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  Letter from Sue and Ted Wright in Zambia  
             
 

January 3, 2007

Nature calls

Summer rains have begun at last—later than expected, but still we thank God. People can now plant their staple crop of white maize. Every day we see them carrying hoes, working the fields. Here, rain falls from November to March only. Last year was the first really good rainy season of this decade. Zambia and Malawi grew enough to feed their people. So far, predictions for 2007 have been mixed.

Although it’s good news to farmers, rain spells trouble for residents of crowded urban compounds. Roads turn into mud, potholes to lakes. Children drown within sight of their houses after slipping into deep, miry puddles. Mosquitoes breed and invade during the night. (Most of the windows lack fly screen.) Pit latrines can fill and overflow. Cholera develops. It’s a mess.

Meanwhile, out in the wild park lands, animals are beginning to stir. The grass is freshening. Antelopes, zebra, and wildebeest are mating. Large cats go on the prowl. However, for tourists it’s not all that great. Certain safari camps close for the season. Why? (1) They have to take you much farther into the bush, instead of waiting by a nice water hole. (2) Their vehicles get stuck in the mud. (3) Even if they manage to find animals, you can’t always see them because of the tall grass.

So what would be the ideal time to see animals? If that is your purpose, try September or October. During our hot spell at the end of dry season the grass is all withered, which means good visibility. Plus, the animals are thirsty; they have to stay near water. But since water holes have mostly vanished, they migrate instead toward the rivers. Certain tour operators forsake their Land Rovers and put clients on motorboats to get a close-up look.

Still, there are no guarantees on viewing. Witness Ted’s recent experience.

It was October 18. We were taking a rest by the long, deep lake that forms Malawi’s eastern border. Sue wanted to read, but Ted wanted to walk, so he signed up for a day hike through Nkhotakota Reserve. Call him brave or call him foolish: venturing out on foot during the heat. But he and a guide set off at 6:30 to go find elephants and more.

Yet they found none.

Photo of the remaijns of a brick house. It has no roof and the walls are breaking apart.
Ruins of a government house within the wildlife preserve, destroyed by poachers.

What they did find, besides a few smoldering fires set by poachers trying to concentrate their prey, was one lonely bushbuck, a crocodile, and a fish eagle. Not much for eight hours of walking.

Why such a sorry result?

The answer lies as near as the next village and as far as India and Japan. Poachers are destroying African wildlife and of course, in the long run, their own way of life.

Officially, the market for ivory has been closed and regulated for quite some time. International conservation treaties are in effect. Still, there is a thriving black market. Poachers shoot elephants, cut away the tusks, and carry them by night to their trucks. If they feel sufficiently safe, they then cut up the meat and hang it in the bush on drying racks. After several days it will go to a village where it might fetch less than 50 dollars. Still, it provides an important source of protein for residents of poor rural districts.

Bush meat also serves as a cultural icon, sort of a status symbol or a guilty pleasure, for wealthy city dwellers.

But food consumption is not the chief culprit. Quick profit is driving this business. Certain animal parts get sold for witchcraft, others for ornamentation, others still for aphrodisiacs. In Asia, the horn of the rhino fetches a fortune. An elephant’s tail makes a good-luck charm. So do eagle feathers, snakes’ teeth, leopard skins, etc. Poachers always take the high-priced pieces first. Then, at the sound of an approaching game scout, they abandon the carcass completely.

And yet the poachers often carry better weapons!

Photo of a man standing by a fence holding an  object.
Game scout in Malawi with the tip of tail of an elephant's tail. Poachers shot the animal, but had to flee before it died.

Ted’s escort was a government scout, moonlighting as a guide because of poor pay. He showed Ted the burned-out ruins of his house, attacked by poachers while he was collecting salary. In this war for conservation the main combatants are poor. It’s a vicious, deadly contest, not only for the game. At one point Ted and his guide heard voices coming from some thickets across the river. Several voices could easily mean several weapons. The guide was carrying only one. Rather than reveal their presence, the two decided to be quiet and move on. Later they discovered: those voices belonged to game scouts. And the scouts also knew they weren’t alone.

We did not come here for tourism, of course. Nor do the people and churches who visit. We enjoy an occasional outing to the country, and so do our guests. So do our hosts, if they can afford it. Issues of conservation are rather complex. Still, the bottom line seems clear: Nature is losing. Whether through de-forestation, or poaching, or global warming, or wasteful mining practices, or whatever, we are failing as stewards of the Lord’s good creation. And He can see that even here, in this vast and beautiful land.

Until the whole world knows,

Yours faithfully,

Sue and Ted Wright

The 2007 Mission Yearbook for Prayer & Study, p. 337

 
             
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