When all the birds of the world assemble and decide that they are in need of a king, the wise hoopoe bird steps forward and offers to lead them to a mighty monarch who lives in a marvellous
mountain across seven valleys. The birds are initially excited at such an encounter, but upon realizing how long the journey will take, how uncertain the path, and how distant the destination,
they begin, one by one, to make excuses for not going on the journey.
Encouraged by the hoopoe, only thirty birds have the courage to set out on a quest to reach Mount Qaf, where the Simurgh, the king of all birds dwells. When they finally get there, the king
they had hoped for may not be what they had expected, but you must make the journey to find out.
The Birds' Journey to Qaf is based on The Conference of the Birds, the Sufi poem by the twelfth-century Persian poet Farid ud din Attar. The accompanying illustrations painted on ceramic tiles
echo a medium that was typically used in medieval Persia and the Middle East.