Today’s wisdom on exploitation and injustice in the Maldives: Rats nibbling on tender coconuts, bats drinking water | World News
Someone does the work, someone gets the benefit. This is the core of this old Maldivian proverb, explained through the imagery of vegetation. In the Maldives, coconut trees are more than just vegetation; It is a historical pillar of the island’s survival. Over the centuries, every part of the coconut tree has been put to good use: the leaves have been woven into thatched roofs, the trunks have been hollowed out to build traditional dhoni fishing boats, and the coconuts themselves provide vital hydration and nutrients to the sun-baked coral atolls.As the coconut tree dominates the natural landscape, it naturally also dominates people’s psychological and linguistic landscape. From this deep-rooted relationship with the island ecosystem emerged one of the most famous and true Maldivian proverbs:“Meeha kandaa kafe, vaulaa boa fene.”(The rats gnaw on the tender coconuts and the bats drink the water.)The quote is a sharp, unapologetic critique of universal human frustrations: exploitation of labor, theft of intellectual property, and unfair distribution of rewards. With simple yet vivid imagery of two common island animals, this proverb perfectly captures the painful reality of one enduring grueling preparation while the other leisurely enjoys the prize.
Opportunistic Bats and Diligent Rats
Unripe coconuts are strictly protected. It has a thick, dense, fibrous green outer skin followed by a hard woody inner shell. For a small rodent like the island rat, breaching this fortress is a difficult task. It requires hours of frantic, exhausting physical exertion. The rat must use its sharp incisors to violently tear away the tough fibers, piece by piece, grinding its own teeth, risking exposure to predators, and burning an enormous amount of energy just to puncture a small hole in the liquid chamber.Fruit bats, on the other hand, operate in a completely different ecosystem. It takes its time to glide effortlessly through the tropical night canopy. It has neither the dental anatomy nor the patience to chew thick coconut shells. On its own, a bat would never be able to drink the sweet water from a fresh, whole coconut.But Bat is an opportunist. It waits high up, watching the canopy. At the moment when the exhausted rat finally punctures its shell and retreats (perhaps scared away by the noise, or collapsing from fatigue), the bat falls from the night sky. It stuck its tongue into the carefully prepared hole and drank the cool, sweet water effortlessly.
Deep Wisdom About Parasitic Success
When Maldivians use this proverb in conversation, it is almost always to emphasize a deep sense of systemic or interpersonal injustice. This is a clear indictment of the success of parasitism on the island.In human society, “rats” are creators, workers, late-night builders, and grassroots workers. They are responsible for doing the heavy lifting, dealing with initial risks, and struggling through the mundane and painful phases of the project. “Bats” are slick opportunists, corporate credit thieves, middlemen, and charismatic free riders who are bad at creating but good at positioning themselves at the finish line.
Why this proverb endures
Because of its psychological accuracy. It doesn’t just describe the loss of material wealth; It describes the specific emotional sting of stolen motivation.If the fruit bats find their food elsewhere, the mice will be satisfied. The tragedy of this proverb is that the bat’s happiness is structurally dependent on the mouse’s pain. The Bats clearly used the Rats’ hard-earned breakthrough as a stepping stone for themselves.This proverb functions as a cultural warning system. In the close-knit community of the small Maldivian islands, harmony is maintained through mutual respect and sharing of burdens. Those who consistently behave like “bats”—taking from the community pool without contributing to preparedness—are quickly identified, socially isolated, and labeled as untrustworthy.This proverb reminds the “rats” of the world that making a breakthrough is only half the battle; once the hole is dug, it must be held. It forces us to build boundaries around our labor, demands that our ideas receive proper attribution, and ensures that those sitting at the table drinking water are the ones helping chew the crust.