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Botswana Bushman Fights For Survival
BBC ^ | 8-15-2002 | John Simpson

Posted on 08/19/2002 6:14:30 PM PDT by blam

Thursday, 15 August, 2002, 16:10 GMT 17:10 UK

Botswana Bushman fights for survival

President Mogae has said Bushmen are 'stone age creatures'

John Simpson
BBC World Affairs Editor

In Botswana the Bushmen, or San, face destruction as a separate ethnic group.

The only concession most San made to the 21st century was wearing clothes

President Festus Mogae once described them as 'Stone Age creatures' for whom there was no place in the modern world, and the Bostwana Government is chasing them off their traditional hunting-lands.

Diamonds, the curse of modern Africa, have been discovered there.

But when I travelled to the distant north-east of Namibia, bordering Botswana, I found conditions there rather better.

Not that the San are entirely safe - an Australian mining company thinks it has found diamonds under Tsumkwe East, the area where the Bushmen have found their safest sanctuary in Namibia.

But at present they are able to live and hunt in their traditional ways, after a century of being hunted and forcibly removed, first by German colonists, and then by the apartheid regime in South Africa.

Safe distance

I had heard the usual depressing stories, but in Tsumkwe East the San are far enough away from towns to be fairly safe from alcohol and AIDS.

The main threat comes from tunerculosis, but a British aid agency, Health Unlimited, has scored what it believes is a world first in Tsumkwe East by treating the Bushmen in their own villages instead of taking them to hospital.

As wanderers, they find it impossible to stay immobile for six months. Health Unlimited claims an 84% cure rate there.

The Bushmen are being chased off their traditional hunting-lands

Travelling from one small group of grass-covered huts in the bush to the next, I found that the only concession most San made to the 21st century was wearing clothes.

Otherwise they hunt enthusiastically in their ancient fashion, with small bows and tiny, unflighted arrows whose barbs they smear with poison from the larvae of Chrysomelidae beetles.

Often they chase a kudu or an eland for four or five days before it becomes exhausted and can be quickly despatched.

Hunting is exciting and dangerous, and for this reason the teenagers and young men of the San prefer it to drifting off to the nearby towns.

Hunting music

I came across a couple of San boys who told me they played in a band: I was even more depressed when they told me that one of their group played the guitar.

But when I asked them what music they played, they said 'Songs about hunting kudu and eland.'

They themselves hunted three days a week, they said.

Most of the San people in Tsumkwe East are from the Jo/'hoansi tribe (the name means 'the right people', or 'the real people').

The Bushmen have sought sanctuary in Namibia

Like other Bushmen, they have four complex clicks in their language, which can only be expressed in writing by using the kind of characters you usually press by accident on a computer.

Some ethnologists believe that although the Bushmen have always been persecuted ever since the first dominant African groups spread to southern Africa between 2,000 and 3,000 years ago, even groups as powerful as the Zulu gradually incorporated the Bushmen clicks into their own languages.

Healing dance

One evening in the village of Djoxkho I watched a dance of healing for a man whose back had been injured; perhaps while hunting.

A circle of 10 women, young and old, gathered round a wood fire and began singing a gentle, complex song while clapping their hands in a completely different set of rhythms.

Half a dozen men, one in his 90's and one a teenager, danced in slow and stately fashion around the circle, singing and chanting.

Then the oldest man, his baggy shirt hitched up round his waist to show his legs, scrawny yet still tough, went into the circle and grabbed two handfuls of burning embers in his bare hands, apparently without harm.

By now in a deep trance, he dropped the embers and went over to the injured man, throwing his arms around him.

All the while, as the fiery sun went down and the stars of the Namibian bush came out, startlingly bright, the women kept up their chanting.

It was, I felt, like listening to the sound of the Stone Age.

And unlike the President of Botswana, I mean that with the greatest respect.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: botswana; bushman; fights; for; survival
Some things I know about Bushmen:

* There are no longer any pure Bushmen, they are mixed with the Bantu(blacks)
* The San Bushmen are believed to be the oldest residents of Africa.
* The San Bushmen are Mongoloids (not Negro) and their children even have 'Mongoloid Spots'.
* The San Bushmen women have a unique 'apron' over their genital area.
* They are recorded in ancient Egyptian records.
* They were the folks featured in the movie, The Gods Must Be Crazy
* One guy even believes that they are the leprechauns of Irish legend. They do have all the traits, even pointed ears.

1 posted on 08/19/2002 6:14:30 PM PDT by blam
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To: blam
* One guy even believes that they are the leprechauns of Irish legend. They do have all the traits, even pointed ears.

Sure, but 'tis the Black Irish! <|:)~

But seriously, weren't these the people who donated their most prized possessions to the U.S. -- cows -- in sympathy for 9/11?

If so, we owe 'em.

2 posted on 08/19/2002 6:19:38 PM PDT by martin_fierro
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To: martin_fierro
"But seriously, weren't these the people who donated their most prized possessions to the U.S. -- cows -- in sympathy for 9/11?"

You are correct.

3 posted on 08/19/2002 6:37:34 PM PDT by blam
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To: martin_fierro
"Sure, but 'tis the Black Irish! <|:)~ "

No, that would be the Fomorians.

Fomorians

4 posted on 08/19/2002 6:47:07 PM PDT by blam
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To: blam
The main threat comes from tuberculosis...

And from empty Coke bottles being tossed out of airplanes.

5 posted on 08/19/2002 7:09:08 PM PDT by Verginius Rufus
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To: blam
My older brothers remember that their grade school text books contained maps having vast areas of the world blank, holding only the word, "unexplored."

Looks like all the remaining hunter-gatherers will soon vanish.

Remember, you younger Freepers, so you can tell your grandchildren that when you were young, people still walked the earh living in the stone age.

And remember how much can change in a lifetime--especially these days.

Amazing.

6 posted on 08/19/2002 7:37:16 PM PDT by Age of Reason
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To: Age of Reason
"Remember, you younger Freepers, so you can tell your grandchildren that when you were young, people still walked the earth living in the stone age."

I've read 2-3 books on these folks and they are from the stone age. They are small, shy and retreating people. They have never been know to fight with anyone. Quite likeable actually.

7 posted on 08/19/2002 7:50:45 PM PDT by blam
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To: blam
They have never been know to fight with anyone.

I suspect warfare to the death was an invention of agricultural societies, where the loser was unable to abandon his land by running away, and where there was no decent place to fee to anyway that was not already occupied.

Because if there were enough unclaimed environment remaining to to move to, they would have been hunting and gathering in the first place instead of farming.

8 posted on 08/19/2002 8:49:39 PM PDT by Age of Reason
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To: Age of Reason
Today 2002, Half of the worlds population has never used a telephone. Think about the implications.
9 posted on 08/19/2002 8:58:43 PM PDT by ElectricRook
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To: martin_fierro; blam
The cows were donated by the Masai tribesmen. Thye are very tall and sre not the same as bushmen.
10 posted on 08/20/2002 1:04:23 AM PDT by crazykatz
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To: crazykatz
"The cows were donated by the Masai tribesmen. Thye are very tall and sre not the same as bushmen."

I stand corrected. The Masai are the folks who puncture a blood vein on their cows and then drink the blood for protein.

11 posted on 08/20/2002 6:03:34 AM PDT by blam
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