The Joys and Dangers of Exploring Africa on the Back of an Elephant
Renowned travel writer Paul Theroux journeys through Botswana’s spectacular, wildlife-rich wetlands
- By Paul Theroux
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2013, Subscribe
(Page 6 of 6)
Nathan spoke of the elephants, and especially Sukiri, with a matey affection, but his tone also contained a note of reverential awe, granting them a sort of sacredness. I noticed that no one at Abu ever joked about the elephants.
Sighing, Alexandra said, “Isn’t this magical? Look at us. It’s a living Manet, Déjeuner sur l’herbe.”
It was a transcendent experience and an unexpected thrill. Such experiences are so exceptional in Africa that few people know them. These thrills will become rarer as the game diminishes and the wild places are overrun with camps and lodges, the rivers dammed, the savannas fenced, the land carved up and exploited, and the bush animals eaten to extinction. Peter Beard’s landmark book, The End of the Game: The Last Word From Paradise, was early (1965) but prophetic, the doom of the animals inevitable. He wrote, “Death is the patiently awaited, unfeared fact of delicately poised African life.”
I admired the order of Abu Camp and the integrity of Michael’s wish to release the elephants; and I hoped that he would prosper. I liked the harmony and found it funny that although the mahout might yell and cajole, the elephant stood its ground, yanking at trees, stuffing its mouth with leafy boughs, doing exactly what it wanted to do, taking its time, and only resuming its walk when it had eaten its fill.
On my last evening Michael asked where I was headed. I said I was going back to Namibia, and north to Etosha National Park.
“Etosha’s another story.”
For him, Etosha was mass tourism in a large, regulated game park; busloads of gawkers, herds of budget-minded tourists, sprawling hotel compounds.
Michael said that he would stay in touch, and he did. I got news of Nathan and Collet and Big Joe taking a trip to New York. These three friends, bonded by their months of working together at Abu, stayed at the elegant Pierre Hotel and were interviewed by awed journalists about their life in the bush and their elephant experiences with the herd at Abu. They visited zoos in Toronto, Indianapolis, Pittsburgh and Baltimore, looking at elephants and studying the breeding programs. They were photographed and quoted, as though they themselves were marvels from Africa. They were away for six weeks.
On his return to Abu, Nathan Jamieson began working again with his elephant, Sukiri. Only a few days after he arrived back he left her untethered, and when he walked a little distance to fetch her chains and manacles, turning his back on her, she followed him in the nodding and plodding way of an elephant on a mission, and knocked him flat, crushing him to death with her huge head. Nathan was 32 years old.
Later, Michael told me, “He died doing what he loved.” I remembered how happy Nathan had been at Abu Camp, how fond of the elephants, and how much he knew of them. Perhaps it was true that he’d had a happy death.
On hearing of Nathan’s fate, the Botswana government ordered that Sukiri be destroyed. Michael Lorentz vigorously opposed this, and thus began an imbroglio that ended with Michael quitting Abu for good, Abu resuming under new management, and Sukiri, along with the two elephants that had been orphaned with her, being trucked to Johannesburg and flown in elephantine crates to the United States, where they are now housed together in an exhibit at the Pittsburgh Zoo.
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Comments (4)
To the Editors of Smithsonian Magazine, Randall Moore's outburst below is entirely in character.. However, this story is not about him, but rather about Abu and the experience there at a time after he had sold the business. Yes, there is a small inaccuracy in that the first elephants that he brought back to Africa were not part of the original Abu herd. However that is old history and only relevant if Mr Theroux was writing a piece about Randall Moore or the full history of the camp. I did work there over a period of 19 years, nine of them for Randall Moore. This is not the forum for a tit for tat between Mr Moore and me, so whatever his personal opinion of me may be, it is utterly churlish to use that to attack Mr Theroux, one of the world's most pre-eminent and highly respected travel writers. The piece is about Mr Theroux's experiences at the camp, and in my opinion, it perfectly captures much of the essence of what it was like to be on safari at Abu. This article is a tribute to all those who invested their lives and passion into making Abu one of the great safari experiences on the continent. Yours sincerely, Michael Lorentz Passage to Africa
Posted by Michael Lorentz on May 1,2013 | 03:44 AM
Randall - Your outburst below, whilst entirely in character, is completely uncalled for. The story is not about you, but rather about Abu and the experience there at a time after you had sold the business. Yes, there is a small inaccuracy in that the first elephants you brought back to Africa where not part of the original Abu herd, but that is old history and only relevant if Mr Theroux was writing a piece about you or the full history of the camp. This is not the forum for a tit for tat between you and me, so whatever your personal opinion of me may be, it is utterly churlish to use that to attack Mr Theroux, one of the world's most pre-eminent and highly respected travel writers. The piece is about his experiences at the camp, and in my opinion, perfectly captures much of the essence of what it was like to be on safari at Abu. This article is a tribute to all those who invested their lives and passion into making Abu one of the great safari experiences on the continent. Yours sincerely, Michael Lorentz Passage to Africa
Posted by Michael Lorentz on April 30,2013 | 03:19 AM
Letter to your editor; Dear sir, It is very sad to read an article in a magazine I considered in such high regard, that is filled with so many inaccuracies. Paul Theroux should be ashamed! He is either too old to research, read, or write this kind of article. The fact that he mentions my book BTA as a reference for the article and then proceeds to reinvent the facts speaks for itself. He should have read my second book Elephants for Africa as a reference to my work in the Okavango Delta and perhaps he would have had a chance to get some of the facts correct! Perhaps his only reason for writing this article was to provide some public relations prose for his friend Michael Lorentz, whom never worked for twenty years at Abu Camp with the elephants! I founded Elephant Back Safaris and built Abu Camp and only served nineteen years in this position myself! Very disturbing to read such a poorly constructed article! Sincerely, Randall Jay Moore
Posted by Randall Jay Moore on April 22,2013 | 04:22 AM
Articles like this are why I love coming to this website. Thank you so much for taking me to Africa on a vivid journey while on my lunch break stuck in a stuffy cubicle. :)
Posted by Jason on March 27,2013 | 04:47 PM