Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Kennebec7 The Earth Trembled


I rescued an elephant mom in Thailand that was about to be killed for trying to protect her baby boy. Mimi is the mother and Bop is the adorable ‘little’boy who was horribly abused by employees of an animal show.

Shirley Francona for Kennebec 7 (#2)

The situation for elephants in Thailand is not so dissimilar from the plight of many wild animals across our planet today. Orangutans in Borneo, Bengal Tigers in India and elsewhere, pandas in China, gorillas in Rwanda. All endangered animals.

Man and beast compete for the ever-dwindling patches of land that have always sustained wild creatures. Land that humans fight over so they can grow food, cut down trees, dig up diamonds, and so forth.

From afar, however, people like me from countries like America, we have the impression that elephants are revered in Thailand. The country is shaped something like an elephant’s head. Elephants figure prominently in the art and history of the Kingdom. Elephants went to war on behalf of Thai kings.

Imagine my shock and disappointment when I arrived in Bangkok for the first time for the express purpose of trekking through Thai forests on the back of an elephant. The first elephant I saw was immersed in the middle of Bangkok’s infamous bumper-to-bumper traffic.

I was in a Toyota taxi, inching along amidst shiny black Mercedes, sleek BMWs, push carts selling food, and endless lines of motorcycles snaking in and out of traffic. Suddenly, ahead of me, looming above the sea of cars and motorcycles was a giant elephant, plodding slowly on the road like a mastodon among pigmies.

He was the first of many ‘begging’ elephants that I witnessed. They can be found in many Thai cities. Because logging was abolished in the Kingdom in the 1990s, owners of domestic elephants had to find a new line of work for their pachyderms. Begging. To quote Antoinette van de Water in her moving book, “The Great Elephant Escape,” ‘…She begs until all the bars and discos close. Drunks pull on her tail and try to make her drink beer. When (she) hungrily reaches out with her trunk to a restaurant table for leftovers, a customer throws hot coffee in her face….’

The scene I have described, where I saw my first begging elephant in Bangkok, appears in the screenplay, "The Earth Trembled". I do hope that you’ll have a chance to see the film after it’s made. You’ll see what noble, intelligent and sensitive animals elephants truly are.

For more information about Antoinette’s book, contact Silkworm Books at info@silkwormbooks.com


Hugs,

Shirley

For Kennebec7

(3/16/2010)

Santa Fe


4 comments:

Anonymous said...

I can't find Shirley Francona on YouTube, but my friend says he saw her on TV last year. The Thai army was flying helicopters over jungle, and this American had disappeared in the jungle with a female elephant she stole from a trekking place.

Are we going to hear the whole story?

Jackie S.

Anonymous said...

I can't find Shirley Francona on YouTube, but my friend says he saw her on TV last year. The Thai army was flying helicopters over jungle, and this American had disappeared in the jungle with a female elephant she stole from a trekking place.

Are we going to hear the whole story?

Jackie S.

Joan said...

I don't know anything about Shirley Francona, but I was on one of those trekking journeys in Thailand two years ago, and it was pretty horiffic. The mahout was hitting our elephant with his pick. It was bleeding on its head. And it through us out of our chair. That picture with the chained elephant and the woman screaming reminded me of the emotion of that moment.

Joan

Joan said...

I don't know anything about Shirley Francona, but I was on one of those trekking journeys in Thailand two years ago, and it was pretty horiffic. The mahout was hitting our elephant with his pick. It was bleeding on its head. And it through us out of our chair. That picture with the chained elephant and the woman screaming reminded me of the emotion of that moment.

Joan