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It was the End of the World, as they knew it
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Imagine the entire world, stripped of all resources and hopelessly overpopulated. Imagine a civil war, lasting for three generations, completely destroying the cultural heritage of your people and burning every single written record of your past. Imagine a world after a worst-case environmental disaster with no trees, no water, no food and no place to go.
It already happened. It happened 300 years ago, and nobody noticed it. It happened on a tiny island, 15 miles in diameter, 2,400 miles off the coast of South America and 1,200 miles away from the next tiny island. But for those who lived there, it happened to the entire world as they knew it. |
In the 1700s, when the first Europeans arrived, the remaining locals - weakened from 100 years of civil war - were easy prey. What little was left after the war was destroyed by devastating slave raids that took the lives of thousands. In 1870, only a hundred people were left on the island; an enigmatic pacific culture was smashed, ancient wisdom was gone for ever. |
They planted trees; good idea, wrong method: it was Eucalyptus they planted. With virtually no resistance, this aggressive plant invaded the island like a gang of bloodthirsty pirates, killing whatever native plant was left. Still not bad enough? The Navy tried to solve the rat problem. In their infinite wisdom they introduced hawks! Well, the rats are still there and doing fine, but Manu Tara, the sacred native bird is all but extinct. |
For five days, I enjoyed Polynesian hospitality, admired 20 feet tall Moai statues, listened to stories and songs, and shared the sadness about the island's past and the optimism about its future. |
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