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The last jungleman tribe Hazabi

author:Boro light and shadow

Hadzabes are typical bushmans who have traveled throughout Central and East African countries. Jungle people, as the name suggests, are people who hunt for a living in the jungle. Originally, the Hazabi people of Tanzania lived in south-central Africa, but later, over a conflict between another tribe, they crossed the Kalahari Desert (which covers all of Botswana and one-third of Namibia, northern South Africa, because the Kalahari Desert is not absolutely arid, there are jungles and wild animals, so there are still some bushmen living here), and migrated to the forest areas of western Congo. The Hazabi later continued their eastward migration to the jungles of the western part of Tanzania's Serengeti National Park, where they met Masai, Tanzania's largest ethnic group. The Maasai asked the Khazabis: What do you depend on for your survival? The Maasai believe that the Maasai and the wild animals have been able to live in harmony. The implication is that if the Hazabi hunt wild animals, the Maasai will not allow them to live in the area. Eventually, the Maasai accepted them. However, the Hazabi still secretly hunted wild animals, an act discovered by the Maasai. The Khazabi were then expelled by the Maasai. The Hazabi then continued eastward along the Serengeti National Park, through the Ngorongoro volcano region and finally settled in the jungles of Lake Eyasi. Because of this, the Hazabi people living in Tanzania and the jungle people in the Kalahari Desert speak the same language, even though they are thousands of miles apart. At present, there are about 900 to 1,000 Hazabi people living in this area of the jungle (because when the Tanzanian government counts the population, some Hazabi people live in very dense jungles, and it is estimated that some are missing, so it is only a large number), scattered in the jungle. Usually a family lives together. Hazabi men hunt, which is generally carried out in the morning and evening. In addition to raising children at home, the women of the Hazabi family also collect some edible plants and some local medicinal herbs. The Hazabi usually live in caves and build simple houses from local sources. The Hazabi people of Tanzania are a lonely tribe. Because they followed the tradition of hunting, they were not only unable to coexist with the Maasai, but also contrary to Tanzania's regulations and actions to protect wildlife. During our visits and filming, we found that they rarely showed a smile, probably worried about the future of their own people.

The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi
The last jungleman tribe Hazabi

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