31.5 F
Holyoke
Saturday, February 22, 2025

Are Black People the True Children of the Gods? Unpacking the Erasure of African History and Spirituality

For centuries, Black people have been at the center of an ongoing struggle for identity, history, and divinity. While modern society often portrays African descendants as the marginalized, the lost, and the struggling, there exists a deeper, more profound question: Could Black people be the original children of the gods? And if so, does that explain why European and American systems have worked so tirelessly to erase African history, culture, and spirituality?

The Power of Black Storytelling: A Cultural and Political Imperative

By Metro Record In the Black community, storytelling...

Zimbabwe Sells Rights to Hunt Endangered Elephants

DiasporaAfricaZimbabwe Sells Rights to Hunt Endangered Elephants

Zimbabwe is selling rights to shoot up to 500 elephants this year to generate public revenue, the country’s wildlife agency said Monday, weeks after the animals were listed as endangered.

Parks and Wildlife Management Authority spokesman Tinashe Farawo said elephant hunting was allowed during the country’s April to October rainy season.

He said revenues from the controversial activity would be particularly important this year due to the economic setbacks of coronavirus.

“We got the authority to hunt a maximum of 500 elephants and that’s how we make money,” Farawo explained, noting that a single elephant hunt could cost up to $10,000.

Hunters “require more assisting personnel like trackers, protective hunters, and chefs,” he added.
“All this will be paid for and means more for revenue.”

However, conservation groups have voiced concern over hunting animals increasingly threatened with extinction.

The Swiss-based International Union for Conservation of Nature last month listed the African savanna elephant as “endangered” and the African forest elephant as “critically endangered”, citing population declines due to poaching and loss of habitat.

Both species had previously been treated as a single category and listed as “vulnerable”.

“Poaching has continued unabated despite trophy hunting under the guise of funding conservation,” said Simiso Mlevu, spokeswoman for the Zimbabwe-based Centre for Natural Resource Governance.
Mlevu also argued that hunters usually targeted large and healthy animals, leaving smaller, less aesthetically pleasing specimens that were less attractive to tourists.

Despite dwindling population numbers, Zimbabwe is faced with a surplus of elephants — estimated at around 84,000 for a carrying capacity of 50,000.

Recurrent droughts have added to the strain of overburdened national parks, forcing the pachyderms to seek food and water further afield.

Some encroach upon populated areas in the process, destroying crops and occasionally killing people who cross their path.

Farawo defended the decision to continue issuing hunting permits, noting that the practice has been going on since 1991 and there was “no need to make noise about it”.

spot_img
spot_img
spot_img

Check out our other content

Check out other tags:

spot_img
spot_img

Most Popular Articles