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Giants of the Monsoon Forest

Page 25

by Giants of the Monsoon Forest- Living


  timber forests in, 7, 65, 141, 165

  in World War II, 5–6, 62–91, 116, 125, 129; see also World War II

  Burma Road, 64, 82, 83, 134

  Burma-Siam Railway, 6, 85–86

  Burmay-Moti (elephant), 5, 51–54, 60, 192

  Burmese language, 55–56

  camels:

  breeding of, 8

  domestication of, 104

  Campbell, John, 105, 106, 109

  Carthage, 100, 103, 231

  Carthaginian Empire, 99–100, 101–3

  catching wild elephants, 19–23

  calves, 22, 23, 43

  fandis (master elephant catchers), 19, 81, 180

  importance of, 35

  kheddah (stockade) method, 19–20, 22, 40–41

  and maintaining population stability, 36

  mela shekar method, 21–23, 37, 136, 138, 179

  moral considerations of, 211

  mother and calf captured together, 22, 43

  pit method, 19

  rituals for, 25–27, 29

  and spirit-mahouts, 26–29, 43

  and training, 138

  as traumatic for elephants, 138

  cattle, breeding of, 8

  Ceylon, mahouts from, 108

  chains, 37, 58, 117–23, 139, 211–12

  Chakma people, 159

  charcoal camps, 146–47, 150, 155

  Chaukan Pass, 63, 64–70, 76–79, 80, 81, 82, 89, 142, 173, 182–84, 185

  Chiang Kai-shek, 64

  China:

  agriculture in, 109–10

  Burma as “back door” to, 63–64

  jade trade in, 175, 177, 185

  Kachin State projects financed by, 175

  oil and gas pipelines financed by, 175

  trade routes to, 186

  Chindwin River, 181

  Chindwin Valley, 56, 84, 87, 151, 152

  Chin Hill, 65, 150

  Chowkham, India, 43, 57, 58, 210

  circus elephants, 115

  cities, flooded, 202–6, 207

  combat elephants, see war

  concrete viaducts, 163, 214

  Congo, see Belgian Congo

  conservation, 192, 209–10

  da Gama, Vasco, 100

  Dambuk, India, 53, 54

  during monsoon, 61

  raftsmen in, 192, 193, 194

  Dapha River crossing, 76–77

  Darius, Persian emperor, 229

  Daru Pass, 184

  deforestation, 38–39, 61

  and agriculture, 36–37, 109, 130, 141

  and erosion, 195

  forest-centered coalition vs., 36, 37, 130, 211

  from logging, 156, 165, 191–92

  from urban and highway development, 141, 191, 192, 209, 211

  in wartime, 127, 129

  and wildlife preserves, 141, 191

  desertification, 103, 104, 114

  Diamond, Jared, 221

  Dibang River, 54, 193

  Dihing River, 68, 226

  confluence with Dapha River, 70, 74, 76, 78

  New Dihing River, 57

  Old Dihing River, 80

  and Trans-Arunachal Highway, 213

  Dihing Valley, 57, 76, 78, 111, 136, 147

  elephant trade in, 55, 78

  intermarriage in, 159

  mahouts, regional origins of, 159

  Sadiya (district capital), destruction of, 194

  and Trans-Arunachal Highway, 162–63

  dogs:

  domesticated, 8

  working relationships with humans, 221

  domesticated, use of term, 220–21

  ecology, mountain, 111

  Ee Ying (Shan baby), 181

  Egypt, Ptolemy rulers in, 100–101, 104, 106

  elephant “corridors,” 55, 141–43, 183

  elephants:

  adaptability of, 58, 61, 113

  African vs. Asian, see African elephants; Asian elephants

  aggressiveness of, 33–34

  “aunties” (adult females protecting calves), 132

  bells worn by, 31, 58, 170

  black tears of, 33, 171

  bonds with humans, 7–10, 38–39, 43, 114–15, 122, 137–38, 143–44, 212–13

  breaking up families of, 22

  capturing, see catching wild elephants

  chains of, 37, 58, 117–23, 139, 211–12

  clearing river logjams, 48–51

  cognitive traits of, 56–57, 58

  in construction projects, 6, 59–60, 84–86, 173, 194

  creativity of, see problem-solving

  dexterity of, 43–44, 102

  disciplining, tools for, 136

  dislike of men’s trousers, 33

  drugged, 139

  and emergency situations, 3, 61, 90–91, 192–99, 203

  environmental challenges to, 14

  feet, 72

  fodder required by, 34–35, 187

  in fugitive cultures, 111

  generations of, 8

  going “on strike,” 82

  guarded by humans, 61

  as guides, 57

  human domination of, 211–12

  intelligence of, 10, 83, 118–23

  ivory poaching of, 38, 210–11

  khoonkie, 19, 21–22, 23, 24, 25, 27–29, 81, 159, 178

  killer, 136

  kind hearts of, 138

  languages used with, 54–55, 61, 113, 119, 125

  learning from their mothers, 47–48

  in logging industry, 3, 7, 47, 89, 173, 210

  logistic skills of, 102, 107

  mating, see mating

  migration of, 141–43

  mobilization of, 61

  mokona (without tusks), 31–32, 43–44, 142

  in mud, 72–73

  musth period of, 33–34, 139, 171

  obstacles to breeding, 8, 9, 113, 236

  opportunities to escape, 91

  passengers with motion sickness on, 170

  patrol work by, 201

  picking up their dead masters, 58, 90

  possible re-expansion of species, 190

  pregnancies of, 6, 91, 171

  productive work years of, 132

  released into forest at night, 9, 34–35, 38–39, 58, 172, 186–87, 191, 202, 209, 212

  “retired,” 149

  river crossings by, 5, 6, 43, 51–54, 75–76, 86, 88, 102, 113, 134, 214

  “rogue,” 138

  situational awareness of, 58–59

  species diversification among, 130

  on steep hills, 40–42, 51

  stresses on, 139–43

  suicide of, 139

  supplies moved by, 116

  survival of, 10, 12, 38–39, 61, 88, 110–11, 112–13, 130, 212

  thefts of, 170

  and tourists, see tourist parks

  trade in, 55–56

  training, 138, 162, 178–80

  transport via, 3, 6, 61, 65, 72–73, 102, 107–8, 114, 151–52, 164–66, 183, 210, 227, 235

  tricks played by, 31

  trimmed tusks of, 135

  trunks of, 42

  unique skills and abilities of, 61

  unusual behaviors of, 139–40, 143

  in wartime, see war

  wild, see wild elephants

  as work partners, 8–9, 29, 88

  elephant trails, 1, 7, 55

  Elephas genus, 96, 228

  Epirus (Greek kingdom), 98–99

  Ethiopia, British invasion of, 107

  ethnic groups, 11–12

  adjustment to forest life, 112

  and Burmese independence, 173–74

  exodus and self-reinvention of, 111–12

  fugitive cultures, 111, 112–13, 124, 164

  “hill tribe” minorities, 12

  and religions, 157, 187

  social intermixing of, 157–59

  “tea tribes,” 160–61

  “Zomia” highlanders, 111, 114

  ethnic minority owners of elephants, 89

  e
thno-elephantology, 11

  ethnolinguistic areas, 55

  extinction, 11

  fandis (master elephant catchers), 19, 81

  bonding of elephants and, 7–10, 38–39

  song to elephants, 137

  training work elephants, 38, 138, 178–80

  Fellowes-Gordon, Ian, 83–84, 89

  festivals and parades, elephants in, 35–36, 38, 95, 110, 194

  flooding cycles, 207

  forest preserves, elephants in, 141

  forests:

  elephant migration into, 110, 111

  fragmentation of, 35, 55, 61

  needed by elephants to survive, 38–39

  Fort Hertz (Putao), 71, 172

  fugitive cultures, 111, 112–13, 124, 164

  Gadadhar (Ahom monarch), 80

  Gale, U Toke, 49, 85

  Gam (mahout), 45–46, 158

  Gardiner (refugee), 69

  genetic survival, odds of, 112–13

  Goal (tracker), 226

  Gohain (mahout), 226

  gold panning, 150–51, 176, 181

  GPS devices, 212

  Grammon (elephant), 81

  Great Zimbabwe kingdom, 109

  Gribble, R. H., 83

  Gudu (mahout), 117, 160

  Gunjai (elephant), 30–34, 58, 151, 153

  Hallett, Holt, 117

  “Hamitic,” 106

  Han invasion, 111, 158

  Hannibal:

  crossing the Alps, 66, 102, 104

  personal elephant of, 102

  vs. Rome, 101–2, 104, 230

  Himalayas, 142

  Hipparchus (geographer), 230

  Hkamti language, 55–56, 113

  Hkamti Long kingdom, 184

  Hkamti mahouts, 80, 113, 158, 166–67, 187

  Hkamti people, 27, 111

  Ho Chi Minh Trail, 6, 118, 122–23, 127, 128, 167, 169

  Homalin, Burma, 150–51

  horses, breeding of, 8

  Hpakant (jade-mining area), 131–33, 169, 172, 174–77

  Hseng Noung (reporter), 181

  Hughes, Richard, 176

  Hukawng Valley, 71, 111, 126, 158, 166, 167, 169–70, 172

  amber from, 176

  armed bases in, 179

  elephant migration route in, 142

  flooding of, 73

  Hukawng Valley Tiger Reserve, 179, 239

  Imow (mahout), 150–52, 159

  Indawgyi Lake, 131, 177

  India:

  agriculture in, 109–10

  all-weather roads in, 192–93

  aristocratic tradition of, 191

  Assamese language in, 55, 158

  elephant populations in, 191

  elephants owned by kings and princes in, 95–96, 113–14

  forest area in, 141–42

  “land bridge” between Africa and, 99–100, 230

  trade routes to, 186

  wartime elephants in, 98, 101, 116

  wild elephants in, 141, 165

  wildlife parks in, 55, 114, 141, 143, 163, 191

  Indian Ocean, earthquake and tsunami (2004), 3, 196–99, 216

  Indo-African “land bridge,” 99–100

  Indochinese War, First, 124

  Indonesia:

  elephants in, 165

  forestry department, 200

  tsunami in (2004), 216

  Indus Valley, elephants tamed in, 95

  Irrawaddy River, 2, 7, 152

  proposed Myitsone dam of, 175–76

  river crossings, 134, 177, 192

  Irrawaddy Valley, 111, 173

  ivory poaching, 38, 210–11

  J. (guide), 131, 132, 134–35, 136

  jade mines, 131–33, 169, 172, 174–77, 185

  Japi Bum Pass, 134, 177

  Java:

  elephant disappearance from, 199, 204

  human migration from, 200

  Jewish narrative traditions, 104

  Jinghpaw people, 167, 224

  Justinian, Emperor, 103

  Kachin Hills, 105, 164, 178

  challenging terrain in, 172

  elephants in, 130, 142, 174, 176, 184

  gold panning in, 150–51, 176, 181

  leech-caused blood poisoning in, 181–82, 183

  Kachin Independence Army (KIA), 6, 7, 36, 58, 116, 117

  cargo carried for, 170, 177

  elephant-based transport system of, 164–71, 176, 177, 180, 187, 207, 210

  elephant brigades in, 169–71, 178, 183, 184–86, 210, 216

  elephants released into forest at night, 170

  elephant training camps of, 171, 177–80, 181–82

  fishing camp of, 182

  Myitsone dam opposed by, 176

  official cease-fire of, 175–76

  and Tatmadaw, 126, 164–66, 168, 170, 171, 172, 175–76, 179, 185, 195

  Kachin Independence Organization (KIO), 164, 168–69, 177, 187

  Kachin language, 55–56

  Kachin mahouts, 80, 158, 167, 182, 206–7

  Kachin people, 27, 111, 158, 159

  Kachin State, 6, 165–74

  Anglo-Kachin coalition in, 173

  and Burmese independence, 173

  challenging terrain in, 169–70, 172

  Christian missionaries in, 172–73

  elephant-owning elites in, 176

  heavily forested region of, 167, 176–77

  insurgencies in, 174

  jade mines in, 131–33, 169, 172, 174–77, 185

  journalists in, 181, 186

  Manau festival in, 168

  refugees from, 166, 173

  Triangle hill range, 172, 184

  warfare in, 166

  and World War II, 173

  Kagung (guide), 46

  Karbi Hills, 142

  Karen languages, 112

  Karen National Liberation Army, 116

  Karen people, 55, 111–12, 124, 157, 173, 234, 236

  Katha, Burma, 134, 142

  Kaukkwe forest, 134, 142, 177

  Kaziranga National Park, 142, 143

  Khamus elephant domesticators, 124–25

  Khao Lak, Thailand, 203

  Kha people, 111, 124–26, 234

  kheddah (stockade) method of catching wild elephants, 19–20, 22, 40–41

  khoonkie elephants, 19, 21–22, 23, 24, 25, 27–29, 81, 159, 178

  Kien (convoy commander), 118, 119, 120, 127

  Kingdon-Ward, Francis, 68

  Klangdot (elephant), 81

  Kumon Mountains, 142, 178, 184

  Lah Ong (elephant), 169

  Lair, Richard, 129

  Laiza, Burma, 169, 177, 185

  Lakes Victoria and Albert, 106

  Lake Tanganyika, 108

  Lao peoples, 111

  Laos, elephants in, 126, 129–30, 141, 234, 236

  Lashio, Burma, 76, 134

  Latai (elephant), 151

  Ledo Road, 73, 81–82, 88, 169, 179, 186

  Leopold II, king of Belgium, 108

  Levant, control of, 100

  Leyden (British refugee), 77

  Lintner, Bertil, 178–79, 181–82, 186

  Lin Wang (elephant), 86, 90

  Lisu people, 182

  Livingstone, David, 106–7, 109

  Locke, Fred, 128

  Lohit River, 142, 194–95, 241

  Loxodonta genus, 96, 228

  Luba kingdom, Congo, 109

  Lucas, George, 104

  Maccabees, 104

  Mackrell, Gyles, 77–80, 82

  Ma Gam (elephant), 83–84

  Maggie (elephant), 73–76, 82, 83, 88, 89, 90, 91, 116–17, 125, 173, 192, 216

  Mahalaseela people, 105, 106, 109, 232

  mahouts, 1

  bonding of elephants and, 7–10, 38–39, 43, 114–15, 122, 127, 137–38, 143, 212–13

  command systems used by, 56

  elephant calves owned by, 171

  fading from memory, 82, 83

  family members of, 148–49, 154

  fetching elephants in
morning, 9

  Indian, in Africa, 108

  as “Indians,” 99

  longyi worn by, 33

  negotiating with their elephants, 117

  on private logging tracts, 157

  religions practiced by, 157, 187

  strikes and labor agitation of, 82

  training, 113

  in villages, 153–55

  women as, 145–52

  Maji Bum, 178

  Malaysia, deforestation in, 141

  Mali Hka (river), 184

  Manabum hill range, 43, 47

  Maniema region, 106, 107, 109

  Manipur, Japanese invasion of, 86, 173, 227

  maps:

  African elephant ranges, 92

  Asian elephant ranges, viii

  Central and Upper Burma (Myanmar), ix

  Trans-Patkai region, x

  Marinus of Tyre (geographer), 230

  Martin, Andrew, 82

  Mason, Robert, 128

  mating:

  domestic with domestic elephants, 35

  and elephant pregnancies, 6, 91, 171

  and genetic diversification, 130

  and musth period, 33–34, 139, 171

  and survival, 123, 130

  under stressful conditions, 140

  work elephants with wild elephants, 6, 9, 33, 35, 61, 91, 114, 117, 120–21, 122–23

  Mats (Swedish traveler), 182, 183

  Mau Hka (river), 126

  Mebu elephant, trapped in rocks, 53–54

  Mekong River, 2, 119

  mela shekar method of catching elephants, 21–23, 37, 136, 138, 179

  Memphis, Egypt, 100

  Meroe, see Meroite people

  Meroite people, 96–97, 100, 229

  Mfecane (forced migration wars), 105

  Miao, India 80, 183, 210

  Millar (British refugee), 77

  Miloswar (fandi), 27–29, 43, 57, 137, 159, 210

  Mishmi (ethnonym for porters and trackers), 80

  Mithong (logging area), India, 43, 47, 112, 117, 147, 148, 157, 194

  mokona elephants (without tusks), 31–32, 43–44, 142

  Mong Cho (mahout), 56, 131–37, 143–44, 147, 174, 177, 210, 212

  Mongol invasion, 111, 158

  Mong Shwe (mahout), 166–67

  Mon mahouts, 173, 236

  monsoon season, 2–3, 14, 130, 185–86

  and concrete viaducts, 163, 214

  elephants’ value during, 176, 183, 188, 195

  emergency flooding situations in, 165, 194–99, 214

  mountain forests in, 68–69, 72

  river crossings during, 51–52, 192, 193–94

  Moran people, 27, 158, 159

  Moses (surveyor in Burma), 68, 69

  Moulmein, Burma, 64, 84, 152

  mountain ecology, 111

  Musawwarat-es-Sofra temple (Meroe), 96

  Muslims, and Year of the Elephant, 104

  musth, 33–34, 139, 171

  Myanmar, see Burma

  Myanmar Timber Enterprise, 89

  Myitkyina, Burma, 65, 69, 165, 168–69, 185

  Myitsone, Burma, 175

  Naga Hills, 142

  Nagaland:

  “Eastern Nagaland,” 180, 181

  National Socialist Council of, 36, 180

 

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