Full Circle Digital Magazine February 2014 | Page 16

C O N S E R VAT I O N • R E P R E S E N T I N G E L E P H A N T S Representing Elephants by Adam Criuse W e have been incorporating elephants into our lives since humans first became… well…humans. The earliest known San rock paintings depict elephants, and so do the cave paintings throughout Asia and Europe. There are some 75,000 prehistoric sites worldwide depicting elephants. The ‘primitives’ believed animals were people, but that they represented the best and noblest of human traits. To them elephants, (as we believe even to this day) symbolised strength, intelligence and loyalty. They were incorporated into belief systems as benevolent deities, an early human behaviour that still manifests in most religions today. Hinduism and Buddhism are the two beliefs most associated with elephants. Asian elephants are represented at the moment of Creation when Indra, the Lord of the Universe, rides into the world on the back of an elephant named Airvaya. Then there is the arrival of the corpulent elephant-god Ganesh, the Remover of obstacles and the most popular of all the Hindi Gods. Following on from the tradition of the San, almost all Sub-Saharan African cultures have too embraced the elephant as a significant and important symbol of their cultural and religious fabric. Professor Dan Wylie 16 FREE SUBSCRIPTION of Rhodes University notes that elephant motifs have adorned ‘stools and masks, flywhisks and drums, tobacco pipes and calabashes’ and for various clans the elephant became their totem symbol – the Ndovu in Tanzania, the Ndlovo in Zimbabwe, while the Zulu kings from Shaka onwards are known as ‘Great Elephants’. In Zambia’s Barotseland the Lozi King at coronation is carried along the Zambezi in an elephant-like adorned royal boat, while dozens of other representations have at various times represented the rulers in West, Central and East Africa, all with the theme of being elephants. Elephants are mentioned often in Islamic texts, and depictions of elephants in Christian churches throughout Europe were popular, especially among Gothic cathedrals. In art too, from Da Vinci’s renaissance to Dali’s surrealism, elephants have formed part of the abstract, the mythical and the blessed, while literature is full of anecdotes and stories or representations of the mighty elephant. Even Charles Dickens, in the dank and dark pages of Hard Times uses elephant imagery to describe the awesome puffing power of steam engines. There is the prose of Victorian explorers and their colonial successors where elephants were described always from a hunter’s perspective - Cornwallis-Harris, February 2014