Beedle the Bard — Tales for Charity

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“The Tales of Beedle the Bard”, by J.K Rowling, is a recent addi­tion to the pop­u­lar Harry Potter book series by the same author, telling the story of a young wiz­ard, destined to take part in one of the greatest battles between good and evil that ‘Muggles’ (non-​​magic folk) have ever known. Toward the end of the book series, young Mr. Potter comes into the pos­ses­sion of a book of magic fairy tales by, writ­ten by one Beedle the Bard, a Yorkshire-​​born man (we are not cer­tain of his magical lin­eage, as his life is greatly shrouded in mys­tery) who lived dur­ing the 15th cen­tury. This is that very book. The book of tales, passed down through the ages, from one magical gen­er­a­tion to the next.

The five tales doc­u­mented in “The Tales of Beedle the Bard” tell stor­ies of cour­age and valor, as well as car­ry­ing mor­als and mes­sages behind them. The main dif­fer­ence, how­ever, in com­par­ison to ‘Muggle’ tales, is that magic car­ries a more pos­it­ive trend, as apposed to evil, cack­ling witches, brood­ing over a smol­der­ing cauldron.

The mes­sages car­ried within the tales are echoed by a noble ges­ture, car­ried out by muggles who are exposed to Beedle’s tales. A por­tion of pro­ceeds from the sales of this magical antho­logy go towards the Children’s High Level Group, a char­ity set up by J.K Rowling and Baroness Nicholson of Winterbourne. As stated in the fin­ish­ing pages of “The Tales of Beedle the Bard”, ‘CHLG aims to bring an end to the use of large insti­tu­tions and pro­mote ways that allow chil­dren to live with fam­il­ies — their own, foster or national adopt­ive par­ents — or in small group homes.’ The char­ity is aimed at chil­dren who are liv­ing in insitu­tional hous­ing pro­jects due to dis­ab­il­ity, ill health and/​or lack of suf­fi­cient fund­ing in their fam­il­ies to assist with their health care.

If you have yet to read “The Tales of Beedle the Bard”, I strongly recom­mend it. The tales are suit­able for muggles of all ages, from read­ing age upward, and carry a moral behind each one, how­ever bizarre the story itself may seem. For a min­imal cost (approx. R100 at time of pur­chase), you get 5 wierd and won­der­ful tales (with com­ment­ary, penned by Professor Albus Dumbledore him­self) as well as head­line illus­tra­tions for each tale, craf­ted and penned by J.K Rowling, and aid­ing the CHLG in real­ising their aims.

For more info, or to pur­chase “The Tales of Beedle the Bard”, here are a few quick links:

“The Tales of Beedle the Bard” web­site.
– Exclusive Books, dir­ect link.

Have you read “The Tales of Beedle the Bard”? Share your thoughts on this post, and on the book, in the com­ments section.

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