1. The Africa of the great explorers,
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2. the huge land of hunting and adventure
adored by entire generations of children
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3. has disappeared forever.
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4. To that age-old Africa,
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5. swept away and destroyed
by the tremendous speed of progress,
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6. we have said farewell.
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7. The devastation, the slaughter,
the massacres which we assisted
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8. belong to a new Africa...
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9. one which if it emerges from its ruins
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10. to be more modern, more rational,
more functional, more conscious
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11. will be unrecognizable.
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12. On the other hand,
the world is racing toward better times.
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13. The new America rose from the ashes
of a few White man, all the redskins
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14. and the bones of millions of buffalo.
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15. The new, carved up Africa
will rise again
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16. upon the tombs of a few White men,
millions of black men,
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17. and upon those immense graveyards
that were once its game reserves.
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18. The endeavor is so modern and recent
that there is no room to discuss it
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19. at the moral level.
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20. The purpose of this film is only to bid
farewell to the old Africa that is dying
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21. and entrust to history
the documentation of its agony.
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22. The age of compromise has begun.
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23. For the first time,
the gardens of the Ocean Road Palace
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24. are open to the new African bourgeoisie
for the grand farewell party.
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25. Old and new masters search in the lanes
for imitation and symbiosis
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26. in the eagerness to find
something in common.
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27. And that's how two centuries of history
draw to a close.
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28. The last representative of
Her British Majesty
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29. leaves the scene graciously
in that climate of festive cordiality
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30. that always accompanies the departure
of a guest who has overstayed his welcome.
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31. In this remote immensity,
the wail of sirens and firing of cannons
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32. make no more din
than a child's birthday party.
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33. Europe is in a hurry to leave
and on tiptoe
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34. even if, all things considered,
it has given far more than it has taken.
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35. Europe, the continent that nursed Africa,
can no longer manage this big black baby
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36. that grew too quickly,
keeps bad company
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37. and what's more,
hates it because of its White skin.
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38. And so it is abandoned,
still cranky and immature,
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39. just at the moment
when it needs Europe the most.
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40. Africa comes out of its long Middle Age
and exchanges the spear for the gun.
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41. The soldiers of
the most famous African regiment
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42. formed by White men Who've lived
in the country for three generations
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43. lay down their arms
Without military honors,
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44. and trust the defense of their homes
and families to new hands.
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45. The first spontaneous demonstrations
take place
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46. controlled by
the new African police force.
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47. Products imported from African countries
that aren't yet independent are destroyed.
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48. First to go
are colonialist Portuguese eggs.
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49. Next it's the turn of
oranges from South Africa.
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50. And South African beer.
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51. Once the popular enthusiasm is unleashed,
the new police must prepare to contain it.
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52. The first elections in the history
of the Dark Continent are imminent.
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53. The crowd presses impatiently
toward the polling places.
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54. They're all afraid of arriving too late
and ending up empty-handed.
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55. For this great day of Uhuru,
every party has promised its voters
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56. the prize of the land, livestock, houses
and cars of the Whites that remained.
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57. In the highlands of Kenya,
the property of the White colonists
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58. the big, green plateau
that for 100 years
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59. was the fortress of
the rural aristocracy,
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60. the Uhuru is late to arrive.
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61. After 100 years,
the ancient African landscape
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62. is transformed
into the Scottish countryside.
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63. There are even foxhunts,
even if there are no foxes here.
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64. All that's needed is for a black man
to drag a piece behind him
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65. that just arrived by plane from England,
in order to leave the scent for the dogs.
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66. The fox is a harmful animal
that does not exist in Africa.
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67. If the White men
want to hunt it so badly,
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68. they have to teach someone
to act like one.
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69. But the fox is a treacherous prey
and should never be underestimated.
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70. Your honor, in force of
Articles 7 and 193
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71. of the Repression of Mau Mau
Criminal Activities Act of April 4, 1953
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72. I ask that Jeroke Camau
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73. accused of arson, theft, robbery,
attempted murder and aggravated murder
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74. be given the maximum penalty.
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75. These weapons,
made by him and his accomplices
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76. were used to carry out
the crimes to which he confessed in full
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77. during the investigation.
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78. On the night of April 6, 1961,
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79. Rashidi Singhida entered
the farm at Aberdare Point
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80. of the British citizen, John Fletcher
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81. Where the defendant strangled
the Askari guard, Josephi Nathaeli.
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82. The defendant's second victim was
Miss Elizabeth Reagan
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83. the farmer's sister-in-law
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84. killed by a gunshot fired by
Singhida through the Window of her room.
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85. Mr. Fletcher ran down the outside stairs
Where he was hit by several gunshots
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86. that shattered his legs.
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87. He dragged himself inside the house
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88. in the attempt to protect
his Wife, Mrs. Jane
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89. and two daughters, Lois and Mary,
ages 15 and 18,
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90. who had looked for shelter
under the table.
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91. The corpses of the three women
were found headless and Without limbs.
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92. The body of Mr. Fletcher,
a former Navy officer,
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93. was found stabbed 72 times
with a panga.
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94. Defendant Rashidi Singhida,
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95. do you confirm the inquiry transcript
already signed by you?
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96. We take the liberty
of pointing out to your honor
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97. that the defendant knows English
and doesn't need an interpreter.
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98. I will reveal to you the facts
that emerged from the investigation.
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99. For nine years, you were the nanny
of Memsa Fosset's three children:
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100. Richard, two years old,
Mary, four and Victor, nine.
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101. You knew them from birth.
You watched them play.
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102. You ate and slept with them.
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103. On the night of February 6,
you opened a Window
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104. to let Kimathi and his gang
into the house.
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105. Juana Fosset was grabbed and
his throat slit on the big green table.
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106. The mother and the children
ran toward the door.
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107. Kimathi caught them
and cut them into pieces
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108. right in the doorway in your presence.
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109. The trial of Jomo Kanari
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110. self-styled general
of the "Land Freedom Army“
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111. escapee from the Voy prison
Where he was spending 30 years
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112. for theft, burglary, assault
and triple murder.
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113. The inquiry determined that
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114. the defendant organized more than
100 sworn members of Mau Mau,
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115. whereby domesticated
and Wild animals were tortured,
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116. and obscenities, together with
the crime of cannibalism, took place.
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117. Besides, the accused,
along with his accomplices
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118. severed the tendons
of more than 400 cattle
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119. that then had to be destroyed
by the farmers.
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120. Irrefutable evidence
of the defendant's guilt was provided
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121. by one of the main victims of Kanari's
acts of vandalism, Mr. Wordsworth,
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122. who along with his son
followed the accused's trail
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123. for 72 days and 72 nights.
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124. In Narok, Kanari was captured
and turned over to the Magadi police.
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125. I consequently ask that
the accused be found guilty
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126. and sentenced to the maximum penalty
provided for by the special law.
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127. Land for the brave Mau Maul
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128. Amnesty for all Mau Maul
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129. Kenyatta proclaims them national heroes.
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130. For the triumph of Uhuru,
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131. yearned for by the blacks
and denied by the Whites,
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132. they killed 27 Whites and 5000 blacks.
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133. Kenyatta announces that in addition to
the undying gratitude of the nation
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134. the Mau Mau will be granted the lands
and houses of the White colonists
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135. in which they carried out their deeds.
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136. The Whites are itching to get out.
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137. The Windows of real estate agencies
are covered with sale offers.
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138. Easy payment terms seem absurd
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139. to anyone who doesn't know how
to savor the bitter irony.
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140. Installments for up to 99 years.
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141. Gloomy irony in the graphic composition,
desperate irony in the text of the ads.
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142. Everything that belongs
to the White colonists is for sale.
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143. Those with time turn to Indian merchants
to hold an auction in the garden
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144. of everything accumulated by three
generations that cannot be carried away.
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145. The Indians do a good business.
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146. The new black bourgeoisie
spare no expense.
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147. The ancient home is quickly emptied.
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148. The family watches on the sidelines.
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149. The seized houses, empty and silent,
await their new owners.
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150. In the entire immense
East African territory
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151. English colonial law
permitted Whites to build a house
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152. and acquire property
here and only here.
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153. In two centuries, the new colonists
transformed it into an oasis of green.
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154. The Africans learned to admire it,
then to desire it, and finally to claim it.
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155. When the Golden Age is over,
the Plated Age begins.
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156. In the highlands,
Where 150 Whites lived yesterday
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157. 10,000 blacks subsist today.
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158. The agrarian reform ignores
the arid immensity of the Lowlands
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159. to express the new spirit
of Uhuru only here
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160. on these freshly seized fertile estates.
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161. But on the Whole, it can distribute
just one acre per family.
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162. So this land that earlier was perhaps
too much for too few
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163. becomes too little for too many.
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164. Uhuru has nothing more to conquer.
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165. Only the dead have remained
to occupy a little land.
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166. Now they, too, have to clear out.
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167. The Indians have sold that off, too.
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168. J. B. Johnson was the most famous
breeder of racehorses in the highlands.
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169. He was killed by Kimathi's Mau Mau
on the steps of his farm.
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170. These were his stables.
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171. Before turning them over
to the new owners,
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172. his sons chased out the horses
and set them free in the savanna.
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173. Six months later, all the
“old land“ horses are living in freedom.
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174. But when the Africans surprise a herd
at the mouth of a narrow valley,
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175. they're trapped inside
by the sound of shouts and old gas cans.
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176. For the Africans, the horse is
the symbol of the White man.
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177. Just like the Whites,
it refuses contact with other species
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178. and Withdraws from
the contagion of mixture,
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179. surrounding itself by an emptiness
that runs from itself to the horizon.
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180. For the Africans,
the horse is physically racist.
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181. It fears the black
and refuses to be ridden by him.
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182. Without the presence of the Whites,
its back is bare.
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183. Its natural architecture is mutilated,
like an equestrian monument
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184. from which the hero was toppled
by a sudden act of violence.
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185. Like the White man, the horse is noble.
It has delicate skin.
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186. It's sophisticated
in its choice of food.
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187. Like the White man, it is timid.
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188. Just a little noise
will frighten it away.
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189. Like the White man, the horse is useless.
All that it's good for is to be eaten.
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190. The Boers are returning to South Africa.
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191. They have revived the wagons on which
they arrived 400 years ago
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192. in search of a homeland.
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193. They could have chosen
boats or airplanes
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194. as the English did to return to Europe.
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195. Instead, with controversial intentions,
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196. they loaded their families
and possessions on old wagons
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197. from their wobbly epic and now move back
across 1000 miles of history.
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198. The demonstration is hard and trying,
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199. just like the entire destiny
of the Boer people.
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200. Its meaning is tragic and precise.
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201. The long African adventure is not over.
It starts here.
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202. The old laws are no longer valid.
The new ones are yet to be written.
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203. There's no one to protect the savanna
from vandals or hunters seeking meat.
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204. For those who want to rob Africa
of all they can as quickly as possible,
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205. the right moment has arrived.
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206. If before it was absolutely forbidden for
Land Rovers to leave the roads or tracks,
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207. now they enter the savanna with impunity
and Wildly weave back and forth
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208. among herds of elephants
to frighten them, divide them
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209. and separate the mothers
from the babies.
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210. Here's the quickest way to get
your hands on a little elephant today.
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211. You exasperate the mother little
by little. You provoke her reaction.
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212. Then you draw out her pursuit
as long as possible
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213. giving the illusion
of letting her reach you
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214. and when the poor beast
can't go on any longer
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215. she'll be too far from her baby
to be able to defend it.
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216. The price of a baby elephant
is around $3000...
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217. assuming, of course, that it arrives
safe and sound to the ordering zoo.
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218. The average is one out of ten.
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219. The others don't survive
Without their mother's milk.
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220. But today,
Africa is an infinite reserve.
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221. Where you can't go by foot,
you go by jeep
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222. and where you can't go by jeep,
you go by helicopter.
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223. Of all the types of safaris
that a hunter can choose from today
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224. this is the quickest.
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225. It's called
“elephant safari in a quarter hour."
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226. The helicopter leaves from the
hotel terrace and drops the hunter here.
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227. Then it goes to find the elephant
and chases it toward him.
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228. The hunter fires, usually poorly, but with
a caliber big enough to bag a dinosaur.
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229. Then he finishes it off
at point-blank range.
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230. Just enough time for a souvenir photo,
and then he's off.
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231. In the absence of modern transport
and the power of guns,
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232. the Africans make do with numbers.
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233. Up to 10,000 of them gather together and
surround an area as large as a big city.
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234. Then they squeeze the vice.
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235. Across the great line
traced by the Zambezi
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236. the Wildlife Society has established its
headquarters in an old abandoned farm.
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237. It's a large organization supported
mostly by private Anglo-Saxon capital
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238. and does what it can to save what it can
in the midst of so much disorder.
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239. Every message received or sent by radio,
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240. every motion of the rake on the
large table in the operations room
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241. corresponds to a massive displacement
of animals in some remote area.
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242. The goal of so much feverish activity is
to collect at least some of the animals
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243. from the areas most infested
with poachers
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244. and transport them to territories
that are safer and better controlled.
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245. After millennia of fascinating silences,
mysterious habits,
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246. pathways covered in obedience
to the orders of nature,
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247. man has imposed upon African fauna
Wild tourism by train, bus, plane
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248. helicopter, and even balloon.
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249. Operation Crocodile calls for the
transfer of all the reptiles in the park
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250. away from the mouth of the Rovuma
that is infested with poachers.
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251. The traps are set during low tide
and marked with colored balloons.
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252. It's estimated that in these waters
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253. more than 20,000 crocodiles
have been killed in the last six months.
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254. The operation in progress
saves 82 of them.
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255. They will reach more peaceful waters
after having slept for 300 miles.
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256. Animals injured by poachers are cared for
by the Wildlife Society's blood bank.
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257. Teams of veterinarians and nurses
carry out tests, administer medicine,
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258. check the temperature
of huge injured elephants,
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259. and keep them happy
with several pounds of tranquilizers.
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260. On February 18, 1964,
a Wildlife Society helicopter
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261. surveying an area on the coast of Kenya
and the Tanarive area
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262. found the carcasses of
a full 750 elephants.
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263. The poachers were surprised
by the helicopter
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264. While they were still
cutting out the tusks.
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265. They ran and hid among clumps of grass.
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266. It was the first inspection operation
after more than a year of total anarchy.
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267. The governments of Kenya,
Tanganyika and Uganda
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268. following serious disorder
and the rebellion of the Armed Forces
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269. urgently requested the return
of English troops.
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270. The old laws that had lapsed
came back into force.
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271. The former Anglo-Saxon administration
retook control of the game reserves.
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272. A brief interlude of order was opened up
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273. which, however, would be closed again
after only one month.
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274. But the level of damage
suffered by the fauna is shocking.
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275. In a first round up,
the police capture 410 poachers.
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276. The great massacre
comes to a standstill.
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277. The police discover
hundreds of caches of ivory and furs
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278. hidden in the underbrush
and dry stream beds.
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279. The gangs of poachers
have used grenades
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280. to kill over 300 young elephants
Without tusks
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281. just to get the tails
to make bracelets and necklaces
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282. to sell to tourists for a few coins.
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283. Large tents set up by police
house 82 tons of confiscated tusks.
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284. An even more frightening number
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285. if one considers
only one-fifth of slaughtered animals
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286. are usually found
by the game warden patrols.
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287. In a valley in Semliki,
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288. the police find 2800 skins of zebra,
leopard, gazelle, lion and cheetah
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289. that the poachers left to dry
in the sun.
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290. The underbrush is strewn with carcasses
that foul the air
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291. which the alarmed vandals
did not have time to skin.
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292. In the ancient breeding grounds
that are the richest in the world
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293. columns of acrid smoke now rise
and flames crackle at the pyres.
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294. While the police chase the poachers,
other patrols comb the savanna
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295. to aid the injured animals.
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296. The initiative,
clearly based upon good intentions
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297. is certainly not adequate
for the amount of damage and butchery.
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298. Africa is afflicted by a hundred evils
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299. and no one
vigorously combats their causes.
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300. Only a few, here and there,
do their best to heal the effects.
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301. There's nothing to do.
They won't give us permission to land.
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302. We decide to try it anyway
on an old landing strip further north.
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303. We're preceded by our sister plane,
rented by three German journalists.
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304. We've flown here together
from Tanganyika.
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305. Neither they nor we want to turn back
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306. Without first having done
everything possible
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307. to document the worst genocide
in the history of Africa.
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308. It all started last night
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309. when an African named Okello,
backed by Russia
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310. overthrew the thousand year old
government of the Sultan
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311. and, naming himself
revolutionary general,
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312. ordered the massacre of
the entire Arab population of Zanzibar.
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313. All communications have been broken off.
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314. The radio is silent
and the airports are closed.
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315. The only way to know anything
about what's happening in Zanzibar
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316. is to come in person,
as did we and our German colleagues
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317. Whom we glimpse for a moment as
they are hauled away by the insurgents.
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318. For today, it's better to skip it.
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319. That cloud of smoke down there
rising from the runway
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320. is the Germans' airplane that's burning.
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321. At least we know
there's no one on board.
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322. We try again a day later, January 19,
with a helicopter.
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323. We waive a red flag
to confuse the rebels.
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324. They direct us toward
the interior of the island,
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325. Where it appears that during the night,
5000 Arabs were killed.
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326. Okello has distributed 850 guns
that mysteriously arrived on the island
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327. which the Africans
do not yet know how to use.
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328. It's open hunting season for Arabs.
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329. The propaganda tells the new generations
the Arabs are cursed slave traders
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330. who sell Africans to slave merchants
along the coast.
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331. It, of course, omitted that
this all happened ten centuries ago.
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332. This footage
is the only existing documentation
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333. of what happened in Zanzibar
between January 18 and 20, 1964.
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334. Entire villages destroyed,
trucks filled with corpses,
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335. testimony that's uncomfortable
and embarrassing for all...
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336. for those in Africa today,
spreading false promises,
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337. fomenting a new African racism
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338. and for those
hastily abandoning Africa to itself
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339. in the false modesty
of antique colonialism
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340. authorizing a new Africa
flooded with misery and blood.
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341. Look at these images.
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342. Look at them with pity.
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343. But above all, look at them with shame.
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344. Endless lines of prisoners marching
toward the site of the massacre.
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345. Hundreds of motionless Arabs,
waiting for death
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346. wrapped in their White sheets,
already more similar to ghosts than men.
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347. Muslim cemeteries transformed
into fields of imminent extermination.
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348. Women and children
trembling under the threat of guns.
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349. Enormous common graves
already half-filled with corpses.
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350. Perhaps the most pitiless mass shooting
in the entire macabre anthology of death.
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351. The exodus toward the sea
of entire villages.
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352. The desperate boarding of boats
stuck in the sand at low tide.
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353. The hopeless run
toward an impossible salvation.
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354. Then, the day after.
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355. These were the national parks
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356. that the mystical
Anglo-Saxon love for animals
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357. and regulations written with the fervor
of an inquisitor
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358. had transformed into
real-life sanctuaries of nature.
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359. Man, who in the text of the English law
protecting national parks
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360. was classified
among the harmful animals
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361. did not even have the right
to set one foot on this land.
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362. He could walk around the edges
in absolute silence
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363. under the watchful eyes
of the game warden
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364. and in full respect of a code
that did not tolerate ignorance.
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365. The most ancient Africa,
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366. the Africa of great navigators
and great geographic discoveries,
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367. is awaking from
a sleep of four centuries.
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368. At the fortresses sown by Vasco de Gama
along the coast of Mozambique
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369. nothing has passed except for time.
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370. The glory of past centuries puts up
a decrepit resistance against new times:
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371. Battlements in ruins,
bastions eaten away by centuries
Copy !req
372. silent bronze cannons
Copy !req
373. and an act of faith
in humility and resignation.
Copy !req
374. Just on the other side of the walls,
in the invisible guerrilla camps
Copy !req
375. is the new reality
still draped with the morning fog
Copy !req
376. Where the soldiers move hesitantly
like ghosts of the past.
Copy !req
377. Wherever man is present,
nature is silent.
Copy !req
378. The silence of the animals and birds is
the unequivocal sign of a human presence.
Copy !req
379. The rebels in Angola
avoid forests that are too quiet.
Copy !req
380. They know that Portuguese patrols
are inside them, lying in wait.
Copy !req
381. 3, 2, 1, go!
Copy !req
382. The cleverness almost always works.
Copy !req
383. Animals and guerrillas
rush to the call of the magnetic tape
Copy !req
384. and in one moment, the forest is
filled with life and death.
Copy !req
385. This is the destiny of a people
who wanted to ignore the color of skin.
Copy !req
386. Aqui es Portugal. This is Portugal.
Copy !req
387. Brancos y pretos as todos portugues.
White or black, we're all Portuguese.
Copy !req
388. But the rebels of Angola don't agree.
Copy !req
389. This is Africa.
Only blacks are Africans.
Copy !req
390. Black and White, brancos y pretos,
wart en blank, blanches et noires
Copy !req
391. a dilemma which is present,
current, universal
Copy !req
392. that is more and more being colored red.
Copy !req
393. January, 1964.
Copy !req
394. The Watusi,
pursued by the Bantu in revolt
Copy !req
395. flee toward the Ugandan border
carrying their wounded.
Copy !req
396. The war of the Bantu against the Watusi
is nothing more than racial persecution
Copy !req
397. fomented for political purposes
by the presence and propaganda of China
Copy !req
398. in the state of Rwanda Burundi.
Copy !req
399. In just two months,
the Bantu have massacred 18,000 Watusi.
Copy !req
400. The underbrush hides the
still-fresh proof of a ferocious horror.
Copy !req
401. On the banks of the Kwoni River,
54 amputated hands were found
Copy !req
402. under the trunk of a tree still wet
with blood, used as a chopping block.
Copy !req
403. The border police caught them in the act
and arrested 25 Bantu guerrillas.
Copy !req
404. But aside from this,
no government, black or White
Copy !req
405. has lifted a finger
to stop the bloodbath.
Copy !req
406. Meanwhile, the waters of the Kagera
send thousands of corpses downstream.
Copy !req
407. For days,
the fishing is macabre and abundant
Copy !req
408. carried out with lazy diligence
by the residents along the river.
Copy !req
409. The feeling of compassion
doesn't exist here.
Copy !req
410. What exists is a good source of
drinking water that has to be kept clean.
Copy !req
411. Because the river is life. Because
it is life that kills, not death.
Copy !req
412. Ten days and nights of exodus
along the roads of Uganda.
Copy !req
413. The Watusi were a people with
a thousand year history as herders.
Copy !req
414. A people of survivors
who continue to flee toward the unknown
Copy !req
415. failing to understand and in shock.
Copy !req
416. It is a people that no longer exists.
Copy !req
417. This is more or less how Noah's
terrestrial paradise must have been.
Copy !req
418. Hearing the far-off rumble of thunder,
he set about constructing the great ark.
Copy !req
419. The same ancient silence,
the same sovereign harmony,
Copy !req
420. the same divine balance
that man still has not managed to upset.
Copy !req
421. Image and likeness
of that terrestrial paradise
Copy !req
422. destroyed with that same divinity
by the sudden wrath of a vindictive God.
Copy !req
423. It's dawn on February 25, 1964.
Copy !req
424. After having put down the rebellion
of the African armed forces,
Copy !req
425. the English troops have left again.
Copy !req
426. The ancient British law to protect
the fauna having lapsed a second time,
Copy !req
427. the African governments decide to open up
even the national parks to hunting.
Copy !req
428. Faced with the most severe measures,
Copy !req
429. White and black game wardens
now employed by the African authorities
Copy !req
430. have no choice but to obey and organize
the details of the "cropping" operation
Copy !req
431. or “harvesting the animals.“
Copy !req
432. From now on, once a week, on Friday,
Copy !req
433. the harvest operation will resupply
local markets with fresh meat.
Copy !req
434. For the first time in the history
of the last refuge of African fauna,
Copy !req
435. in the inviolate sanctuaries of nature
Copy !req
436. Where it was considered sacrilege
to even speak loudly,
Copy !req
437. men are entering armed with guns.
Copy !req
438. The take from one day
of hippopotamus harvest amounts to 160.
Copy !req
439. The park authorities sell them
to butchers for 300 shillings each
Copy !req
440. or about $45.
Copy !req
441. The number of animals to kill
is established each time
Copy !req
442. based upon the demands of the market,
100, 200, 1000,
Copy !req
443. but not one more nor one less
so as not to disrupt the prices.
Copy !req
444. The rest are left alive
for the next day, completely at peace,
Copy !req
445. yawning right next to the river Where,
up until yesterday
Copy !req
446. tourists came to photograph them.
Copy !req
447. Killing them is child's play.
Copy !req
448. You just have to choose,
like the targets at a shooting gallery.
Copy !req
449. Babies, adults,
males, females and pregnant females...
Copy !req
450. Since this is the world's richest park
and hippopotamus will always be abundant,
Copy !req
451. up to the day
when there aren't any more.
Copy !req
452. The request for 45 elephants has also
been fulfilled Without difficulty.
Copy !req
453. Now they're butchered on the spot
Copy !req
454. to simplify the transport
of prime and choice cuts.
Copy !req
455. Among the butchers,
not even one injury.
Copy !req
456. Elephants, which hunters described as
the most ferocious animals in Africa
Copy !req
457. in reality allow themselves
to be slaughtered like goats
Copy !req
458. Whether it's those miserable males
suffering from toothaches
Copy !req
459. or the legendary pregnant females.
Copy !req
460. The truth is that in all of Africa
there is only one truly ferocious animal:
Copy !req
461. Man.
Copy !req
462. Wounded animals that go to die
at the edge of the parks
Copy !req
463. must be destroyed much more quickly
than the vultures normally would do.
Copy !req
464. The tourists must not know and,
above all, must not see.
Copy !req
465. And now we'll offer you a souvenir photo
of the butchery from 1964,
Copy !req
466. the richest storehouse
of hippopotamus meat in the world.
Copy !req
467. Don't worry.
Look over there, in the water.
Copy !req
468. A few have remained for next Friday.
Copy !req
469. And here's another.
Copy !req
470. Look long and hard,
especially since today is Friday
Copy !req
471. any Friday in any season.
Copy !req
472. It's the most recent souvenir photo
in our journey
Copy !req
473. through what were the safe refuges
of African fauna
Copy !req
474. the centuries-old game reserves,
the inviolable sanctuaries of nature
Copy !req
475. Where it was considered sacrilege
even to speak loudly.
Copy !req
476. Now you can scream, shout,
swear and even curse
Copy !req
477. Without the fear of disturbing
anyone or anything.
Copy !req
478. The most harmful of animals, man,
has passed by here.
Copy !req
479. You can follow his tracks
for miles and miles
Copy !req
480. along this dusty White road that today
crosses the heart of Africa,
Copy !req
481. always winding along scenes
of nothing but desolation and death.
Copy !req
482. We just left behind
an Africa that's disappearing
Copy !req
483. and immediately we enter an Africa
that's already disappeared.
Copy !req
484. The division is a clean crack.
Copy !req
485. On the other side,
confusion and indiscriminate death.
Copy !req
486. On this side,
order and discriminating life.
Copy !req
487. This is the view of Cape Town from above,
one of the largest cities in South Africa,
Copy !req
488. the country today with
the most enemies in the world.
Copy !req
489. To the universal cry that proclaims
“Africa for Africans, “
Copy !req
490. the South Africans respond,
“This is not Africa."
Copy !req
491. And this, at least, is true.
Copy !req
492. This is a View
that suddenly and unpredictably appears,
Copy !req
493. an ignored and distant landscape
Copy !req
494. that seems to have wriggled away from
the network of parallels and meridians.
Copy !req
495. If it isn't Africa,
it also isn't Europe or America.
Copy !req
496. There's nothing that can give sense
to a geographic expression.
Copy !req
497. It's not an African mirage
because it exists in time and space.
Copy !req
498. It's not a Promised Land because
it lacks the biblical requirements.
Copy !req
499. All that's left is to define it
as a miracle...
Copy !req
500. a weighty miracle carried out
over three centuries
Copy !req
501. by a persecuted people wanting to prove
that only its God is the true one.
Copy !req
502. A miracle that,
despite its physical reality,
Copy !req
503. transcends the limits of time and space,
Copy !req
504. wrapping men and objects
in a soft blanket of bliss
Copy !req
505. in a delicate balance between
the transient and the eternal.
Copy !req
506. The black Africa of tribal dances,
Copy !req
507. of swollen breasts offered
to the glory of nature
Copy !req
508. survives only on movie sets.
Copy !req
509. A film is being shot in South Africa
about the Zulu,
Copy !req
510. the proud African tribe that made things
so difficult for the Boers.
Copy !req
511. Today, Zulu maidens
come out of the academy,
Copy !req
512. speak excellent English,
and receive union wages
Copy !req
513. for putting on nylon underwear and
dancing the dance of their grandmothers.
Copy !req
514. During their breaks,
the ancient rhythm of the tom-tom
Copy !req
515. gives them a few variations
on the theme.
Copy !req
516. The African female has discovered
she is a woman
Copy !req
517. and is beginning to behave as such.
Copy !req
518. She wants to be modem because
she feels the past is against her.
Copy !req
519. When she was naked,
she had two mammary glands.
Copy !req
520. Now that she's clothed,
she has two breasts.
Copy !req
521. She does not wants to display herself.
She wants to be looked at
Copy !req
522. to make you guess
what's under her alluring clothes.
Copy !req
523. She covers her intimacy not
out of modesty, but to be flirtatious.
Copy !req
524. She undresses to surrender
and dresses to attack.
Copy !req
525. Naked she was prey,
like a black female.
Copy !req
526. Clothed she is a tyrant,
like a White woman.
Copy !req
527. Africa covers itself consciously
Copy !req
528. and all wrapped up in the veils of its
consciousness, Africa disappears.
Copy !req
529. For their part, the authorities
encourage or even impose modesty.
Copy !req
530. In the southern regions of Sudan,
Copy !req
531. thousands of pairs of underwear,
all one size
Copy !req
532. are distributed to the tribes in
the interior by the "Legion of Decency“.
Copy !req
533. The unconquerable warriors
entrusted with them
Copy !req
534. must maintain them
with the care owed by every good citizen
Copy !req
535. to everything that is state property.
Copy !req
536. Among all things to hide,
underwear covers what's most urgent.
Copy !req
537. That's enough to decently begin to march
toward the conquest of further dignity.
Copy !req
538. Never before has a warrior put on pants.
Never before has a lion climbed a tree.
Copy !req
539. The fact is that times have changed,
and in the new republics
Copy !req
540. the ancient kings
have fallen into disgrace.
Copy !req
541. Let's take the poor ex-king
of the animals with the stiff muscles.
Copy !req
542. Today, his roar doesn't scare anyone.
Copy !req
543. While zebras and gazelles flee,
pursued by gunshots,
Copy !req
544. the once invincible, ex-aristocrat,
ex-hunter of noble prey
Copy !req
545. climbs trees and hunts lizards.
Copy !req
546. Poor king of the jungle!
Copy !req
547. His old reputation haunts him,
making his humiliation public.
Copy !req
548. The tourists crowd the parks
to see him, only him.
Copy !req
549. Where's the lion? There's the lion.
Copy !req
550. Wait, let's see what the lion's doing.
Copy !req
551. It's like that the Whole day,
Copy !req
552. and they don't even leave him
a moment of intimacy.
Copy !req
553. Encouraged by his ancestral laziness,
the African lion has given up hunting,
Copy !req
554. seeing as how the park rangers
do the hunting for him.
Copy !req
555. Fresh meat is delivered to his door,
Copy !req
556. that is, to the areas
most accessible to tourists
Copy !req
557. Where the park administration
has a great interest that he stays.
Copy !req
558. So, over time, the ancient, nomadic,
independent king of the jungle
Copy !req
559. has become a stingy retiree
with middle-class habits
Copy !req
560. forced to defend his steak
Copy !req
561. against those who up until yesterday
would not have dared to come close.
Copy !req
562. A new rebellion
has broken out in Tanganyika.
Copy !req
563. The mob has massacred Muslims,
including women and children.
Copy !req
564. The mortuaries are full.
The corpses have to be lined up outside.
Copy !req
565. The vultures wait patiently
for the operation to finish
Copy !req
566. so they can start their own.
Copy !req
567. Dar es Salaam
is in the grips of anarchy.
Copy !req
568. Everyone is in revolt:
The people, the police,
Copy !req
569. and even the army, which has mutinied.
Copy !req
570. President Nyerere has disappeared.
No one knows Who's in charge.
Copy !req
571. For us European journalists,
Copy !req
572. going out on the streets in search of
footage is a nearly suicidal endeavor.
Copy !req
573. Everywhere we go, they chase us away.
They insult us. They threaten us.
Copy !req
574. We try to get to the outskirts.
Copy !req
575. On the bloody streets, a crowd hides
the victims of the massacre from us.
Copy !req
576. In one neighborhood,
a Muslim tries to flee from a lynch mob.
Copy !req
577. He jumps off a seawall.
The mob reaches him and drowns him.
Copy !req
578. They destroy the houses and shops
of businessmen
Copy !req
579. accused of having taken over
from the Whites in exploiting the people.
Copy !req
580. With great effort, we push
through the crowd in Uhuru Square.
Copy !req
581. Someone has killed
three African soldiers.
Copy !req
582. The police prepare the reprisal,
Copy !req
583. dragging all the Muslims
out of their homes
Copy !req
584. and lining them up against the wall.
Copy !req
585. They yell at us to leave,
they threaten us with guns.
Copy !req
586. We try to equivocate, to win time,
While the camera continues to roll.
Copy !req
587. One of us is injured.
Copy !req
588. They open the doors and drag us out.
Copy !req
589. They arrest us.
They put us up against the wall.
Copy !req
590. We are saved by a miracle
which the newspapers would later report.
Copy !req
591. Moise Tshombe has returned from exile
as a liberator,
Copy !req
592. father of the country,
and special envoy of the UN.
Copy !req
593. Three quarters of Congo is in
the hands of rebels and communists.
Copy !req
594. Tshombe promises to clean house
in three months.
Copy !req
595. Two months later, Stanleyville,
stronghold of Simba leader Nicholas Olenga,
Copy !req
596. has been conquered
by Belgian paratroopers and mercenaries.
Copy !req
597. The city is a cemetery Without graves.
Copy !req
598. During 100 days of occupation,
Copy !req
599. the Simba have tortured
and, in part, eaten 12,000 Africans.
Copy !req
600. Guns in hand, regular Congolese troops
force the Simba prisoners
Copy !req
601. to carry out this gruesome cleaning.
Copy !req
602. In the final days, 80 schoolchildren
were burned alive.
Copy !req
603. Four nurses were raped and killed.
Copy !req
604. Sixty-four people were shot including
Europeans, Indians and Pakistanis.
Copy !req
605. Many bodies have along gash
in the belly
Copy !req
606. Where the Simba cut out the liver
and ate it.
Copy !req
607. Nine nuns, seven missionaries
and four White children
Copy !req
608. were tied up with Wire
and shot by the rebels in the mouth.
Copy !req
609. The heat is unbearable.
Copy !req
610. The air is thick
with the stench of corpses.
Copy !req
611. There's fear of pestilence.
Copy !req
612. At the Leopoldville airport,
Copy !req
613. American C-130s land with the survivors
of the Stanleyville massacre.
Copy !req
614. Just yesterday, they had been
massed together for execution.
Copy !req
615. The machine guns had already started
cutting them down
Copy !req
616. when 320 Belgian paratroopers
dropped from the sky
Copy !req
617. and, in 10 minutes, managed to pull them
out of the hands of 7000 rebels.
Copy !req
618. Despite the lightning operation,
22 are missing.
Copy !req
619. The injured were pulled out
from under a pile of 40 corpses
Copy !req
620. among which were identified Americans
Carlson and Rain
Copy !req
621. and Belgians Brinkman, Masqueau
and De Smitter.
Copy !req
622. Five of these wounded, among whom
was a woman who had been raped,
Copy !req
623. were to die soon after
in a Danish hospital in Leopoldville.
Copy !req
624. The evacuation of survivors,
Copy !req
625. the transport of the wounded,
food and medicine,
Copy !req
626. was carried out in a few hours
by the US Air Force with 40 planes.
Copy !req
627. Two days later, November 27,
the governments of the new African states
Copy !req
628. demanded that Washington
make a broad official apology
Copy !req
629. for the abusive interference by the USA
in private Congolese affairs.
Copy !req
630. Beyond Polis and Beni, on
the northern border of Congo with Sudan
Copy !req
631. an attempt is made at the aerial
resupply with food and medicine
Copy !req
632. of a mission occupied by rebels.
Copy !req
633. The life of the priests, nuns
and over 100 children is in danger.
Copy !req
634. The 6000 rebels of the Kirlis army
who rule the area
Copy !req
635. have threatened to Wipe out
all of the besieged
Copy !req
636. if even one paratrooper
or helicopter tries to land.
Copy !req
637. For eight days, the planes of the ANC
take turns in the sky above the mission
Copy !req
638. making drops that end up
in the hands of the rebels.
Copy !req
639. At dawn on the ninth day,
planes and helicopters take off
Copy !req
640. and we're with them.
Copy !req
641. But this time,
there's no one to await us.
Copy !req
642. We got to know them one at a time.
Copy !req
643. They are the White mercenaries
of Tshombe's army.
Copy !req
644. They're the last surviving
soldiers of fortune from another century.
Copy !req
645. They're former citizens of a world
that kicked them out
Copy !req
646. or that they're running from.
Copy !req
647. Dead and survivors,
all of them are or were ex-something.
Copy !req
648. From a restless past,
an uncomfortable present,
Copy !req
649. a ruined adventure, lost faith.
Copy !req
650. They're ex-“Pieds Noirs" from Algeria,
ex-English commandos,
Copy !req
651. ex-German engineers,
ex-farmers from Kenya,
Copy !req
652. ex-residents expelled from Sudan, Egypt,
Ethiopia, Uganda, Tanganyika,
Copy !req
653. ex-veterans of Katanga,
ex-professional hunters,
Copy !req
654. ex-students from
South Africa and Rhodesia,
Copy !req
655. come to pursue
with a macabre academic spirit
Copy !req
656. the idea of glory and adventure.
Copy !req
657. Two days ago, 15 of them
plucked 400 rebels from Kisala.
Copy !req
658. Tomorrow, 40 of them
will attempt an endeavor
Copy !req
659. that 93,000 UN soldiers could not manage:
The conquest of Boende.
Copy !req
660. The attack plan for Boende calls for
the use of massive aerial forces.
Copy !req
661. The “massive" aerial forces are
these two 20-year-old P6s
Copy !req
662. held together as well as possible
with bolts and Wire.
Copy !req
663. They're the personal property
of Tom O'Keefe and Somerset Wilson
Copy !req
664. former Rhodesian pilots Whose families
were massacred by rebels from Angola.
Copy !req
665. They've hired out themselves
and the planes for $500 a month
Copy !req
666. which no one has paid for six months
Copy !req
667. and a life insurance policy
that up to now
Copy !req
668. no insurance company has underwritten.
Copy !req
669. This time, as always, before leaving
Copy !req
670. they've filled out the forms
at the airport in the usual manner.
Copy !req
671. Hell.
Reason for flight: Personal matters.
Copy !req
672. The Simba fled Without having time
to slaughter the missionaries
Copy !req
673. Who've lived for three months
under the daily nightmare of the massacre.
Copy !req
674. Propaganda teaches the Simba to strike
the White man especially at his God,
Copy !req
675. a White-skinned God responsible for the
centuries-long arrogance of his faithful.
Copy !req
676. Along the path to Boende,
the skeletons of the Simba
Copy !req
677. are rotting in the puddles
Without glory and Without burial.
Copy !req
678. They advanced unprotected,
dazed by drugs,
Copy !req
679. intoning the "Mai Mulele, “
Copy !req
680. the magic spell that was supposed to
transform the lead of bullets into water.
Copy !req
681. They fell, incredulous and amazed.
They died for nothing and for no one.
Copy !req
682. Africa has no fallen soldiers
on either side.
Copy !req
683. It has only corpses.
Copy !req
684. Boende has fallen.
Copy !req
685. The last Simba come out of the forest
with their hands up.
Copy !req
686. Today it's their turn, but tomorrow
Copy !req
687. when the mercenaries leave the city
headed toward other objectives,
Copy !req
688. they'll be on the other side of the gun.
Copy !req
689. It's an absurd and tragic ballad
that's been going on for five years now.
Copy !req
690. Whites against blacks
and blacks against Whites.
Copy !req
691. They take turns killing and dying,
like a cruel children's game.
Copy !req
692. No one Wins and no one loses,
once and for all.
Copy !req
693. No condition is definitive
except for White and black deaths
Copy !req
694. that together infect the ruins
and dissolve, amidst the buzz of flies,
Copy !req
695. into absolute biological equality.
Copy !req
696. The ethics of the Congolese guerrilla
are that to the victor belong the spoils.
Copy !req
697. The mercenaries have aimed right at
the safe of the revolutionary government
Copy !req
698. and have blown it open with a bazooka.
Copy !req
699. Inside was 50 million Congolese francs.
Copy !req
700. These were the funds destined for
the famous “OK Plan“
Copy !req
701. according to which General Olenga,
at the head of his 3000 Mulelist warriors
Copy !req
702. was to invade the United States.
Copy !req
703. America has been saved.
Copy !req
704. In the streets,
the soldiers divide up the small change.
Copy !req
705. The ambitious “OK Plan“ has been
postponed for centuries,
Copy !req
706. just like all of their
naive delusions of grandeur.
Copy !req
707. Meanwhile, they go into raptures
Copy !req
708. over a victory as squalid and useless
as their raid,
Copy !req
709. sharing in a miserable little celebration
from which they get only the crumbs.
Copy !req
710. For centuries they were poor
out of necessity.
Copy !req
711. But now that they're rich to excess,
they load themselves up,
Copy !req
712. even if they will never
be able to carry it away.
Copy !req
713. Bent under the weight of useless trinkets,
they pursue an ideal of wealth,
Copy !req
714. robbing only their own misery
from themselves.
Copy !req
715. The right to plunder
is valid only for 24 hours.
Copy !req
716. Time ran out 10 minutes ago.
Copy !req
717. But Why could you steal
up to 10 minutes ago, and now you can't?
Copy !req
718. A good Congolese soldier who fought
for the homeland will never understand.
Copy !req
719. Nor will he ever understand
Why the Whites make such a fuss
Copy !req
720. to find out who ate
this peasant's liver.
Copy !req
721. Or Why there has to be a trial
to condemn to death this Mulelist
Copy !req
722. who burned 27 children alive.
Copy !req
723. Or Why they're arresting the soldiers
Copy !req
724. who raped those Mulelist bitch
prisoners in jail.
Copy !req
725. And Why you need so many guns to kill
one single little disarmed Mulelist.
Copy !req
726. While to kill a bigger and stronger one,
you only need one shot.
Copy !req
727. But despite everything,
Copy !req
728. Africa continues to be
an uncontainable sea of life.
Copy !req
729. Here in South Africa,
for every baby born with White skin,
Copy !req
730. five come into the world
with black skin.
Copy !req
731. Racial separation,
which is called “apartheid“ here
Copy !req
732. is a short-lived, provisional dam.
Copy !req
733. It is the hysterical reaction
to the hysterical situation
Copy !req
734. that threatens to darken the smile
of the new generations into hatred.
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735. Soweto is one of the largest
black cities in South Africa.
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736. The apartheid laws
prohibit Whites from entering.
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737. If it's a prison,
then it's a strange prison
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738. Where the doors lock on the inside
and open out.
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739. On the other side of these lines,
there's another big prison...
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740. that of the Whites.
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741. It's called Johannesburg.
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742. Apartheid prohibits blacks
from entering.
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743. This is another strange prison
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744. Where the doors lock on the inside
and open out.
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745. Apartheid has looked up two races
in two different prisons
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746. Whose locks work the wrong way.
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747. Two gilded cages
in the richest country in the world.
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748. The Boers discovered gold
a hundred years ago
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749. when they had been working this land
as farmers for hundreds of years.
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750. There's no question that the Boers
also have a right to this wealth
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751. because the Boers are Africans, too,
even if they're White Africans.
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752. But it's also true that to extract
just one of these gold bars
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753. requires one day of labor
from 1000 black Africans
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754. and the technical assistance
of 100 White Africans.
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755. Because this is a country
of 3 million White Africans
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756. and 11 million black Africans.
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757. And although each needs the other,
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758. they live in suspicion
of the numerical disproportion
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759. and in the misunderstanding
of certain slogans arriving from Europe:
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760. “Whoever is White is not African,"
a racist affirmation.
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761. “Only those who are black are Africans, “
another racist affirmation.
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762. So day after day,
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763. the gilded prisons continue to close
and open to the wail of the sirens
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764. that call White Africans
and black Africans to work together.
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765. As long as it was a poor land,
it was an uninhabited land.
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766. Then, when the Boers opened the mines
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767. the Bantu came down from the mountains
in search of work.
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768. They spread the word and new crowds
crossed the uncontrollable borders.
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769. Then it was the turn of the refugees
from Congo, Sudan, Angola.
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770. Today there are 11 million
and still growing.
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771. They come in waves
to the entrance of the mines
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772. They flood through the labyrinth
of tunnels that run under the big city.
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773. The great vein of gold, half a mile thick,
Winds under the city of Johannesburg,
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774. the ceiling that separates
3 million Whites from 11 million blacks
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775. peppered with holes
like a huge Swiss cheese.
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776. Crowds of miners dig like termites,
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777. crawling from one shaft to another
like Christians in the catacombs,
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778. following the path of gold with
a secret, methodical, muffled grinding.
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779. Over here, the roof creaks menacingly.
The miners run for cover.
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780. Over there,
the big city vibrates and trembles
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781. from the dull explosions of dynamite,
but no one moves.
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782. No one has paid attention for years.
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783. The stock market goes up continuously.
Share prices are steadily high.
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784. Buy orders for mining shares arrive
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785. from the markets of London,
New York, Geneva and Paris.
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786. On March 10 of this year, Moscow bought
2 million carats of diamonds.
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787. On May 12,
Peking requested 50 tons of gold.
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788. Down below, the great vein of gold
climbs from low to high
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789. just like the stock chart.
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790. Millions of picks and shovels follow it
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791. in a relentless, solid march
toward the surface.
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792. The great floor separating the two worlds
is growing thinner and crumbling.
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793. The growing clamor of the Stock Exchange
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794. mixes with the ever closer
and louder boom of the explosions.
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795. Almighty Lord, now that another day
dies in your glory,
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796. bless and protect our lives.
Bless and protect our forces
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797. as it is written that
the hyena shall prevail over the lion
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798. when the lion has no more claws
with which to rule.
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799. Grant that this sea whence we came
shall always lie before us
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800. and never at our backs.
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801. Bless and protect this, our last refuge
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802. which you led us to find unspoiled
on the day we came
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803. and in which we have resisted
hatred and violence.
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804. Lastly, bless and protect
the waves and the winds,
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805. that the fury of two oceans united
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806. shall not wrest us away forever
from these final shores.
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807. Amen.
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808. At the end of the Ice Age,
a warm current
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809. broke this little colony of penguins
off of the glaciers of the south
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810. and carried them here on huge rafts
of ice that then melted in the sun.
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811. Isolated and Without the possibility
of returning to their original homeland,
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812. they have for centuries been
strangers in a strange land
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813. that is becoming more and more
heated and hostile toward them
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814. surrounded by a sea that grows higher
and more and more filled with rage.
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815. Perhaps a little peace will descend
upon these waters sooner or later,
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816. before a wave stronger than the others
tears them away forever
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817. from this last rock that forms
the geographic end of the Dark Continent.
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