KILLING
THE KILLING FIELDS OF LOLIONDO
By Ted Botha
In a corner of Africa, hunters
from the Middle East run amok with submachine guns, killing and
maiming animals, then spirit away their orphaned infants to keep
them as pets. Even worse than this massacre is that no one wants
to know about it
I first heard about the killing fields of Loliondo several years
ago. It struck me at the time that it was a sensational story. Arabs
shooting up animals in Africa with AK47s, stealing leopard and lion
and cheetah cubs to take back to Dubai and Damascus with them, building
an airfield on the edge of the Serengeti so that cargo planes could
haul away the booty they weren't meant to be taking out in the first
place, setting up cameras and armed patrols to keep the Maasai away
from tribal lands they'd been traversing for centuries, and even
bribing them to convert to Islam.
The story sounded
too good to be true. Nice guys, bad guys, and innocent animals caught
in between. It wasn't a new story, at least not in Africa. But editors
in New York didn't seem to know about it. Over the next few years
I discovered that they didn't want to know about it either. Some
of them thought it was a worthy story. (Wow, they gasped,
is that really true? Animals? AKs? Arabs? Corruption? Now that's
a story someone should write about. Fascinating, really fascinating.
) But none of them took it - and for various reasons.
"It's too far away."
"People don't know/care
about Africa."
"We have too many
stories about Africa already."
"We know hunting
is cruel, but what's the new angle?"
"Isn't AIDS bad enough?
Do you really want to tell another tragic story about a devastated
continent?"
After 9/11, there
were other concerns. Mostly they had to do with the fact that the
story implicated Arabs. The media suddenly seemed to be consumed
by an anti-anti-Arab sensitivity, so that any story about Arabs
who were doing something bad that didn't have to do the World Trade
Center attacks or Al Qaeda was just in poor taste. Couldn't we journalists
pick on someone else, please?
The upshot was this:
I had a sensational story, but no one wanted it. Which turned this
into a story about two hunts, the first being the cruel, devastating
kind for animals in Africa, the second being the cruel, frustrating
kind for a publisher in America.
The first hunt begins
in Tanzania in 1992, when an anomalous-sounding outfit called the
Ortello Business Company, based in the United Arab Emirates and
owned by its deputy minister of defense, Brigadier Mohamed Abdul
Rahim Al Ali, was sold a 20-year concession to Loliondo by the then
president, Ali Hassan Mwinyi.
At the time Brigadier
Ali made all kinds of eco-friendly (and very friendly-sounding)
promises - he would protect and conserve the area, pay local communities
a percentage of any income earned off of it, create employment,
build schools, lay on water, and so forth - and he boasted that
the deal would "demonstrate to all [the world presumably] the seriousness
that the Arab world is giving to wildlife conservation..."
Ali, or 'the brigadier,'
as he is referred to locally, couldn't have been given a more ideal
place to prove his good faith. The 1,540-square-mile concession
of Loliondo is a very important piece of property, especially in
ecological terms. It lies adjacent to the Serengeti National Park,
the Ngorongoro highlands, and the Maasai Mara, putting it smack
in the path of hundreds of thousands of wildebeest and zebra during
their annual migration. If when Westerners think of Africa, they
think of wide open plains teeming with animals, then Loliondo is
at the very heart of it.
Loliondo is also
located on the border of Kenya, which would make it easy for any
unauthorized person - or military aircraft, given that the brigadier
has constructed a 1.6-mile airstrip on the property - to enter or
leave the country. This fact alone, an unnecessary military airstrip
in Africa built and owned by a defense minister from the Middle
East, should have raised a few eyebrows, especially after the terrorist
attacks pre-9/11 in Dar es Salaam and Nairobi and post-9/11 on a
Mombasa hotel. But it didn't.
In 1959, when Tanzania
was still called Tanganyika, Loliondo was proclaimed a conservation
area. For thirty years, after independence from Britain and then
during ujamaa, the post-liberation leader Julius Nyerere's
unsuccessful form of socialism, Loliondo's status remained unchanged.
Even though plenty of animal-killing went on in the '70s and '80s,
most of it was by poachers. They wiped out hundreds of thousands
of elephants and rhino for ivory and rhino horn until an international
ban on the sale of both helped to turn the tide.
But then, while no
one was looking, something strange happened. Illegal hunters were
replaced by the legal kind, trophy or sport hunters. In the 1990s,
when Tanzania was ditching ujamaa for a market-oriented
economy, hunting was suddenly seen as a way of earning money, and
Loliondo was declared a 'hunting block.'
Tanzania sells hunting
blocks to anyone who can afford them, which usually means foreigners,
who then bring friends/family/clients to hunt there. (In the case
of Loliondo, these visitors have included King Abdullah II of Jordan.)
In 1990 there were only 47 blocks in the country, but by 2000 that
number had tripled, to 140. At present about twenty percent of the
country is designated for hunting.
All across Africa,
the same thing is happening - hunting is catching on like wildfire
- and it's not hard to see why. Money. Animals are the crude oil
of the savanna. Tourists who point Winchesters, it has been calculated,
spend at least ten times as much as tourists who point Nikons. In
South Africa, for instance, an ordinary lion costs $10,000 to kill,
a black-maned one $25,000, and an extremely rare white one, over
$150,000. Last year a Norwegian hunter was prepared to pay $60,000
to shoot a tame black rhino until, in a much-publicized case that
even involved the movie actress Charlize Theron (who paid for the
rhino's accommodations until its fate was decided), the Supreme
Court wouldn't let the hunt go ahead.
Besides each animal
he kills, a hunter has to pay to camp, to eat, to employ trackers,
and so forth, which can work out to more than $1,000 a day. In a
country with a robust economy, such as South Africa, those figures
are tempting. In countries in the midst of famine and financial
ruin (Zimbabwe) or overcoming years of ruinous socialist policies
(Zambia and Tanzania), they are just plain irresistible.
Not that the local
people who should benefit from that money ever see it. In Botswana,
it was estimated by Dereck Joubert, who writes for National
Geographic and has spent many years tracking lion and other
animals to write books like Hunting with the Moon , locals
earned 2 pula (a few cents) per animal shot. The bulk of the money
often goes to the outfitters, who are based on other continents,
in places like Texas, Germany and the Middle East.
Outfitters, as well
as some pro-hunting conservationists, argue that hunting has an
important role to play in conservation. It is a way of controlling
animal numbers while earning money for Africa. They would probably
also argue that most hunters respect the Four Rules of Hunting,
namely (1) No drugging or baiting of animals, (2) No hunting from
vehicles, (3) No hunting at night using high-powered lights to blind
your prey, and (4) No use of semiautomatic weapons.
In the United States
and Europe, perhaps that happens. Not in Africa.
Joubert, needless
to say, is vehemently against trophy hunting. He believes it erodes
the community and the economy. Hunting safaris are seasonal, use
very basic camps, and the staff are seldom trained in any job that
can keep them employed during the non-hunting months. Photographic
safaris, meanwhile, are year-round and are based out of well-established
camps, such as Governor's in Kenya or Richard Branson's Ulusaba
in South Africa; and the staff are trained in everything from cooking
to management.
And then, of course,
there's the diminishing gene pool to think about. Because the biggest
and best animals are the most highly sought-after by hunters, they
are systematically being killed off. Male lions are getting smaller
and elephant tusks punier. Hunters shoot an animal once, then it's
gone forever; tourists with cameras shoot the same animal thousands
of times and it is still there. You do the math.
The worst offender
on the continent is, ironically, also the most conservation-savvy:
South Africa. During the '70s and '80s, when poaching was rife in
the rest of Africa, there was hardly any in South Africa, which
was so successful in protecting animals that the Kruger National
Park landed up with too many elephants and the KwaZulu-Natal Parks
Board singlehandedly saved the black rhino from extinction.
Animals did so well,
in fact, that it didn't take long for the hunters to realize that
South Africa had what they wanted - in abundance. Now, commercial
hunting is an industry. Over $1.5 billion is invested in 25 million
acres of game farms, breeding centers and hunting ranches. Foreign
hunters, largely from Europe, the Middle East and the United States,
spend $100 million a year to kill as many as 32,000 animals. (A
28-year-old Alabaman hunter who was recently quoted in the Los
Angeles Times said he had killed 17 animals in 16 days.)
To ensure a regular
supply of the most desirable animals - the Big Five (lion, leopard,
elephant, buffalo, and even the still-endangered black rhino), lechwe,
African wild dog, cheetah, and, more recently, foreign species like
the Bengal tiger - they are not only being bred in captivity, in
Africa's version of puppy mills, but also brought in from neighboring
countries, and even stolen from game parks.
Thankfully, South
Africa's problems are being brought to light by a zealous local
media, as well as by television programs such as Britain's Cook's
Report, which several years ago exposed the controversial activity
of canned hunting, or shooting a lion that is caged and often drugged.
(Despite the program, though, canned hunting still goes on.)
But in Tanzania,
Loliondo has always been shrouded in secrecy. From the time it was
sold to OBC, there were questions. The price the Arabs paid was
never made public; the Maasai, whose cattle have been allowed to
roam across boundaries and terrain like Loliondo for centuries,
were never consulted; and the way the application was rushed through
led to rumors of presidential favors and government corruption.
(This is quite possible, seeing Tanzania came 82 nd out of 91 countries
covered in Transparency International's 2001 Corruption Perceptions
Index.)
My search for more
information about Loliondo began in Arusha, a town near Mt. Kilimanjaro
that is known, if at all, for being the seat of the International
War Crimes Tribunal on Rwanda. It is also a major crossroads for
hunters - the people who organize hunts, the foreigners who come
to hunt, and the government officials who provide the licenses that
are needed to hunt.
When none of the
outfitters agreed to talk to me (about Loliondo or, for that matter,
anything else), I contacted their colleagues farther afield, in
the hunting blocks to the south, in Ruaha and Selous. When they
also refused to talk, I contacted outfitters in Zimbabwe and Zambia,
but the outcome was always the same - zip. It was either because
I told them I was a journalist (and all hunters seem to be convinced
that no journalist has a good word to say about them) or because
they knew that there was, in fact, something fishy going on in Loliondo.
If solidarity didn't
keep people quiet, then fear did. In New York, I met a woman who
worked for a company that owns a luxury safari camp in the Serengeti,
not far from Loliondo. Its clients were not hunters, though, but
photographic tourists. She told me that the manager of the camp
knew what the Arabs in Loliondo were up to, and he didn't like it.
Besides being cruel, it was very bad for his business. He would
be out on his Landrover with a group of Americans and Brits pointing
binoculars when they came across a Jeep-load of Arabs pointing submachine
guns. Some of his guests would be so upset by this that they caught
the first available flight home.
The manager regularly
heard automatic gunfire from camp - again, I had to go on what his
colleague told me - and he would find animal carcasses in the veldt,
killed by gunfire, and most of the time it was quite pointless.
Two wildebeest, for example, were positioned head-to-head, shot
while they sparred playfully with each other. The shooters never
even bothered to take the skins or the horns as trophies; they simply
shot the animals for the sake of shooting. Nor were the hunters
sticking to the boundaries of Loliondo, but regularly penetrated
into the Serengeti, which is a protected area, and across the border
into Kenya's Maasai Mara, which is not only a protected area but
is also in a country that banned commercial hunting twenty-five
years ago.
I wanted to get hold
of the camp manager, but the owners asked me not to. They were worried
about the consequences - and understandably so. They had invested
heavily in Tanzania, and they feared the government would close
them down if they talked about what was going on. I couldn't even
get employees who had left the company to discuss the Arabs. In
fact, every lead I got went nowhere, and I was convinced that the
whole of East Africa knew about Loliondo but no one wanted to be
the first to spill the beans.
Just as I was coming
to a dead end, however, I heard about a man named Meitamei Dapash
... and the floodgates suddenly opened.
Meitamei works out
of a small office in Washington, D.C., the sole representative of
the Maasai Envrionmental Resource Coalition, or MERC. In existence
since 1999, MERC is supported by, among others, the Humane Society
of the United States and the Animal Legal Defense Fund.
Meitamei not only
knew about Loliondo and wanted to talk about it, but he had recently
returned from a trip to the area. He and six colleagues had interviewed
several hundred Maasai villagers and herdsmen, as well as local
church personnel, employees of nongovernmental organizations, park
officials, tour operators, and former and present OBC employees.
When I questioned him, he shot off information like one of the machine
guns he was trying to silence, confirming all the rumors I'd heard
until now.
The Arabs were breaking
every rule there was to break. According to what MERC heard, they
were using semi-automatic weapons, hunting with lights at night,
luring animals with artificially created salt-licks and waterholes,
shooting animals from vehicles, and shooting or capturing the young
and old, the male and female, the lactating and pregnant. (Tanzania,
while it allows hunting, forbids the use of bait, poisoned bait,
poisoned weapons, stakes, pitfalls, nets, snares, hides, fences
or enclosures, artificial light or flare, automatic weapons or self-loading
rifles, or hunting "within 500 meters of any permanent water, pool,
waterhole or salt-lick, and within a kilometer of a national park
or other protected area, and hunting at night.")
The accusations went
on. Animals the Arabs captured that were considered unhealthy were
shot, and their carcasses were then sold to non-Maasai communities
(the Maasai do not eat wild game), further encouraging poaching
and an illegal market for bush meat. Mysterious veldt fires would
occur exactly when and where they were needed for the hunters to
trap animals and stop them from crossing the border to safety, in
Kenya or the Serengeti. As many as 100 animals were flown out of
the country each week; and in the last six months of 2000, according
to OBC workers, those exports included some 70 lion, 28 cheetah
and 17 leopard. Larger animals, such as eland, buffalo, giraffe,
zebra and waterbuck, were held in enclosures until they could be
flown out.
The MERC representatives
had to go on oral evidence for the most part, seeing they couldn't
get access to Loliondo and at one point were forcibly removed from
the property. While driving around the area, however, they did find
countless empty bullet shells as well as many wounded animals. During
their investigation, in August 2001, they also saw the ripple effect
of a high-profile hunt that included King Abdullah II of Jordan.
The entourage was accompanied by a helicopter and two small planes,
which were used not only to patrol the area but also to herd wildebeest
and other large groups of animals toward the foot of the hills,
where they would be trapped and more easy to shoot.
"For two days, MERC
heard gunshots almost continuously," Meitamei wrote in the report
several months later. "It is hard to estimate the number of animals
killed but Maasai believe that at least sixty animals were killed
or wounded in the two-day expedition. Over the following month,
the Maasai encountered many wounded animals, particularly buffalo,
zebra and wildebeest. Sometimes they speared them to relieve them
of their suffering."
So many animals were
being killed that workers at Loliondo had started talking about
'the killing fields of Loliondo.'
The OBC was also
destroying the Maasai way of life. It declared "grazing restrictions,"
stopping locals from traversing land they had used for centuries,
and started arresting and beating people who carried on doing it.
Hunters went dangerously close to Maasai homesteads, threatening
the security of their children and livestock. Village elders and
park rangers were bribed to encourage locals to favor the OBC, and
Maasai were being paid 30,000 Tanzanian shillings each (up to $40)
to convert to Islam.
"The act of buying
people into a faith defies the teachings of any religion and is
a deliberate act to destroy the Maasai people," a local church leader
said.
At the 1.6-mile airstrip,
meanwhile, military aircraft were landing up to twice a week, loaded
with four-wheel-drives, weapons and communication gear - as well
as hunters accompanied by young Pakistani and Filipino women - and
then flew out with a variety of live animals and bush meat. They
were not subject to inspections in either direction.
Security around the
property was tight, and it was clear that the agreement between
the Tanzanian authorities and the UAE went much further than just
a lease allowing the Arabs to hunt. A joint team of the country's
paramilitary wing, the Full Force Unit, and members of the UAE army
patrolled the property, and there was always a strong police presence.
No one could prove that it was a kind of payment, but it was well
known that the UAE royal family had donated passenger aircraft to
the Tanzanian army and a number of vehicles to its wildlife division.
During the interviews,
Meitamei said, it was obvious that everyone - from Maasai herdsman
to park official to businessman - was intimidated by the OBC, and
feared some kind of retribution if they talked.
"The Maa word for
'the Arab,' Olarrabui, is often used to refer to Brigadier Al Ali,
and, by extension, the OBC," Meitamei said. "The word has become
synonymous with power, authority, brutality, fear, and entities
larger than life. It's amazing no one talks about this. Everyone
is too scared. The Arabs are a mafia."
If you looked closely
enough, though, you could see a groundswell of resistance to OBC
starting. The East African newspaper in Kenya had carried
several articles about their country's wildlife and economy being
seriously threatened by outsiders. (Photographic tourism is Kenya's
largest earner of foreign exchange.) A journalist from Associated
Press, Chris Tomlinson, was sending the occasional story to an even
broader audience abroad, although no one seemed to be picking up
on it.
At the same time,
more and more Maasai were growing vocal about cases of intimidation,
harassment, arbitrary arrest and detention, even torture by OBC
officials and security forces. Thirteen of their elders trekked
across the country to the capital, Dar es Salaam, to press the government
to take action against the OBC.
"We cannot just sit
and watch the Arabs take our land," a spokesman for the elders,
Sandet ole Reya, was quoted as saying. He finished with a very serious
warning: "If necessary, we will wipe out all animals in the area
to keep the Arabs out of our land."
A war of words began
between the Maasai and the government, with people suggesting that
ex-president Mwinyi and other Tanzanian officials were part owners
of Loliondo, and that's why nothing was being done about it. Government
officials accused the Maasai of trying to make political mischief,
a suggestion that was ridiculed by the Tanzanian association of
environmental journalists, JET, whose chairman, Balinangwe Mwambungu,
said the Maasai were "not affiliated to any political party and,
therefore, had no reason to lie to the world."
When questioned by
The East African about all the allegations, the OBC managing
director, Juma Akida Zodikheri, denied them, and said animal numbers
in Loliondo had actually increased under the OBC's guardianship.
All of this information,
you understand, was my own bait, the lure, the stuff a freelancer
uses to entice a publication to commit itself to a story. This was
the ammunition in my hunt. I believed I now had enough
evidence to prove the story was valid, so I sent out a proposal.
Hopefully that would entice a publication to send me to Loliondo
to investigate more thoroughly. I was all fired up, even though
Meitamei warned me that it wouldn't be an easy story.
"People are scared,"
he said. "That's why they don't talk. It's dangerous."
I singled out publications
that I thought were interested in issue-driven articles and had
at least once in their lifetime carried a story on Africa, and I
wrote to them. Harper's never replied. Ditto the Atlantic
Monthly . Outside said they had a backlog of "African
travel stories (sic)." Mother Jones made nice noises, but
honestly they had too much other stuff; and besides, they
were only a bi-monthly. The New York Times Magazine was
already doing a piece about the excesses of the wealthy class in
Dubai, and hunting in Loliondo was just too much of an overlap.
But thanks anyway. Some editors said it was the perfect story for
the New Yorker or Vanity Fair - had I tried them?
- which was a snub and a compliment at the same time.
Finally, an editor
at National Geographic Adventure got enthusiastic about
the idea, although several months passed before his editor-in-chief
even considered it. I finally went in for a meeting. The editor-in-chief
sat in a corner and looked disinterested. He could see a problem:
photographs. How were they to get images of secretive Arabs shooting
at herds of animals with AK47s when there were armed patrols and
security cameras everywhere? And then there was that animal-hunting
'thing.' How did they photograph the wholesale slaughter of animals
for a magazine that was, despite its name, a glossy?
They came up with
a solution. At around the same time, a photographer had approached
NGA with a proposal about a big-game hunter from Europe
who took guests to shoot in Africa. Perhaps, said the NGA editor,
I could write THAT story. At first I wondered what the subjects
had in common other than hunting, although I had to admit that the
pictures would be a lot easier to get (I could already see the glossy
shots of khaki-clad hunters with big guns at white-clothed tables
under a baobab next to their just-killed buffalo).
It was a cop-out,
but I said I would be prepared to do it. Somewhere in the story,
I believed, I would be able to slip in a few paragraphs about Loliondo
- I would tell the world about it that way. I was running out of
magazine options, and I was losing hope that Loliondo would get
any coverage at all.
Then, out of the
blue, an editor at Condðexpressed an interest in the story.
( Condð? Yes, apparently this would be one of their occasional
forays into 'relevant journalism'). I didn't have much confidence
that they would take the story in the end, although it was a nice
gesture on their part. Then something happened that made them nix
it: 9/11.
All of a sudden,
no one wanted Loliondo. NGA, who had in the meantime discarded
the big-hunter idea, didn't return my calls. CNT shelved
not only Loliondo idea but also every story that had a Muslim anywhere
in the neighborhood. It was as if the Muslim world would disappear
if the editors ignored it hard enough. All they wanted were stories
about America, America and more America.
Except, that is,
National Geographic . An editor there loved the Loliondo
idea. He took my proposal and sent it to NG 's sausage
machine of researchers and checkers , who basically compile
their own story before they let the journalist do his version. The
editor-in-chief, meanwhile, wanted to know why the story had never
been covered before. Ten years and no one had written about it?
As part of NG
's research (to ensure that I hadn't made up this fabulous
story perhaps?), they contacted two of the biggest names in conservation,
the renowned Kenyan anthropologist Richard Leakey and the chimp
expert Jane Goodall. Both of them said to do the story on Loliondo.
After that, I was sure the story was a sure thing.
But then NG ran
into a familiar problem. Photographs. Furthermore, they were worried
about doing a story that might offend other countries neighboring
the UAE, and possibly sabotage future stories they might have in
the Middle East. Then, to cap it all, the magazine went through
a change of editorial staff. The proposal gradually lost momentum,
and even though the editor I was working with wanted it, he couldn't
get anyone to back him. Loliondo sat in limbo.
I kept wondering
if I shouldn't just pay my own way to fly to Arusha, go to local
bars, talk to hunters, and stake out Loliondo for several weeks.
Wasn't that how great stories were written - you just went off on
a whim? Trouble is, because of the way freelancing works (you investigate
the hell out of the story before you even get to it), I had already
tested the waters and there seemed to be no interest in the story.
What was the point of throwing away money on a dead duck - not to
mention more time? It had at this stage been two years since I'd
first heard about Loliondo.
In May 2002, MERC
brought out a report titled The Killing Fields of Loliondo.
It was the last and best chance the story had of attracting some
genuine interest in the media.
Dedicated to 'present
and future generations of the Maasai people, faithful stewards of
nature and wildlife in East Africa,' the report put in black and
white all the things Meitamei had told me, as well as numerous things
I would've learnt if I'd gone to Tanzania to investigate the story.
Such as: One, the
battle for Loliondo is also a battle for the future of wildlife
in East Africa, pitting the Tanzanian government and hunters (not
only the Arabs, but ALL commercial hunters) against the Maasai and
eco-tourists.
Two, the Maasai have
been conservationists since time immemorial. They do not believe
in commercial hunting, for it leads to greed, over-exploitation
of wildlife resources, and often irreversible damage to delicate
ecosystems. What they do believe is that today's generation holds
all natural resources in trust for future generations. Over the
centuries they have developed a very special relationship with wild
animals, so that they and their cattle can share water and grass
with them.
Three, it is largely
thanks to the Maasai way of life - pastoral and pacifist - that
the Kenya/Tanzania cross-border region continues to have such an
abundance of wild animals, not only helping to maintain one of the
most important ecosystems in Africa, but also guaranteeing a future
for the region's strongest industry, tourism.
All this, however,
was being jeopardized by commercial hunting. The Arabs were an extreme
example of what was happening across the whole of Tanzania, where
hunters were being allowed to break the law with impunity. They
were bribing wildlife officials to let them enter protected areas,
give them blank hunting certificates to shoot as many animals of
whatever kind they liked, and turn a blind eye to these actions.
"Here in Tanzania
we can kill what we want because money speaks," a Danish hunter
told MERC. "You find the park rangers are now the guides for hunting
expeditions both inside and outside the park."
Not all rangers are
like that, though, and one of them beseeched MERC to tell the world
the story of Loliondo.
"You must raise this
concern because there is serious wildlife destruction going on here.
Perhaps you can implore international conservation regimes to carry
out thorough investigations to discover the truth."
An elder at a Maasai
village, meanwhile, had already given up hope. "The government and,
indeed, justice are not on our side. We have been forced to accept
things as they are because we have no power to stand up against
this Arab."
I went back to the
magazines armed with my new ammunition. I was sure the report from
MERC would make a difference to them. But it didn't. Not for the
first time, I felt as though I had let Meitamei down. I had questioned
him and other people for several years, convinced that their story
was newsworthy, but my profession didn't seem to think so. I had
to tell him something every freelancer hates to do with a story
he believes in: I was giving up on their story. The Arab hunting
in Loliondo would carry on, but my hunt for a place to expose it
was over.
Ted Botha is a
freelance journalist based in New York.
www.tedbotha.com
*
*
*
I wrote the above story in order to give closure to all the research
I'd done on Loliondo as much as to vent my frustrations with freelancing.
Offbeat though the article is, I submitted it to publications I
thought would be sympathetic to its sentiments - The Village
Voice, Utne Reader, The Columbia Journalism Review, and salon.com.
Two of them sent curt replies, and the other two didn't even
bother with that.
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