The children come running as soon as the boat pushes onto the riverbank, mooring next to empty handmade fish traps. Greg Carr is at the front of the group of visitors clambering ashore. He lifts one child into the air, makes a face at another and greets adults with backslapping familiarity. Carr, an eager American with khaki pants and a Boy Scout's smile, has spent a lot of time in Mozambican villages like this one over the past three years, wooing officials and local elders alike in the hot, red dust.
Carr's smile broadens when he sees Paulo Majacunene, who oversees this district. The tech multimillionaire turned philanthropist needs Majacunene to help him make a deal with these villagers. Carr has risked millions of dollars in an effort to revive a national park across the river, a once-heralded place of sweeping savannas and velvety green wetlands called Gorongosa. He believes a restored park will lift this beleaguered region out of poverty. And he believes his success depends on the help of this village, Vinho, and others like it.
Vinho is a subsistence farming community of some 280 adults and twice as many children, one of 15 villages along Gorongosa's borders. It has a school that goes through the fifth grade and a water pump that teenage girls use to fill plastic jugs as they jostle babies tied to their backs. As Carr and Vinho's leaders settle into wooden chairs shaded by a blue plastic tarp, the villagers gather.
Majacunene speaks first. He tells the crowd that when the Carr Foundation restores Gorongosa, there will be new jobs, health clinics and money for Vinho. But the community needs to help, Majacunene says. No more setting fires. No more killing animals. Everyone nods. He leads a series of cheers, thrusting his fist into the air.
"Viva Gorongosa Park!" he yells in Portuguese.
"Viva!" the crowd answers.
"Down with poaching!" he yells.
"Down!" echoes the crowd.
Carr, who understands some Portuguese, beams.
After the meeting, Roberto Zolho, Gorongosa's warden, tells Carr that the people of Vinho are setting many of the fires in the park, which clear land for farming but devastate the ecology. Carr smiles the wry smile that seems to appear when something strikes him as particularly absurd.
"Well, we're starting," he says. "You know, it starts somewhere."
What Carr has embarked upon is one of the largest individual commitments in the history of conservation in Africa. To restore Gorongosa National Park, he has pledged as much as $40 million over 30 years, an almost unheard-of time frame in a field where most donors—governments and nonprofit organizations alike—make grants for four or five years at most. He also plans one of the largest animal reintroduction efforts on the continent and hopes to answer one of the most debated questions in conservation today: how to boost development without destroying the environment.
His efforts come against a backdrop of worldwide biodiversity loss, which is at its worst in developing regions such as sub-Saharan Africa, where conflict and poverty accelerate natural resource destruction. Last year, the World Conservation Union reported that 40 percent of the species the group assesses are under threat of extinction.
Gorongosa, Carr believes, will change all that.
The park was once one of the most treasured in all of Africa, 1,525 square miles of well-watered terrain with one of the highest concentrations of large mammals on the continent—thousands of wildebeest, zebra and waterbuck, and even denser herds of buffalo and elephant than on the fabled Serengeti Plain. In the 1960s and '70s, movie stars, astronauts and other celebrities vacationed in Gorongosa; tourists arrived by the busload. Tippi Hedren, who starred in Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds, was inspired by Gorongosa's lions to build her own exotic cat preserve outside Los Angeles. Astronaut Charles Duke told his safari guide that visiting Gorongosa was as thrilling as landing on the moon.


I always amazes me to hear people talk very negatively about those with wealth, especially in America. I am grate ful for those with wealth and attempt to help mankind. I am not rich, however, I do have an admiration of those who have taken the chances to better themselves and then go on to attempt to help others. Mr. Carr seems to be such a person.
Posted by Denis Murphy on November 22,2007 | 06:39AM
It takes someone with a passion and a heart for humankind to do what Mr Carr has embarked on. His selfless dedication to this initiative will improve the lives of the impoverished people in Mozambique and the footprints will be there for future generations to marvel at how the rich but humble commit their time and resources to changing the world. All the best to Mr Carr and all those that are involved in transformation of lives for people around the protected area and improvement of biodiversity for global benefits.
Posted by Thandiwe Chikomo on November 29,2007 | 01:04AM
I am interested more information of the watershed project, and the ultimate project Mr. Carr will introduce to Mozambique. I have worked in development many years and even in Mozambique, being my father country and heritage, and unfortunately,I have noticed many promises gone sour, and games played by donors and organizations for personal gain and or image. last but not least, is this project sustainable. What happens when funds run out, or stop? is this part of implementation in the project? I would appreciate any information regarding the prtoject plans and intentions. Sincerely, Jeronimo Augusto
Posted by Jeronimo Augusto on January 2,2008 | 12:26PM