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Tension between crows and pigeons in the forest due to friction


- You have eighteen bends-octagons

- The entire Kagdasamaj was a supporter of Maharaja Singh, so he was in awe of him in the forest. The pigeons did not have the political backing they needed. There were frequent conflicts between these two societies

Venom has existed between many animals and birds of the forest for centuries. There is friction between societies like dog-cat, rat-cat, snake-snake, pada-bull, leopard-leopard, red ant-black ant, horse-donkey. In birds, a similar fight is going on between Crows and Pigeons. Crows are very cunning. Centuries ago, an ancestor of crows became an owl against a fox and lost a spicy puri in return for false praise, but then crows also grew. The crows who raised the water level by throwing stones in the pond gradually became clever. That is to say, the crows would become supporters of those in power and thus establish their dominance in the forest.

Ever since the lion came to power, the crows had become staunch lionists. Being a supporter of Singh, he promoted various schemes of the king. Raja Singh created a new social media department called 'IT Cell' and the crows got a key role in propaganda along with the sheep society and the bull society. The work that sheep and oxen could do in a herd, but only in a close area, was done by crows flying long distances. The Maharaja was very happy with the entire Kagada society. Crows became useful to Raja Singh as they were adept at silencing opponents with their screeching noises.

As the crows came to be believed by Raja Singh, his arrogance also increased. They used to come into conflict with him at any time. Grabbing someone's whole. Peeing into someone's pudding. Injuring many forest dwellers by stabbing them in the head. Pigeons started to become the biggest victims of the bullying of crows. Incidents of bloody violence between the crow community and the pigeon community in the jungle are often flashed in the 'Jungle News'.

Pigeons were originally considered to be peaceful birds. The pigeon's prestige rose ever since the first king of the jungle gave it special honor and allowed it to participate in the parade for the first time. The crows objected that the king was very fond of pigeons. The pigeon community used to exchange messages for that king. Pigeons who delivered letters without any confusion and keeping the message secret became everyone's favorite. Yes, one of the complaints of the pigeons was that the whole society is a lot of dung. It fills the gap anywhere. But against his peaceful nature, the forest dwellers used to conduct this campaign.

The crows, burning with jealousy of the pigeons, then quietly watched the pigeons fly away, but spent years waiting for an opportunity. When Maharaja Singh came to power, the crows' decades of waiting came to an end. In order to gain more respect and influence than the traditional rivals pigeons have received in history, the entire paper community started doing Maharaja Singh's work with heart, mind and wealth. Kagadabhai Kankasia, Acting President of the Kagda Samaj, 'inspired' the society to fight pigeons.

In a hoarse voice Kagadabhai Kankasia roused the whole society by giving an acid speech saying: 'Our traditional rivals, the pigeons, have so far received so much respect. As the erstwhile kings of the jungle shouldered the pigeons, these pigeons littered our areas and littered our habitats, but those days are gone. Maharaja Singh is pleased with our work. There has never been a better time to teach pigeons a lesson. We all have to work hard and attack the pigeons.' Making a religious connection befitting a leader, Kagadabhai Kankasia continued: 'Our ancestor Kakabhushundi Maharaj was a great devotee of Rama. Can't we create history by being lion devotees?'

'Jai Kakbhushundi! Jai Kakabhushundi!' The entire Kagadasamaj chanted slogans. Seeing the opportunity, Kagadabhai Kankasia gave a new slogan: 'Look there, peck!' The crow society took up the slogan and all the crows came out to target the pigeons.

Incidents of bloody conflict between crows and pigeons started appearing everywhere in the forest. The crows called to the doves' nests. Injured numerous ducks. Kabutar Kanafusia, a youth of the pigeon community, sent a video message to the entire community to be aware of the attack and sent his nephew Preet Parewada to file a police complaint. Security officer Babban Bilada refused to file a complaint and chased Preet away with two sticks from above. The distraught pigeons also launched counter-attacks. Prema Parevdi, the girlfriend of pigeon Kanafusia, created a female team and shared videos and photos of atrocities on pigeons on social media.

All those materials reached opposition leader Sasalabhai. Sasalabhai interacted with pigeon families who were victims of the attack.

At the same time, the traditional crow-dove conflict took on a political colour. Pigeons were making demonstrations everywhere and crows were attacking every chance they got. Due to the struggle of both, the atmosphere of the forest became tense.

(Sequentially:)



This post first appeared on The Editorial News, please read the originial post: here

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Tension between crows and pigeons in the forest due to friction

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