Wednesday, June 6, 2007

BAKA'S FIGHT TO SUSTAIN THEIR CULTURAL HERITAGE


In the heart of the Congo basin forests the Baka community are fighting for their lives to save a disappearing world from an unseen enemy. The rain forests of Central Africa vast green blanket covering the area the size of Mexico hidden by trees are the forest homes of the Baka people. No one knows how long the Baka have lived in this forests. Ancient Egyptians recorded contact with them nearly 2500 years before Christ. Europeans who came to this region 4000 years later called them pygmies, they call themselves Baka.

The Baka believe they were thrown out of heaven for being too noisy and sent to live in the forest. The Baka people are hunter and gatherers. A semi nomadic tribes people, the Baka lived across huge territories of forest regions. In the 1960s life changed as the government of Cameroon encouraged the Baka's to move out of the forest and live by the road sides in exchange for schools, health care and the chance to trade. Then it seemed like a good deal. Little did they know...




Massive deforestation, which deprives the Pygmies of the natural and symbolic resources essential for their biological and cultural survival is now endemic. The trees in the forests can fetch up to US$40,000 for each individual tree due to their rarity and age. Before, the Baka would walk freely through the forest stopping wherever they liked, cuts sticks to make temporary shelters. They ate plants and fish as men hunted for game meat to feed the communities. Now they are forced to live a sedentary lifestyle.




Today the Baka village sends a group of men deep into the forest to hunt for big game meat to provide a substitute to their dietary needs. They use guns and sometimes can only afford one bullet as they are so expensive and literary have just one shot at finding the food. They hunt for monkeys, forest buffaloes and other big game life within the forest. They skin and smoke the game meat so as to ensure the meat does not rot while at the same time deterring flies. For the Baka survival in the forest is only possible because they share everything equally. Pickings are too lean for everyone to find their own.



In the periods of the year when the Baka live near the Bantu villages, they are exploited and despised by their farmer neighbours. The Baka have become victims of racism and exploited in the plantations as very cheap labour. Despite the inadequate diet and various health problems, the Baka communities have managed to live a peaceful life and maintaining their cultural heritage and the Baka identity.


MORE INFORMATION
MAURO CAMPAGNOLI FIELD RESEARCHES AMONG THE BAKA
Rain Forests Foundation

Sunday, June 3, 2007

SPRINTING MARIA MUTOLA

Maria Mutola has been ranked as one of the greatest female 800 m runners

Date and Place of birth: She was born in Chamanculo, a poor town in the suburbs of the Mozambican capital, Maputo, on 27 October 1972.
Height: 162cm
Weight: 61kg

Mutola played football with men in the Chamanculo neighbourhood until Mozambican writer, Jose Craveirinha, noticed a possible athletics talent when she was 14.



She was appointed an honorary United Nations youth ambassador in 2003 at a ceremony in Maputo, in recognition of her outstanding athletic achievements.

Maria's Lurdes Mutola Foundation aims to bring more young Mozambicans to sport and to assist in helping them achieve their sporting and educational potential. Other initiatives that Mutola and her Foundation have been involved in include a Ministry of Health /UNICEF immunisation campaign against measles and polio and housing development intiatives in Maputo.




MARIA'S 800M AWARDS
  • Olympic Games: 1988 first round; 1992 5th and 9th 1500 m; 1996 3rd; 2000 1st; 2004 4th
  • World Championships: 1991 4th; 1993 1st; 1995 disqualified semi final; 1997 3rd; 1999 2nd; 2001 1st; 2003 1st
  • World Indoor Championships: 1993 1st; 1995 1st; 1997 1st; 1999 2nd; 2001 1st; 2003 1st; 2004 1st; 2006 1st
  • World Cup: 1992 1st and 3rd 4x400 m Relay; 1994 1st; 1998 1st; 2002 1st and 4th 4x400 m Relay
  • All-Africa Games: 1991 1st; 1995 1st
  • African Championships: 1988 2nd; 1990 1st and 1st 1500 m; 1993 1st; 1998 1st; 2002 1st
  • Commonwealth Games: 1998 1st; 2002 1st; 2006 3rd



"It doesn't matter where you come from. If you come from a rich or poor area or family, you can always achieve your goals at school or in sports - if you focus enough and dedicate yourself"

-Maria Mutola
 
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