By Nichodimas Cooper (Nama, CS Journalism Fellow)
By Nichodimas Cooper (Nama, CS Journalism Fellow)
By Kuela Kiema (Dcui Bushman)
The Kalahari Bushmen are Indigenous to southern Africa, where they lived for time immemorial, depending on hunting various species of wild animals and gathering plant roots and fruits. Today, the San are found in southern African countries, including Angola, Botswana, Namibia, South Africa, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.
Los nama de nuestra comunidad nos dedicamos a preservar y promover nuestro rico patrimonio cultural al tiempo que apoyamos las iniciativas de desarrollo sostenible en Botsuana. Nuestro principal objetivo es salvaguardar los conocimientos tradicionales, la lengua y las costumbres, garantizando que se transmitan a las generaciones futuras. Sólo podemos lograrlo a través de programas educativos, festivales culturales y asociaciones con partes interesadas afines a nivel local e internacional.
Cultural Survival recently visited one of our Keepers of the Earth Fund Grant Partners, The San Youth Network (SYNET) in Botswana.
On January 27, 2011, Botswana’s Court of Appeal reversed a ruling that denied the Kalahari Bushmen access to water on their ancestral lands. The Bushmen appealed a 2010 High Court judgment that prevented them from accessing a borehole. The new ruling not only gave the Bushmen rights to use the borehole, but also gave them the right to drill new ones and ordered the government to pay the Bushmen’s court costs.
On July 21, the Botswana High Court ruled against the San Bushmen, barring them from re-opening a vital waterhole in the Kalahari desert, which is key to their way of life and survival.