Monday, 13 March 2017

Hunting in Trinidad and Tobago - a bond with the land and people.

A question conservationists always ask is “why do you hunt” and normally follow up that injury with the insult “if you wanted meat why not buy chicken!”
If only life was as black and white as that we may have known the answer to have given them long ago.
Truth be told, hunting in Trinidad and Tobago would vary from hunting in any other country and the factors that motivate us would surely differ from what motivates them. For us, the impulse that causes us to feel no hesitation in identifying as a hunter has its roots buried deep in the history of this land.
About a decade ago a paper was published in a Dutch university describing the complexities and understanding of bush medicines in Trinidad and Tobago; its practice, its history, its effectiveness and a complete scientific breakdown of the phyto chemicals found in each plant used in this field which in almost all cases connected the plant to the remedy that was sought.
Another thesis that was produced alongside this was one detailing the plants used by hunters as concoctions for dogs or for human use.
The authors of that document did extensive research on the topic citing almost one hundred and forty other books, articles and journals written in years past that showed positive confirmation of these practices and its history not only in Trinidad and Tobago but in the wider Caribbean and Amazonian region.
What was consistent throughout the thesis was a link between our current practice of herbal and other bush medicinal techniques and that of the tribal practices of existing and departed native peoples of the region and wider hemisphere. What was concluded from their observations is that much of our hunting rituals that incorporate bush medicine was indeed handed down to us from our ancestral interactions with Amerindian peoples.
In a world of corruption, capitalism, consumerism and Bambi Brigadism, one has to ask “how have we managed to retain such correct and relevant knowledge of herbal or bush medicines in spite of the raging modernisation around us and the centuries gone since our ancestors would have been actively interacting with the native peoples of this land?”
The answer to that is simple – that deep bond to the land. It is therefore understandable that that bond would also run deep in the veins of the Hunters – those who are the ones that have carried and transmitted the oral knowledge from generation to generation maintaining the connection between the Bush and ourselves!
The dilemma we face though is that the conservationist HAVE NO CARE WHATSOEVER for our point of views, our life styles, our contributions and our connections to the land. They, form groups like El Sucko (El Soccoro) Wildlife Rehabilitation Centre and Papa Bois Conservation and relentlessly troll and attack us, playing on the soft emotions of this TV generation well-groomed by Disneyland to weep for the plight of Bambi!
They have shown in the past that they would rather tear hunting from the fabric of our society than to feel empathy to the thousands of seniors whose only recreation is hunting and being in the bush. They have shown their readiness to demolish the centuries of traditions built by hunters and their families and the communities formed from such in order to satiate their egos. It is a far gone understanding that the topics mentioned earlier are of little or no concern to them.
But there is hope for us hunters!
We have always acknowledged conservation and regulations as necessary for our traditions to continue. That is non disputable. We also acknowledge that there are ignoramuses among us.
However, as human diseases and medical complications begin to spawn rapidly as world population expands exponentially, the need for new, cheap, effective and available medication is also increasing. Research on traditional herbal medicines and its usage and applications have begun to rise. As science once again turns its eyes to herbal cures, we the men of the bush would be that link needed to such pathways: as the Amerindians handed it down to our ancestors, we must now pass it along to the future. We cannot simply be cut off from the land.
It is therefore incumbent upon us to step up to the table. Maybe it is time we put our factions aside and in unison fight the bombardment of the bambi brigade, protect our traditions and heritage, save or forests, swamps, savannas, marshes and bush lands and protect our interests. Let us the hunters unite and show our strength and improve ourselves and our country. Let the next generation not ask “why do you hunt?” but rather lets elevate our status that they would turn to us and say “THANK YOU FOR BEING A HUNTER!”
Article by: Abby Karim

For: Caiere Chase

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