Hungry Stomachs Have No Ears

Transcriber: Zsófia Herczeg
Reviewer: Peter Van de Ven

It is true

that empty stomachs have no ears,

that hunger causes
the destruction of wildlands,

but I believe there is a remedy
that can heal both people and nature.

The Civil War

in the Southern African country
of Mozambique

lasted from 1977 to 1992.

During the horrific 15-year war,
there was no food and no jobs,

especially in the countryside.

One of the families hard hit

by the terrors and deprivation
caused by the conflict

were Zakaria and Anastasia Domingo

and their children
Chico, Yao, Davina and Nando.

Living in the Marromeu Complex
of the Zambezi Delta,

with the war raging around them,

Zakaria’s only means of feeding his family

was through subsistence farming
and poaching with homemade snares.

But there was really never
enough nourishment for his family,

particularly protein.

His sons and daughter
were suffering from chronic malnutrition

and severe protein deficiency,

or what is called kwashiorkor,

a visible sign of which

was the terribly bloated bellies
of his children.

As any father would,

Zakaria did not worry
about the consequences of the poaching

or the extensive destruction
of the forested areas

through slash-and-burn agriculture.

He was desperate to feed his family,

and he would stop at nothing
to try and fulfill the role of provider.

Eventually, the war came to an end,

but food and jobs were still lacking
in the villages of the Zambezi Delta.

Poaching and subsistence farming

were still the only means
available to the local people

to bring in even a meager supply
of nutrients and income

for their families.

Then men and women
arrived from the capital city of Maputo

and from neighboring South Africa.

They sat down and spoke with Zakaria
and Anastasia and other villagers.

They explained to them

that they had a vision to restore
not only the villagers’ lives

but also the ecosystem
within which they lived.

These newcomers went on
to paint a picture

of how they would accomplish this,

this resurrection of lives and wildlands.

They emphasized
that only by working hand in hand,

local villagers with the outsiders,
would change be possible.

The newcomers pointed
to the first step in the chain that could,

with much work and persistence,

lead to the realization
of their nearly unimaginable vision.

This first step was a provision
of a consistent supply of protein.

Like the meagre amount of protein
brought in by the villagers’ poaching,

the source would be wild animals.

[Warning: graphic content]

[Images of animals hunted for food}

However,

rather than indiscriminate poaching,

international trophy hunters
would provide the animal protein.

All of the meat

from this closely regulated sport hunting

would go to feed the local villagers
and the international hunters themselves.

The goal was to provide
ten pounds of meat per week

for each of the local families.

Well, we’re dropping off meat
to one of the villages.

This is coming from what’s called
a community buffalo.

It’s a Cape buffalo that I hunted
this morning and took.

I paid for the permit and the opportunity
to hunt the Cape buffalo,

but I won’t take a trophy away with me,
no horns or anything like that.

Instead, this is simply for meat
for the villagers.

This Cape buffalo will feed
approximately 60 families,

something like that,

because it’s 10 pounds per family,

about 600 pounds
of boned meat from this animal.

So as you can see,

they’re beginning to come in
to get their allocation of meat.

And each time, this is what happens,

it turns into a family affair,
an event and a lot of fun.

After knowing only deprivation and hunger,

it is easy to understand

that Zakaria and Anastasia
would have been mistrustful

of such promises.

So the second step
in the restoration process

was equally important.

The outsiders told them

that they would use the funds
from the sport hunters

to hire anti-poaching teams.

Who better to act
as anti-poaching squads,

they emphasized,

than those who were former poachers?

So anti-poaching efforts

are the other side
of the restoration coin.

Fast response teams
made up of local villagers

now ride on electric motorbikes
bought with hunter funds.

Even a helicopter operates
from the Zambezi Delta Safari Base Camp,

adding its range and speed
to both monitor wildlife

and to search for poaching teams.

And yes, hunters bought
the helicopter as well.

Over time, the local villagers’ doubts
transformed into relief and joy.

No longer did they have to worry

about their children
or themselves going hungry.

Not only was 10 pounds of red meat
provided each week,

but abundant fish protein
was also available

through a regulated fishing program
begun by the safari operators.

Likewise, instead of slashing
and burning the forest

to have access to maize
and other plant-based nutrients,

the safari outfitters developed
a community agricultural field.

Though a 2016 study
by the National Institutes of Health

still identified malnutrition
in Mozambique as a serious concern,

with around 40 percent of all children
chronically malnourished,

this is no longer the case
in the Marromeu Complex.

Children and their parents are well-fed
and enjoy a much healthier existence.

As crucial as it was,

the near miraculous changes
for the local villagers’ lives

did not stop with the provision of food.

Infrastructural improvements
including schools,

housing for teachers, a clinic,
a portable maize mill

and even a self-sustaining
honey producing program

are available to all local villagers.

Every one of these additions

came from the money
of passionate sport hunters.

You might be wondering
how sport hunting differs from poaching;

I mean, in both cases,
animals are killed by “hunters.”

Non-hunters in particular
ask me this question quite often,

and it’s a great question.

Let’s look again at the Marromeu Complex.

In the case of poaching,

snares and traps catch
whatever unfortunate animal happens past.

Often found are females and their youngs
strangled by the wire snares

or with their legs mangled
by the steel traps.

The indiscriminate nature
of poaching is horrible,

but possibly even worse
is that organized poaching squads

will catch tens to hundreds of animals
over the course of their multiday raids.

Some of these raids are for personal use,

but many are for selling the meat
at markets in the local villages.

The result

is the near extinction of species.

Contrast this to sport hunting,

where strict quotas exist,

overseen by government officials

and the outfitters
who guide their hunting clients.

Hunters take only a small fraction
of the older males from each species.

Let’s consider two examples.

Each year, sport hunters
remove only 70 Cape buffalo bulls

from a population of 25,000

and 25 sable bulls
from a population of 3,000.

The money paid by the hunters,

in the form of license fees,
community fees and daily rates,

goes straight back
into the local community

and into anti-poaching efforts.

The financial input
from the well-regulated sport hunting

for the restoration
of the Zambezi Delta ecosystem

has been no less miraculous
than for the local villagers.

Game animals have swollen in numbers

with the regulated hunting
of their populations,

providing the funds necessary
to continue to suppress poaching.

Sable antelope once numbered
only 30 animals

but now have grown to 3,000.

Only 1,200 Cape buffalo remained

when the safari operators
began their work.

Now there are more than 25,000
of these animals roaming the landscape.

And the quintessential African species,

the zebra, as they say here in Mozambique,

was nearly extinct,

with only eight of these beautiful
equids left in 1992.

They now roam in herds
that add up to over 1,200 individuals.

But it’s not only game animals
that have benefited from sport hunting.

The disappearance
of subsistence agriculture

means protection for tree species
and ground cover.

The trees are home
for beautifully colored songbirds.

Lower vegetation holds a wealth
of amphibians, insects and small mammals.

The ecological web has self-healed

as the protection from human
destruction has continued.

Without sport hunting,

there would still be starvation
in the Marromeu Complex.

Without sport hunting,

there would still be
an ecosystem in disarray.

And without sport hunting,

the people and the wildlands
within which they exist

would be in daily peril.

With sport hunting,

this portion of Mozambique and Africa

reflect a resurrection of people

and of nature.

And remember Zakaria?

I met him on this trip to Mozambique.

He’s now in his 50s.

He is prosperous.

We passed through
his rice fields, sesame fields

and even his apiaries,
where he produces honey for personal use

and selling in local markets.

Zakaria, like all the local villagers,
has seen a transformation of his life,

the lives of his children
and the wildlands within which they live.

Sport hunting can indeed stop hunger,

and it can cause ears, eyes,

and yes, even stomachs
to hear and see and understand

the need for conservation
of natural wonders

like the Marromeu Complex of Mozambique.

Thank you.