It’s two months since Cecil the lion was killed by hunter Walter Palmer, an American dentist, in Zimbabwe. Cecil, a favourite among locals, was wounded with an arrow, then – 40 hours later – shot and beheaded. Gael Jennings was in Zimbabwe at the time, and here she writes about her experience with the country’s magnificent wildlife.
At roughly the same time that Cecil the magnificent patriarch of Hwange National Park, was being ignominiously murdered by a cowardly white foreigner in Zimbabwe, just a couple of kilometres away, a mature male leopard padded out from the scrub right in front of our little open truck and stood calmly regarding his surroundings (including us), before slipping silently into the bush like a surreal visitation.
His glossy beauty, his hugeness and impossible health, the perfection of his sleek dappled coat, his carved head, soft ears and unflinching amber eyes (and his proximity…) silenced all of us in the truck.
We were quite literally awe-struck by his being.
How could such a creature actually exist?
He was too unearthly magnificent to materialise in this impoverished scrub and dirt, let alone still live and hunt here, as he and his predecessors had for millennia.
This was the creature of our childhood fantasies - potent, exotic, from that mystical place called Africa.
And that, I think, is part of the nub of our anguished response to the murder of Cecil the lion.
We have a love affair with African animals, and there’s good reason for it.
Africa is an ancient continent.
This is where we human beings first evolved, distinct from the apes, and from where waves of us spread around the world, over hundreds of thousands of years, to become who we are today.