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The Elephant Men
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India's elephants are locked in a fierce competition for food, water, and living space with the nation's fast-growing human population. Over the course of the twentieth century, India's population has almost doubled to more than 950 million people. In their search for living space, India's settlers have cleared all but ten percent of the elephant's traditional forest homelands. Some Indians, however, have been taming elephants for more than 5,000 years. In THE ELEPHANT MEN, NATURE follows a venerated elephant trainer named Dr. Krishnamurthy and several of his young trainees, or mahouts, in their travels 1,500 miles from their homes, as they aid a beleaguered village in the northeastern state of Bengal. To get the inside story on the making of THE ELEPHANT MEN, NATURE Online spoke with filmmaker Harry Marshall. Harry Marshall: In His Own Words
"In the opening scenes of the film, you see an elephant charging
the camera, and then you see some people with torches. That wasn't set
up; all that really happened. If you look closely, you'll see me run
across the camera -- with an elephant 20 yards behind me. I was chased
by a wild elephant absolutely hell-bent on killing me! "At one point, I felt something grab my arm. I was afraid it was a trunk, but it was Alphonse Roy, the cameraman. Now Alphonse is only 5'2", so he was really on his tiptoes in the water. And the first thing he said to me was, 'Shall I take a [light] meter reading?' I thought that was a funny thing to ask. "Dr. Krishnamurthy is something of a legend in elephant circles. He's been working as a wildlife vet for over 50 years. He was the inspiration for the whole film. He'd been asked to go to North India to solve the problem of rampaging elephants and capture them. It seemed like an extraordinary thing to ask a retired 70-year-old man to do, but it's because there is a crisis -- and he's the only man who could sort it out. "Elephants have been used [as beasts of burden] for centuries. The first recordings of men and elephants working together date back to 3,000 or 4,000 B.C.E.
"Elephants have been losing their place in Indian culture, and the number of mahouts has dramatically declined. You have to be careful not to break that golden chain, because the whole tradition is passed down orally. There are no written instructions. The training of elephants does exist in Sanskrit texts that were written over 2,000 years ago, but the mahouts are all basically illiterate. Dr. K is a walking library of elephant knowledge. "Obviously, seeing an elephant being trained -- having its will beaten out of it -- is not pleasant. But I'm not there to moralize, I'm there to make a film, and to document what has happened there for thousands of years. "How long it takes to train an elephant varies. The younger the elephant is, the easier it is to train. The smaller elephants can be done in three weeks. It's going to take months if the elephant is older and has killed three or four people, like this one very large tusker [we filmed]. He took so long to train that we ran out of time on our schedule and had to leave. Of course, with the bulk of the elephants, the training never stops, because they have an infinite capacity to learn. "The bond that develops between an Indian and his elephant is as deep as any bond that exists. Dr. K's relationship with the elephant he called 'The Inspector General' went on for 20 years. As he says in the film, after it had been in a fight with wild elephants, he used to stand on its tusks and remove broken bones from its head.
"Dr. K became a wildlife vet as a freshman in university. Not many people enjoy living in the jungle, sleeping rough. He just took to it like a duck to water. They say that great elephant trainers, great mahouts, aren't made, they're born. Dr. K has an intuitive touch with elephants. And thanks to him the tradition will continue. He has many disciples who sit at his feet and hear his stories. "The population of Indian elephants is rising. In India they can't just be culled the way they are in Africa, where there are no religious considerations. The skills of people like Dr. K are going to be called upon even more in the years to come. Elephants are going to be used to control elephants. The domestic ones will be used to help control the wild ones. Elephants are peaceful herbivores when they're left alone. But when a farmer empties a shotgun full of rusty nails into its trunk and the trunk goes septic, that elephant becomes a homicidal maniac. "There are still elephants living peaceful lives, as they have for millennia. We just came back from South India. We are making a new film with Dr. K called 'The Elephant Mountain,' about Anaimalai, which means 'elephant mountain.' It's a place where elephants live in peace. We're going to observe a wild herd in a pristine setting for a whole year." Harry Marshall, the founder of Icon Films, was born and spent his childhood in South India. He received an MA from Oxford University. He was nominated for a Best Director Emmy for his film TIBET AND THE END OF TIME. Currently, he is at work on a series for PBS about the Brazilian Amazon.
The Elephant Men
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