Scenes from The Last Great Ape
The Achipawa of Nigeria: "Hostile Animists"
In a hut in Nigera, Ofir Drori found a document written by a missionary that listed all the tribes in Nigeria by the percent of Muslims and Christians in each. Only one had neither: the Achipawa, who were called “hostile animists.” It took Ofir nearly a year to find them living on a volcano in the remote north of Nigeria, an adventure that led to his meeting their god.
Osama Bin Laden in West Africa
The Edge of Starvation
Ofir Drori sets off along the Give River in Ethiopia, loses his horse, and almost dies of starvation.
Sharia law: Sitting Like This Is Not Allowed
Through Nigeria
The Face of Poaching
In 2002, this silverback gorilla wandered out of the jungle into the town of Abong-Mbang, Cameroon. Swamps in the jungle kept the ecosystem intact right to the edges of town until recently. The silverback walked the dirt streets of Abong-Mbang until it was shot near the hospital by a retired gendarme. Though killing a endangered species was illegal at the time, the law against doing so went unenforced. For a few dollars, wildlife traffickers and poachers could bribe government officials to look the other way. The lack of concern by the gendarme to have himself photographed after committing what was a crime, speaks to the ambivalence to the law. Jane Goodall’s prophesy that apes in the wild would soon become extinct has largely been proven true in Cameroon in terms of gorillas, which Ofir says his investigators seldom see anymore in the illegal animal trade. (Ofir photographed the photo in the gendarme’s house.)
Saving Jack the Gorilla
David McDannald & Ofir Drori save a gorilla orphaned by hunters.
Self-Portrait in a Boy's Eye
Self portrait in a boy’s eye.