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“If
food is manna from heaven, then hunger can raise devils from the
dead”.
My first encounter with monkey stew deep in the
jungles of Berberati, brought me face to face with personal demons
whose existence I'd never even suspected. Not too long ago, I found
myself in a forest concession area in the Central African Republic.
I was part of team of consultant-analysts deployed to survey a 200
km stretch just south of the Mambere River in Berberati. Our mission
was to identify timber trees, calculate their economic potential
and map the forest environment for The Client. It was a standard
job.
The five of us flew over the Congo River, into
Bangui. In sky-high spirits, we drove a straight ten hours to the
work site. Throughout that road journey, we laughed about having
to severely reduce our speed on the worst parts of the road. We
marvelled at bugs that collided with the windscreen (the fat ones
made the biggest splashes) and we frowned at the film of red dust
that covered just about everything. Except for endearingly rotten
jokes (The 'there was an American, a Chinese, and… a Nigerian'
variety), the general mode of communication was grunting, snoring,
burping and farting. Sure, they were middle-aged South African men...
but, our differences were even more fundamental. Let me paint a
picture.
They were staunchly religious, made sinister by
the military service of their youth, and then polished up by dubious
PhDs in the late 1980s. Brandishing sturdy calves and heroic beer-bellies
spilling over the waistband of rugby shorts, it became their life’s
mission to foster relationships with trees (to raise environmentalism
to a spiritual level!). They went about it by saving nature from
the fists of the human race and translating this contradictory love
into dollars – a fitting 21stcentury professionalism. To them,
I was very much the external insider, the one strategically positioned
to sustain the group dynamic. The youngest, and I believe the most
easy-going, I revelled in the realisation that I held an important
role. Me and my group of adorable, overgrown boy scouts eventually
arrived at the forest edge, tired and soul-drenchingly happy.
The Berberati jungle is dark and dense, like a
living, breathing organism. I swear, sometimes you will hear it
hiss, exhaling humidity and bowing to the heat. The trees easily
top 80 metres, blocking out sunlight, trapping in high temperatures.
The forest is a carnivorous beast, and we are its victims. Leaf
litter on the forest floor slithers with imaginary evil: 'What the
hell was that? Did it really move?' Fatigue and sticky sweat that
runs from every pore can trick the eyes. There are no footpaths
or animal tracks in this place. The only way through the swollen,
intensely tropical atmosphere is to swing the machete with serious
intent. Dots of floral pinks and mauves add a magical quality to
the forest. The flowers are sometimes large and dramatic, and they
dazzle with their surreal beauty. Turning skywards, the heart soars.
Glimpses of magenta plumage of birds flick through the leaves. Now
and again, we spot another giant wa-wa, a majestic rare tree species
that goes by the Latin name of Entandophragma. Merchants in the
timber industry love it to death. Found nowhere else in the world,
it is the undisputed lion of Afro-tropical rainforests. Its grain
quality is breathtakingly intricate, justifying its place as the
most expensive African timber in every Western commodity market.
We count wa-wa adults and seedlings, and later on, try to work out
mathematical models that can tell us how much can be harvested without
threatening the natural balance in the ecosystem.
The song of African Grey Parrots is ever-present
- a sure sign of their abundance in the forest. Jannie, the group’s
tallest and skinniest, recalls the previous summer when we heard
many during a job in the Knysna-Monkey Valley Forest in South Africa.
Shaking our heads fervently, we agree that Western conservationists
who insist the African Grey Parrot’s near-extinction actually
know nothing about what is really going down on the ground. “Typical”,
grimaces someone. It is a solemn, treasured moment of holy communion
in shared understanding. Our group experiences many moments like
this.
We’d travelled light, saving space for survey
equipment like measuring tapes, satellite technology, energy generators,
petrol - and booze (that universal life-saver for mind-numbing ordeals
in nature). Food was logically our lowest priority for the rucksack.
Our supply of drinking water was the ubiquitous liana, a sort of
woody climber that spirals around the tallest trees in the forest
canopy. We would severe the stems, and bubbles of cold, earth-tasting
water would gush out at high pressure into our parched throats.
Baths were out of the question; we lost our last opportunity some
three, four days earlier when we stumbled upon a Baka village. The
villagers' huts reminded me of doll’s houses, so low and tiny.
There were no subsistence farms or domesticated animals around the
village. It seemed that the forest was for them - as it was for
us - the sole source of sustenance. Surprised by our arrival, they'd
scattered, screaming, into their huts and the surrounding forest.
Like intrusive anthropologists surrendering to ‘un-cooperative
indigenes’, we left ashamed and dejected, unwashed and without
food.
As our assignment wore on, the drudgery of our
work began to wear us down. At some point, the dreaded time matrix
sucks you in. Counting the days eventually became crucial for sanity.
Time passed slowly. In addition to trees, we began to count steps,
days, hours, meals... it was all the same...
Then the eighth day arrived with a bang. Literally.
Sickened by insipid suppers by firelight, the metallic
taste of tinned baked beans and sardines lingered long after the
plates were cleared. Jack Daniels whiskey to quench thirst and tiredness,
and Camel cigarettes for dessert was no longer satisfying. Re-fuelling
the body became an effort. We wanted to move beyond monotony. Gradually,
we gave into the craving for comforting, home-cooked nourishment.
In the manner of sinners who erect defences to keep the howling
dogs of temptation at bay.
On that eighth day, four of our group of five left just before dusk.
I remain by the fire stoking the coals, waiting for their return.
The night sounds of insects are loud and exaggerated. After what
seems like hours - Kabah! - I hear the report of a rifle shot deep
in the jungle. I creep into the safe haven of my tent, scared -
and livid - at the discovery that a rifle was part of our survey
kit. My sense that I am losing control of the bonds keeping our
group together adds to my horror. Soon, they come trooping back
after the hunt. Proud men bearing fresh kill.
She is a young female vervet monkey, not exactly
my first choice for meat. There is the fact of her humanoid face,
fingers, her long limbs.... reminded me of rabbit dissections during
my Zoology 101 university days, a biologist’s cold fascination
kicks in. With my Maglite torch, I check for dilation of the vervet’s
pupils. She is truly dead. I peer and prod. Clear oesophageal and
rectal passages. The wound through the cranium, behind the ear,
is imperceptible – a neat gunshot by an impressive night marksman.
Our uncooked food was a fine specimen of an animal. I’m drawn
to the idea of skinning it to keep the fur as a memento but I reconsider
when I imagine the shame of being arrested by Customs.
A toothless Baka woman, whom they had met along
the way, prepares the monkey stew for us with tiny onions and tomatoes,
and a variety of unidentifiable forest leaves. Soon the pot is exuding
a rich, ceremonial aroma. That baleful humanoid face is disposed
of, with the gore and entrails. A thick broth bubbles in the pot,
as appetising as any beef stew you can order anywhere between Cape
Town and Casablanca. Cheeks bulging with saliva, we struggle to
contain our urge for the pleasure sensation. We quiver as the meal
is served - at least, some of us quiver - because into that climax
of emotion comes the grunt: “I’ve decided not to eat”.
Psychological impotence could not have come at a worse time. Two
of our group opt out of the monkey meal and stayed with the lean
fare of the past few nights. The most desperate retort I can muster
is a feeble, “Shit”. Automatically, our happy group
is split into good and evil, into non-monkey eaters and monkey eaters.
My feelings are jumbled, like after realising I
chose a last supper of root vegetables before crucifixion over the
elixir of life. I force-feed myself some positive psychology: more
food for us. My fingers dig enthusiastically into the stew... but
by a strange alchemy, the monkey stew has soured to my taste buds.
I hear myself panting with faked enjoyment. Suddenly the feast tastes,
feels, twisted and wrong. Conflicting emotions consume me, like
drug-tripping and then freaking out at bright neon galaxies flashing
by on the autobahn. The eyes of the dead monkey morph with the condemning
eyes of our abstaining colleagues. Damn! Surely, eating monkey meat
was supposed to be a rite of passage?! It was supposed to bring
you nearer to mankind and help you connect with your evolution!
It was supposed to release an epiphany and unlock the light of vision
and wisdom! And all of that grand, bejazzed stuff of virgin principles…
Instead of connecting with all these bass drumbeats in the heart
of the jungle, all I felt was deep shame...As though we were a party
of conservationists caught stewing our wards! It was the eighth
day of a jungle trek and I was suddenly at a moral t-junction I
did even know existed. I did not have a clear, immutable principle
that I could readily import - or export - from city to bush. Perhaps
if I had been served this exotic dish in some shanty town I would
have eaten without compunction... but we had poached this primate,
this cousin of man, from the trees, I had looked into her dead eyes...
Resolute, I soldiered on with the business of stuffing monkey gruel
down my throat. One can’t lose face during these group tests.
Yet, I resented this level of self-betrayal. And even more, I resented
the non-monkey eaters for their smug superiority, the decisiveness
with which they had claimed the moral high-ground. The anticipation
of murkier conflict hovered over our camp. I braced myself.
None of us spoke a word that night, as silent reproaches
overwhelmed our previous bonhomie. The following morning lapsed
into heavy, cloying judgements. We resumed our trek, cutting through
the jungle with our heavy kit in the stupefying heat, but it was
as though we were a different team from previous days. Such was
the strained cloud of pride and one-upmanship that followed us.
Not a spare word was uttered, no friendly banter. Somewhere around
noon, when the forest's heat and humidity was at its highest, redemption
arrived. One of the men who abstained from the monkey stew asked
for a rest-stop, complaining of a dizzy spell. Someone called, “Chicken-shit!”
Another, I think, called out something to do with a baby or his
mother, or hot flushes and mid-forties menopause... the usual horseplay,
with an edge that came, no doubt, from the previous night’s
events. We stopped in some relief, because, secretly, we were dreadfully
tired. Unfortunately, by the time we made a small clearing to sit
down in, the freckled, stocky guy with the ginger beard who had
called for a break had crumpled in a faint!
As he collapsed, the walls of silence and division
also splintered and crashed around us. Suddenly we were fussing
over the red-faced, fallen man. His collapse seemed an answer to
a prayer for catharsis, triggering an immediate re-instatement of
the group’s camaraderie. We fanned him, patted his balding
head and put water to his lips. The penance was quite over the top,
really. In my role as the group’s organiser, I encouraged
a slick presentation of a Madonna’s face. It came with a sniffle
and a little coo. Remorse is perhaps a necessity in the games surrounding
mutual shame? Heita!
Thirteen more days in the forest crept by uneventfully.
Indeed, it was a standard job.
On day twenty-one, we returned to the plush hotel
frequented by expats in Bangui, the capital city. The day was delightful
and sunny. Colours were bright, the air smelt fresh and life was
one hundred percent fabulous. I was reclined on a pink lilo-cushion
floating in the swimming pool, sipping a cocktail and flirting dangerously
with the world. My head bopped as I hummed along with the Michael
Jackson melody being performed by the hotel’s one-man-band-cum-keyboard,
“We are the world, we are the children, we are the ones to
make a brighter day so lets starts giving…”. My skin
glistened like honey. Every now-and-then, I ran my fingers through
my mane of hair. With a red carnation behind my ear and wearing
a risqué bathing suit, I felt like an almighty goddess after
a vicious battle. It was justified performance – reclaiming
a familiar identity and sense of principle in a world I knew best.
Guiltily, I thought about my flight to London via Lagos, Johannesburg,
and Cape Town, and hoped that I’d be lucky to be seated next
to someone gorgeous and charming. I made a mental note of the Prada
sling back high-heels and matching handbag at the Duty-free. The
smell of wood smoke clung. The view of the Oubangi River, forming
the border between the Central African Republic and the DR Congo,
shimmered through my sunglasses. In the distance, the fishermen
struggling with their meagre catch seemed like a parallel universe.
Licking my lip-gloss and parting my thighs slightly, I shifted to
a more comfortable position on the lilo. I had already drafted the
first version of the report to The Client. The job was over. Mission
accomplished. I would never discuss that eighth day in Berberati
with the others again.
Unencumbered by things of time and monkeys that
bring fundamental human qualities into sharp focus, cities can be
irritatingly safe intellectual spaces for principles. After all,
it had taken only eight days in the Berberati jungle to draw the
red-toothed monkey eater out of the conservationist. What a curious
species we are! |
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