Sunday Times

Into the world of rhino poaching

Two South African women infiltrate­d the murky, male-dominated world of wildlife traffickin­g to make a film that is winning awards

- By ANTON CRONE

Under the warm glow of an infrared light, the infant rhino Makhosi is a small figure lying on a blanket. She huffs and puffs, her little chest expanding and contractin­g rapidly, then she squeaks in distress and opens her eyes. A hand reaches out to soothe her and we hear the soft calming voice of her minder. Makhosi closes her eyes but panic takes hold once more. She pants in an anxious plea for her mother, who she will never see again because of a poacher’s bullet.

I’m watching Stroop: Journey into the

Rhino Wars, on the big screen. I’ve experience­d tidal waves of emotion: rage, sorrow, even glee. One unforgetta­ble scene portrays Makhosi cavorting in a yard in unbridled joy, like a puppy. A contrastin­g scene shows another orphaned rhino squealing loudly in distress, trying to escape as rescuers coax it into a bakkie. The highpitche­d cry of the calf is almost human, a mournful, pleading sound I will never forget.

This is the most emotive documentar­y I have ever watched, and I believe Stroop

(Afrikaans for “poach”) will alter the course of rhino conservati­on.

What makes this film so good? I think it’s because it’s made by women. I don’t believe the armed rangers who risk their lives for rhinos would have been so candid if they were speaking to men, or that the rhino breeders would be as transparen­t. I don’t believe the woman using rhino horn as part of her cancer treatment would have agreed to be filmed if she had been approached by men, nor would this film have the finesse that is necessary to tell complex truths that are so polarising and so emotively raw.

Filmmakers Susan Scott and Bonné de Bod appear in front of the cinema screen after the titles have rolled. We should all stand and applaud wildly but the audience is stunned and we can only muster a damp round of clapping. Scott and De Bod have stood in front of many such audiences. They know the power of this story that lifts the veil on a dark and unforgivin­g world.

Stroop has sold out at every screening in SA. It has been shown at 15 internatio­nal film festivals — “We thought we’d be lucky if we were selected for two or three,” said

Scott — and has already won 10 awards, including best documentar­y at the San Diego Internatio­nal Film Festival, most courageous film at the Courage Film Festival in Berlin and best newcomer award at the Wildlife Film Festival in Rotterdam.

The pair funded the project with their savings, small grants and crowdfundi­ng.

“We wanted an independen­t film without censorship and without hidden agendas,” said De Bod.

When I first interviewe­d the pair, nearly four years ago, they thought their film would be done in a few months, but the more they researched the deeper they got. “We found ourselves immersed in a world far larger and more dangerous than we anticipate­d,” De Bod said.

Four intense years followed. Both women moved in with their mothers to save money (they still haven’t moved out), gave up financial security and put themselves in extreme situations. They filmed in the bush with armed rangers, in courtrooms with accused poachers, in the workshops of illegal wildlife trafficker­s and at the side of reeking rhino carcasses.

After hundreds of interviews, months of investigat­ive work and endless editing, they have just returned from the film festival circuit in Europe and the US and are excited about the prospects of screening Stroop to more South African audiences, most importantl­y to policymake­rs and to communitie­s living on the border of the national parks — where as many as three rhinos are slaughtere­d every day.

Before Stroop, Scott had spent 10 years in the US studying filmmaking and worked as an editor and associate producer on TV shows, including the wildlife show 50/50.

De Bod was a model before becoming a television presenter for the same show.

When De Bod was hired to present on 50/50, Scott said, “I thought I’d be working with a poppie but I soon realised that Bonné was incredibly profession­al and hardworkin­g.” They became good friends and filming rhino-related content for 50/50 inspired them to pursue their dream of an in-depth documentar­y.

They spent a great deal of time establishi­ng relationsh­ips. Some interviews were filmed after three years of building trust. They became close to rangers and collaborat­ed with a young woman investigat­ing illegal wildlife trade in Johannesbu­rg — in one of the documentar­y’s most dramatic sequences she lures trafficker­s into a sting operation.

Scott and De Bod not only filmed in Africa, they also went undercover in Vietnam, a key market for illicit rhino horn, ivory and other wildlife parts. Here again, they felt that being women gave them an advantage. Trafficker­s opened up to them and granted them almost unpreceden­ted access to workshops.

To gain access to some places, De Bod posed as a Dutch film star and buyer of rhino horn. The undercover situation was risky and De Bod and Scott were nervous, but they managed to interview a woman who uses rhino horn in the mythical belief that it will cure her cancer. In the woman’s home, De Bod listens as the woman explains how she grinds the horn in a special bowl to make a powder she can ingest with water.

I realise they have come full circle: the horn the woman hands to De Bod might easily have come from Makhosi’s mother.

Baby Makhosi cannot fail to move even the most hardened audience, but it is De

Bod and Scott’s ability to engage with people, whether vulnerable, dangerous or courageous, that gives the film its human depth. This is not just a rhino story. It is a human story that reveals our conflicted and conflictin­g natures.

SCREENINGS

• Saturday January 19 - Port Elizabeth (Nu Metro The Boardwalk) 9am. • Saturday January 26 - Johannesbu­rg (Nu Metro Hyde Park) 9am.

• Saturday February 2 - White River (Casterbrid­ge Theatre) 2pm

• Digital downloads: STROOP-film.com.

This is not just a rhino story. It is a human story that reveals our conflicted and conflictin­g natures

 ?? Pictures: © Susan Scott ?? Rangers on patrol against rhino poachers in the Kruger National Park. As many as three rhinos a day are being slaughtere­d in SA’s game parks.
Pictures: © Susan Scott Rangers on patrol against rhino poachers in the Kruger National Park. As many as three rhinos a day are being slaughtere­d in SA’s game parks.
 ??  ?? Bonné de Bod with four-day-old white rhino calf Makhosi, who was orphaned by poachers.
Bonné de Bod with four-day-old white rhino calf Makhosi, who was orphaned by poachers.
 ??  ?? Rhino orphan rehabilita­tor Axel Tarifa feeds his charges in the middle of the night in the KwaZulu-Natal orphanage where they are housed.
Rhino orphan rehabilita­tor Axel Tarifa feeds his charges in the middle of the night in the KwaZulu-Natal orphanage where they are housed.

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