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"Baka: People of the Forest" and "Baka: Growing Up" by Phil Agland

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    - [Narrator] People who have wandered
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    Central Africa for centuries.
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    Today they live in the humid rainforest
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    of southeastern Cameroon.
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    This ancient place is
    immensely rich in wildlife.
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    But for all its biological riches,
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    it is a difficult
    environment in which to live.
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    (speaking foreign language)
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    Few people have the knowledge
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    and ingenuity to survive here.
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    Only the Baka have developed the skills
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    to exploit its wealth.
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    A wealth that yields
    medicines from leaves.
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    - [Narrator] And compounds
    from bark and seeds
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    to make poisons for arrows.
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    - [Narrator] The Baka
    have this extraordinary
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    knowledge of the forest,
    but it's their personality
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    enriched by the forest itself
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    that makes the Baka even more remarkable.
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    (gentle music)
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    - [Narrator] These are the Baka,
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    The people of the forest.
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    This is their story.
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    (dramatic music)
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    - [Announcer] To better
    understand our world.
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    Ourselves.
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    And our future, this
    program was made possible
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    by the people of Chevron.
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    Chevron, giving thought to television.
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    - [Announcer] Additional funding provided
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    by the Corporation for
    Public Broadcasting.
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    (singing in foreign language)
    (gentle music)
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    - [Narrator] The heart of Africa.
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    Below the clouds lie the
    rainforests of southeast Cameroon.
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    This is the home of the Baka.
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    The Baka left camp this morning.
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    For the last three months they have been
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    on a journey through the
    forest hunting and gathering.
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    Traveling with the group
    is Laykano and his family.
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    (speaking foreign language)
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    His son Yaya is eight years old.
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    - [Narrator] Ali is four.
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    At 40, Kaykano is the second
    oldest of all the men.
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    - [Narrator] His wife
    Deni is in her early 20s,
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    and she's expecting their next child.
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    - [Narrator] Their three month journey
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    through the forest has been tiring.
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    Today's camp will be the last
    before the Baka reach home.
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    (gentle music)
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    Within an hour or so the
    frameworks are ready for roofing.
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    - [Narrator] The shelters will only
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    be used for a night or two,
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    but they're strong enough to
    keep out the heaviest storm.
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    It's always like this.
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    The women establish camp
    after a few hour's walk,
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    while the men look for food.
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    Close by, Laykano and the other men
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    are breaking open a termite mound.
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    They're after winged termites
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    that have gathered in
    the top of the mound.
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    (speaking foreign language)
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    The smoke stops the termites
    from retreating underground.
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    (speaking foreign language)
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    They're not all edible.
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    The bites of the defending
    termites are painful.
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    Thing winged termites are plump
    and full of fat and protein.
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    They taste like raw egg.
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    (speaking foreign language)
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    These temporary camps
    are always established
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    within easy reach of rivers.
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    (speaking foreign language)
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    Many of the trees and vines
    of the forest contain poisons.
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    The Baka have an intimate knowledge
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    of these plants and how to use them.
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    (speaking foreign language)
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    The chemicals in these
    vines are called rotenones.
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    To release them the creepers
    have to be beaten into a pulp.
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    (speaking foreign language)
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    By rinsing the pulp in
    the fast-flowing water,
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    the chemicals are
    dispersed into the river.
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    The river flows into a
    small patch of savanna.
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    It's too wet for rainforest to grow here,
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    so these open areas
    are dominated by palms.
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    The chemicals that have dissolved
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    in the river are not poisonous.
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    Instead they deprive the fish of oxygen.
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    Unable to breathe, they
    float to the surface.
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    - [Narrator] At the camp the women
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    are setting off to gather fruits.
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    Only during the rainy season do the Baka
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    travel this far into the forest.
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    They have come in search
    of the feki fruit.
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    The seeds are rich in oil.
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    Every rainy season for hundreds of years
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    the Baka have come to collect
    the fruit in this way.
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    (speaking foreign language)
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    It's almost the end of the rainy season
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    and much of the feki fruit
    has already been gathered.
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    Those fruit still left on the trees
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    are a rich source of food for gorillas.
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    To get at them, they will climb
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    100 feet or more into the canopy.
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    Adults like these may weigh 400 pounds,
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    and these are the animals the
    Baka fear most in the forest.
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    Elephants also roam the forest here.
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    Many fruits like feki must
    through an elephant's stomach
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    to have a better chance of germinating.
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    Large mammals and large birds
    like these giant horn bills
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    give the rainforest here
    its special character.
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    They too are essential.
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    Dispersing the seeds that will become
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    the next generation of the forest.
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    In the camp, the women are already
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    preparing the feki fruits.
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    (speaking foreign language)
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    - [Narrator] The seeds are crushed
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    to provide a precious oily paste.
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    This will be used for cooking
    in the months to come.
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    (speaking foreign language)
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    For centuries the Baka have been
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    called pygmies by the outside world.
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    It's a name they dislike
    and feel is derogatory.
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    Most of the people here
    are under five feet tall,
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    but in the forest, and to the Baka,
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    their size is irrelevant.
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    (gentle music)
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    (singing in foreign language)
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    - [Narrator] Such tales
    told only deep in the forest
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    are important for the
    children's education.
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    (speaking foreign language)
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    (thunder crashing)
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    (speaking foreign language)
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    - [Narrator] The dry season in beginning.
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    Ahead like 10 hours of hard
    walking before reaching home.
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    (gentle music)
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    - [Narrator] Laykano was
    told this by his father.
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    All stories are handed down in this way.
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    - [Narrator] Home is a permanent village.
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    Still deep in the forest and 10 miles
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    from the nearest dirt road.
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    Deni and Laykano spend
    most of the year here,
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    and share this village
    with 20 or so members
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    of their extended family.
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    Local villages of the Konabembe tribe
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    bring metal goods and clothes
    from the outside world.
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    These are traded with the
    Baka for meat from the forest,
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    and for occasional work they do
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    on the nearby Konabembe plantations.
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    Although they speak different languages,
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    they can easily understand each other.
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    (speaking foreign language)
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    The Baka have never been truly isolated,
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    and have always relied
    on these local villagers
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    for material goods.
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    The Konabembe also come
    to the Baka for medicines.
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    Usa is well known for
    her cure for infertility.
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    This Konabembe woman has
    been unable to conceive
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    and has come for treatment.
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    - [Narrator] Usa has
    successfully treated friends
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    of this woman in the past.
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    (speaking foreign language)
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    The medicine is from a
    small plant called njaya.
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    Elsewhere in Africa it is
    used to treat gonorrhea.
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    (speaking foreign language)
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    - [Narrator] Deni is preparing medicine
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    from the heartwood of the ingeli tree.
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    It's to make Ali grow up big and strong.
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    Sand is used as an abrasive
    to create a red paste.
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    - [Narrator] Soap comes
    naturally from certain leaves.
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    - [Narrator] Washing is important
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    before applying the medicine.
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    - [Narrator] It's important to look after
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    children in the forest.
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    Illness and death can strike suddenly.
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    Many a child is lost in infancy.
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    (speaking foreign language)
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    Occasionally the Baka will
    go into the forest at night.
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    This is often the best
    time to look for honey.
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    Honeybees are active at
    the nest well before dawn.
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    The earliest foragers lead
    by the light of the full moon
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    in search of flowers high in the canopy.
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    The first bee has arrived.
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    Below, Laykano and Babu have been
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    waiting for the flowers to talk.
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    A tree talking is a
    tree humming with bees.
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    By listening to the sound
    of the returning bees,
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    they can discover the
    direction of the nest.
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    - [Narrator] The light of dawn
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    reveals the site of the
    nest, high in the canopy.
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    Two more men arrive from the village.
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    Mewunga is Lakano's
    brother-in-law and he is to climb.
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    The nest is 140 feet
    above the forest floor.
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    Very few Baka would
    attempt a climb like this.
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    - [Narrator] Mewunga is using a strong
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    pliable vine to help him climb.
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    By cutting tiny foot holes he will
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    slowly inch his way up the tree.
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    The climb will take several hours.
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    Not far from the village,
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    a golden cat has killed an antelope.
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    The cat is elusive and
    seldom seen by the Baka.
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    (speaking foreign language)
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    - [Narrator] The women left the village
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    at dawn to come dam fishing.
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    It's only the women who fish in this way.
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    (speaking foreign language)
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    Below the damn, the remaining water
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    is scooped further downstream.
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    Dams must be constantly reinforced.
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    Deni is nine months pregnant,
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    but that doesn't stop her from working
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    as hard as the other women.
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    As the water recedes, the
    fish retreat under rocks.
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    - [Narrator] During the dry season
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    other fish lie dormant deep in the mud
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    below the banks of the river
    and have to be dug out.
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    - [Narrator] The cat poses
    no real danger to the women,
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    but it's a relief when it's gone.
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    - [Narrator] They're off to
    find out how the climb is going.
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    - [Narrator] Mewunga is already
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    some 70 feet above the forest floor.
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    (gentle music)
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    (speaking foreign language)
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    In the nest, tens of
    thousands of stinging bees
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    pose a serious threat to Mewunga's life.
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    Before he climbs any higher,
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    he must have the protection
    of a bundle of smoking leaves.
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    - [Narrator] At this height
    a single slip means death.
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    Two men were killed last year
    climbing trees for honey.
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    (gentle music)
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    (speaking foreign language)
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    (bees buzzing)
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    Mewunga stuffs bark scrapings containing
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    cyanide compound into the nest.
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    Followed by smoking leaves.
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    This stuns the bees, which in their panic,
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    gorge themselves on honey
    and become lethargic.
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    Mewunga is not stung once.
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    - [Narrator] The nest
    has to be hacked open
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    to get at the comb inside.
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    - [Narrator] Mewunga
    is completely confident
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    working at this height.
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    The honey basket has to be
    hauled up 140 feet to his perch.
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    - [Narrator] 30 pounds of honey
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    are lowered to the crowd below.
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    (speaking foreign language)
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    Honeyguides feed on beeswax,
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    and are never far away
    when there's honey around.
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    - [Narrator] Honey is the
    ultimate gift of the forest,
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    and very little of it will
    return to the village.
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    (speaking foreign language)
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    (gentle music)
    (singing in foreign language)
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    The bees descend immediately to the
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    scattered combs tossed aside by the Baka.
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    All available honey is taken back
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    to the shattered remnants of the nest.
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    Forest bees are often reluctant
    to desert a raided nest.
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    In time, this one will
    be completely rebuilt.
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    (gentle music)
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    Other animals also take advantage
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    of the spoils of the honey climb.
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    A honey badger is quick to
    seize such an opportunity.
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    Although it's quite capable of tackling
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    a bee's nest with his massive claws,
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    it readily scavenges on
    these combs left by the Baka.
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    (speaking foreign language)
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    Unexpectedly Deni has felt
    her baby change position.
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    - [Narrator] This medicine,
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    which contains plant estrogens,
    is always used during labor.
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    - [Narrator] Ali blesses the medicine.
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    (speaking foreign language)
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    Her hands are no larger than a thumbnail.
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    Her shoulders from tip to tip,
    the size of a little finger.
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    (speaking foreign language)
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    Ali is distraught.
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    The baby has taken his place beside Deni.
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    - [Narrator] Ali's sister, born
    into the world of the Baka.
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    The first sounds she hears
    are those of her people.
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    Her village.
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    Her forest.
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    Her people are the
    people of the rainforest.
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    (gentle music)
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    (singing in foreign language)
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    Several weeks later and Ali is adjusting
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    to his new place in the family.
  • 53:54 - 53:58
    (singing in foreign language)
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    (both humming)
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    (speaking foreign language)
  • 54:55 - 54:59
    (singing in foreign language)
    (gentle music)
  • 56:04 - 56:05
    - [Announcer] WonderWorks presents
  • 56:05 - 56:08
    CS Lewis's magical story
    about four children
  • 56:08 - 56:13
    who discover a fantasy kingdom
    while exploring a wardrobe.
  • 56:13 - 56:14
    You whole family will enjoy
  • 56:14 - 56:17
    The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe
  • 56:17 - 56:20
    Friday night at 8:00 on WonderWorks.
  • 56:21 - 56:23
    Next the season open of Frontline
  • 56:23 - 56:25
    looks at the career of President Reagan
  • 56:25 - 56:29
    and assesses the legacy
    of his administration.
  • 56:29 - 56:33
    Frontline is next on
    KCPT, public television.
  • 56:34 - 56:36
    (gentle music)
  • 57:16 - 57:17
    - [Narrator] 18 months have now passed
  • 57:17 - 57:19
    since Kamila was born.
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    - [Narrator] During this
    time Laykano and Deni
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    have been teaching her about the forest.
  • 58:38 - 58:40
    (gentle music)
  • 59:02 - 59:04
    - [Narrator] For all
    children growing up here,
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    the last 18 months have been a mixture
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    of fun and gradual adjustment
  • 59:08 - 59:11
    to the responsibilities of Baka life.
  • 59:11 - 59:14
    (children babbling)
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    - [Narrator] Takala has asked
    to have his teeth sharpened.
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    Not everyone has it
    done, for those that do,
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    it reinforces their sense of being Baka.
  • 60:46 - 60:47
    - [Narrator] For some
    boys life after today
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    will never be quite the same.
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    Six boys have been confined to this hut
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    for the last few days.
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    They are approaching puberty,
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    and are preparing to
    be initiated by Jengi,
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    the forest spirit.
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    Jengi was summoned to
    the village by Ikundum.
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    As the oldest man, he alone has the power.
  • 61:08 - 61:12
    Jengi is constantly guarded in
    his lair beyond the village.
  • 61:17 - 61:19
    - [Narrator] Torches for
    Jengi's nightly dances
  • 61:19 - 61:22
    are prepared from tree resin.
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    - [Narrator] The tooth sharpening
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    has proved to much for Takala.
  • 62:05 - 62:08
    (children laughing)
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    - [Narrator] The ripe banana
    skin warmed by the fire
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    acts as a poultice.
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    - [Announcer] We will
    return to Baka Growing Up
  • 62:45 - 62:47
    on the Discovery Channel.
  • 62:56 - 62:58
    - [Narrator] Children
    learn from the earliest age
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    how to find and prepare
    medicines from the forest.
  • 63:06 - 63:10
    (speaking foreign language)
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    The bark of the mayimba tree is used
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    to treat coughs and colds.
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    This medicinal knowledge is easily
  • 64:00 - 64:04
    acquired through shared experience.
  • 64:04 - 64:07
    (speaking foreign language)
  • 64:23 - 64:24
    - [Narrator] The children have been
  • 64:24 - 64:26
    left to their own devices while Deni
  • 64:26 - 64:30
    and the other mothers
    have gone dam fishing.
  • 65:23 - 65:26
    (speaking foreign language)
  • 66:36 - 66:39
    - [Narrator] Jengi, the most
    important forest spirit,
  • 66:39 - 66:42
    arrived at the village some weeks ago.
  • 66:44 - 66:47
    His presence is called
    upon every few years
  • 66:47 - 66:51
    when enough boys are ready
    for initiation into manhood.
  • 66:53 - 66:56
    He has decided to initiate
    the boys this afternoon.
  • 66:56 - 67:00
    (speaking foreign language)
  • 68:26 - 68:26
    - [Narrator] The news is relayed
  • 68:26 - 68:29
    to the initiates waiting in the hut.
  • 68:29 - 68:32
    Jengi will be coming for them.
  • 69:00 - 69:01
    - [Narrator] Ali and his friends
  • 69:01 - 69:02
    are too young to be initiated
  • 69:02 - 69:04
    and have little interest in Jengi.
  • 69:04 - 69:08
    (speaking foreign language)
  • 69:59 - 70:01
    - [Announcer] We will
    return to Baka Growing Up.
  • 70:01 - 70:05
    (rhythmic music)
    (singing in foreign language)
  • 70:34 - 70:37
    - [Narrator] The boys are nervous.
  • 70:39 - 70:40
    As they're led across the courtyard,
  • 70:40 - 70:42
    they must run the gauntlet of Jengi
  • 70:42 - 70:45
    who is threatening to kill them.
  • 70:45 - 70:49
    (speaking foreign language)
  • 71:03 - 71:06
    The boys are taken towards Jengi's lair
  • 71:06 - 71:08
    where they are to be initiated.
  • 71:15 - 71:16
    They have no idea what lies in store
  • 71:16 - 71:18
    for them beyond the gate.
  • 71:18 - 71:22
    (rhythmic music)
    (villagers cheering)
  • 71:39 - 71:43
    (singing in foreign language)
  • 72:12 - 72:13
    The initiates are finally carried
  • 72:13 - 72:16
    through the gate into Jengi's lair.
  • 72:19 - 72:21
    Jengi is now at his most dangerous.
  • 72:23 - 72:28
    He storms after them, slashing
    the gate to the ground.
  • 72:28 - 72:31
    (speaking foreign language)
  • 73:53 - 73:55
    - [Narrator] No flies
    must land on the blood
  • 73:55 - 73:57
    before Jengi's found and persuaded
  • 73:57 - 73:59
    to bring the boys back to life.
  • 74:12 - 74:15
    (speaking foreign language)
  • 74:54 - 74:55
    - [Narrator] Now the initiates
  • 74:55 - 74:57
    take their place in the barrier of men.
  • 74:57 - 75:01
    Playing their new role in
    protecting the women from Jengi.
  • 75:01 - 75:05
    (singing in foreign language)
    (rhythmic music)
  • 76:14 - 76:18
    Jengi leaves the village
    for the last time.
  • 76:18 - 76:20
    His presence has again reinforced
  • 76:20 - 76:23
    their spiritual link with the forest.
  • 76:44 - 76:47
    (speaking foreign language)
  • 78:18 - 78:22
    (singing in foreign language)
  • 78:36 - 78:38
    - [Narrator] In a few
    years Jengi will return
  • 78:38 - 78:41
    to initiate Ali into manhood.
  • 78:41 - 78:45
    (gentle music)
    (singing in foreign language)
  • 78:50 - 78:52
    - [Announcer] Life in the
    rainforest is difficult,
  • 78:52 - 78:56
    but growing up in many African
    cities isn't much easier.
  • 78:56 - 79:00
    Children there must also
    struggle for food and a home.
  • 79:00 - 79:03
    That's true of the
    members of Bernard's gang.
  • 79:03 - 79:04
    Their story is next.
  • 79:19 - 79:21
    - [Announcer] The Falklands
    War, The Untold Story--
Title:
"Baka: People of the Forest" and "Baka: Growing Up" by Phil Agland
Description:

"Baka: People of the Forest" and its companion film "Baka: Growing Up" were on the Discovery Channel in the United States in the late 1980s. At that time I made a copy for myself on VHS off of the cable broadcast, sponsored by the National Geographic Society, Chevron, and CPB. It was a National Geographic Special and is narrated by Denzel Washington. The companion film is narrated by Ian Holm.

It is 1:19:21 in length, and shows the two films back-to-back.

The first film is about 56 minutes. The next one is 18 months later and is called "Baka: Growing Up." It is about 24 minutes.

A new film, Baka: A Cry from the Forest, was made of the same living people in this film, 25 years later, in 2012. Here are some references:

http://www.river-films.com/BAKA_Watch_Buy.html
http://www.river-films.com/BAKA_NEWS.html
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0192w60

I think the great value of these films is to see an up-close example of how human beings lived from in bands from 50,000 or more years ago to 20,000 years ago as more people began the transition to village life, as Stephen Mithin documented in his book "After the Ice."

I decided to upload it to enable more people to experience this amazing film and its look into the daily life of an egalitarian family of hunter-gatherers, living as they had been for up to 50,000 years.

Plus, the more people who see how the Baka and other hunter-gatherers live, the more pressure could be excerpted to help prevent them from being bothered, their lands taken, or worse.

Produced and filmed by Phil Agland, these films was shown by the Discovery Channel in 1989.

Key websites:

River Films
http://www.river-films.com/BAKA_NEWS.html

Producer, writer and camera operator Phil Agland:
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Phil-Agland/340869215954510

Associate Producers:
Lisa Silcock and Michael Harrison

Edited by:
Chris Lakeman Fraser and Lisa Palattella

Baka: People of the Forest narrated by:
Denzel Washington

Baka: Growing Up narrated by:
Ian Holm

Translated by:
Lisa Silcock

Music by:
Jennie Muskett

Sound Recording:
Michael Harrison

Assistant Editor:
George Volker

Production Assistant:
Paula N. Kessler

Researcher/Script Editor:
Marjorie M. Moomey

Administrative Assistant:
Nola L. Shrewsberry

Music Supervisor:
Jack Tillar

Audio Technician:
Chuck White

Post-Production Sound:
Colin Martin
Michael Danks
Jim Lownie

Re-recording Mixers:
Paul Schremp
Mark LInden

Post-Production Services:
WQED West, Inc.

Vice President and Managing Director:
Donna Mitroff

Production Coordinator:
John Cosgrove

Post-Production Coordinator:
David L. Lahaie

Series Supervising Editor:
Barry Nye, A.C.E.

Production & Post-Production Supervisor:
David R. O'Dell

Executive Producers:
Dennis B. Kane
Thomas Skinner

The National Geographic Society
www.nationalgeographic.com/‎
Address: 1145 17th St NW, Washington, 20036
Phone:(202) 857-7000
Hours: Friday hours 10:00 am--6:00 pm

This YouTube Channel is owned by:
Kelly Gerling
http://kellygerling.com
http://kellygerling.net
http://kellygerling.org
http://mediation-seattle-com
http://progressiverevolution.org

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Duration:
01:19:22

English subtitles

Revisions