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Wednesday 7 November 2012

Birdfall (or, who determines our agenda?)

The National Geographic (October 2012) reports that China legally bought 73 tonnes of ivory from Africa in 2008. In 2011, poaching reached the highest levels since the 1989 ban in ivory trade. A single tusk can fetch up to USD 6,000, providing a strong incentive for the poor and criminals. We must urgently take back the driver's seat in setting our own human development agenda.


Birdfall
The next someone says the sky is falling
I shall be more inclined to listen,
because this morning I saw a strange thing happen.
I saw a bird fall onto the tarmac, and I promise you it wasn’t dead.
We might say it hit the ground flying.
I don’t know any more if it’s true: that only dead birds fall to the ground.

Here we don’t cry wolf, because the wolves were wiped out with the smallpox.
And the African painted wild dogs are nearly extinct.
Soon we won’t be able to cry anything at all –
not lion, not leopard.
Certainly we won’t be able to say, I was chased by a rhino on the way to work.
But that doesn’t mean it didn’t happen.

The sky is falling. The air cannot hold the birds.
Cities are crumbling, even as skyscrapers go up.
Our stories are about extinction and eradication.
We can’t speak of miracles; such as birds defying buoyancy.
That would be mere superstition. If we insisted that it happened,
some more research would be required.
The research consortium would then patent
the gene that causes live birds to fall from trees.

When the right hand is trying to breed back the wolves,
the left hand is holding workshops about development infrastructure.
The rhino keepers dart, dehorn, and then decry the waste.
Have you ever seen a lump of rhino rotting?
While the cameras flash, the horn makes it way to Asia.
The technology is assembled in Asia.
Part of our development is built on cadavers.

Me, I’m keeping my eyes open. There might be other birds falling.
Maybe this not such a rare phenomenon.
I want to hear what earth might be telling me.
I might to catch a new idiom; speak in tongues.