±«Óătv

In short

Themes: Loyalty; friendship; care; empathy.

Summary: This assembly, which is suitable for an act of collective worship, focuses on a story from the Buddhist tradition called ‘The Steadfast Parrot’.

Resources: ; an image to display showing . You may also wish to source an image of a parrot and / or a puppet parrot to ask the questions with.

The video

This story is a Buddhist tale.

Once upon a time, a parrot lived in a beautiful tree. The parrot always returned to the same tree and Shakra (King of the Gods) was impressed with the parrot’s loyalty to the tree. The King decided to put the parrot's loyalty to the test, so he removed all the leaves from the tree. The parrot was sad to see the tree without its leaves but it stayed loyal to the tree even though it was no longer beautiful. The parrot stayed with the tree day after day.

The King was now even more impressed with the loyalty of the parrot. There was a golden breeze, the King smiled, the leaves returned and the tree was beautiful once again. This can help us to reflect on the value of loyalty.

Video questions

  1. What colour was the parrot? (Green, yellow and blue)
  2. Where did the parrot live? (In a tree)
  3. Why did the parrot love the tree? (It loved its leaves that gave shade and the way it whispered in the wind)
  4. Who was Chakra? (King of the gods)
  5. What happened when the tree lost its leaves? (The parrot stayed with the tree)
  6. Why was the god Chakra impressed by the parrot? (Because the parrot was loyal and stayed with the tree)

Key links

Download / print the assembly framework ready for use

Assembly framework (pdf)

Click to display the image full size.

Loyalty

Suggested framework

1. Entry:
Play some video footage of parrots as children enter and / or play your chosen music and display the .

2. Introduction:
Ask the assembly what ‘loyalty’ means and gather responses. (Sticking with someone no matter what; people can ‘count on you’). Explain that everyone is going to watch a short video telling a story about loyalty and that while they are watching the children should think about the meaning of loyalty.

3. The video:.
Play the video. The duration is 3’ 51” and the final words are: ‘it was an old Buddhist tale. Goodbye!’

4. After the video – time to talk:.
Ask some or all of the video questions above to consolidate children’s understanding of it. Then lead a discussion by asking:

  • Why do you think loyalty is a good value to have? (People trust you; it shows you are responsible; you put others first; it shows you care; etc).
  • Are you loyal to a particular sports team? Why did you pick that team? (Children might talk about a link with a sports team through location or family loyalties).
  • How do you show your loyalty? (Children might talk about supporting and cheering for a sports team or wearing clothing with the sports team colours - eg a football kit).
  • How can you show loyalty to your family, your friends and your community?

5. Opportunity to sing:.Suggestions from ±«Óătv Collections below.

6. Opportunity to reflect:
Be still now as we think about some of the things we’ve heard today

We’ve heard an old Buddhist story about the importance of loyalty
and how the parrot remained loyal to tree no matter what

How do you show your loyalty to others
?
Think about three different ways that you could show loyalty to your friends

And why you think it’s important that you show loyalty to your friends

Think about what those friendships would be like without trust and without loyalty


7. Opportunity for prayer:
Dear God,
Thank you for the loyalty of others - those who stick with us when we are finding things hard and help us when we may be struggling.
Help us to be good friends, to show our loyalty so that our friends know that they can trust us and rely on us.
Amen.

Suggested songs

Song: 'Being a friend' (All about our school, no 8. Vocal version)

'Build up' (All about our school, no 12)

'Our school' - All about our school, no 9 (© Kate Walker / ±«Óătv)