Stories For Childrens In Telugu !free! May 2026
Let’s keep that tomorrow alive.
“Na koduku kanna parula koduku melu” – Someone else’s clever child may outsmart your own, but a calm mind always wins.
Once, a hungry crane lived near a pond full of fish. He pretended to be sad. Fish: “Why are you crying, uncle?” Crane: “Farmers will drain this pond tomorrow. I weep for you.” The fish panicked. The crane offered, “I can carry you one by one to a bigger lake.” Greedy fish agreed. But the crane flew to a rock, ate each fish, and threw the bones down. Finally, a crab asked for help. The crane carried him high, but the crab saw the bones below. Crab: “Uncle, my shell is too hard. Let me hold your neck with my claws to balance.” The crane agreed. When they flew over the rock, the crab squeezed tightly and cut the crane’s neck. The crane fell, and the crab crawled home safely. stories for childrens in telugu
The Clever Crab (తెలివైన పీత)
In a world of Cocomelon and YouTube shorts, Telugu children’s stories (బాలల కథలు) are making a quiet, powerful comeback. And for good reason. Let’s keep that tomorrow alive
Tomorrow night, turn off the TV. Light a lamp. And say: “Nenu oka purana katha chepthanu... vinadaaniki ready na?” (“I will tell an old story... are you ready to listen?”)
Screens give dopamine. Stories give soul. The Telugu language is not just words – it is the lullaby of our ancestors, the laughter of Tenali Ramakrishna, and the wisdom of every grandmother who ever said, “Malli repu cheptha” (I’ll tell the rest tomorrow). He pretended to be sad
Remember the sound of rain on a tin roof, the smell of jasmine, and your grandmother’s voice saying, “Vinara... okka katha chepthanu” (Listen... I will tell you a story)? That is the golden thread of childhood in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana.