In this adaptation of an early Kafka story, a soldier is taken prisoner in the night by a pack of jackals. Offering a pair of scissors, they demand that he use the makeshift weapon to kill his sleeping friends. He takes the scissors, and...

In the original story 'Jackals and Arabs', the traveler is European and the military men are Arabs, but in this retelling, those details don't seem to be important.

This is an intriguing parable and one that I don't completely grasp. Much of Kafka's writing was cryptic and open to interpretation though.

I'd be curious to here interpretations from fellow sifters.

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