How was Changu’s trick discovered?
5. The moral is:
6. ✏️ Why did the other animals believe Changu was divine?
7. ✏️ What does it mean to ‘be yourself’? Why is it important?
8. ✏️ Can you think of a situation where pretending to be someone else could go wrong?

📐 Grammar: Pronouns: He, She, They, It

Use pronouns to avoid repeating the same name again and again.
  • Changu was small. He was not brave. (he = Changu)
  • The animals saw him. They were amazed. (they = animals)
  • His fur was blue. (his = Changu’s)
  • The jackal howled. It was instinctive. (it = the howling)
  • Everyone obeyed Changu. (everyone = all animals)
💡 Pronouns prevent repetition: Instead of ‘Changu ran. Changu was scared. Changu hid.’ → ‘Changu ran. He was scared. He hid.’

🗣️ Retell the Story

Retell ‘The Blue Jackal’ in your own words:

  1. Who was Changu? Why was he unhappy?
  2. How did he become blue? What was his idea?
  3. What did he tell the forest animals?
  4. How was he finally caught?
  5. What lesson did Changu learn?

👨‍👩‍👧 Read Aloud Tips for Parents

  • Use a timid, scared voice for the bullied Changu, then switch to a royal, commanding voice when he becomes ‘king.’
  • Make a big SPLASH sound when Changu falls in the dye!
  • Build up to the howling scene — whisper: ‘And then… the jackals howled…’
  • Make the howl dramatic: ‘AWOOOO!’ Kids will howl along!
  • Discuss: ‘Why is it better to be yourself than to pretend to be someone else?’

❓ FAQ

What is ‘The Blue Jackal’ about?

A jackal falls into blue dye and tricks forest animals into thinking he’s a divine king. But when he instinctively howls at the moon, his true identity is revealed and he’s chased away. Moral: Don’t pretend to be someone you’re not.

Is this an Indian story?

Yes! It’s from the Panchatantra, one of the oldest collections of Indian fables (over 2,000 years old). The Panchatantra stories were written to teach wisdom through animal tales.

What vocabulary is taught?

15 words: ancient, bullied, dye, completely, reflection, cunning, amazed, divine, commanding, impressed, obeyed, orders, recognize, deceiving, ashamed.

What grammar is covered?

Pronouns — using he, she, they, it, his, her instead of repeating names. Essential for writing good paragraphs and stories.

What life lessons can kids learn?

Be authentic, don’t pretend to be someone you’re not, the truth always comes out, and it’s better to be a genuine version of yourself than a fake version of someone else. Also: bullying is wrong.

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