Time for tears is past, it's time for action
Updated: 2016-09-24 08:55
By Li Bingbing(China Daily)
|
||||||||
A group of African elephants at Chimelong national center in Qingyuan, Guangdong Province. [Photo by Qiu Quanlin /chinadaily.com.cn] |
Producing genuine tears on demand is one of the hardest parts of my job as an actress. Acting teachers will tell you that in order to cry on screen you need to summon up something personal-a fear, an inner secret, a sad experience-that taps into your deepest emotions.
This may sound strange, but the inner secret I use when I need to cry during a movie scene is the image of an elephant. It's an image that haunts me, an image that will remain in my heart and mind for as long as I live.
Two years ago I visited Samburu National Reserve, a wildlife park in Kenya. There, on a guided walk through the bush, I saw my first dead elephant. Poachers had hunted down this magnificent animal before piercing her tough hide with poisoned spears. As if she already knew her fate, the elephant had walked through the bush, the toxins coursing through her veins, until she found a quiet place to lie down. She chose to die in the cool shade of an acacia tree.
And that's where her body was when I saw her, lying in the dusty red soil, her face hacked off with machetes so that her killers could wrench the tusks from her skull. Around her dead body were the small footprints of a baby elephant; her child now left to fend for itself without the protection of its mother.
That moment, the sight of the dead mother and her mutilated body lying under the shade of the tree, changed something inside me. It made me sick in the pit of my stomach. I remember crying for her as I thought about the cruelty and senselessness that had led to her death. It made me angry, too: she died so that someone living thousands of miles away could buy a bracelet made from ivory, or some other trinket they could show off to their friends and neighbors, oblivious to the blood, sorrow and brutality that made these trivial objects possible.
But her death also fired me up. I stepped from the shade of that acacia tree knowing that to prevent the death of more elephants like her I would have to double my efforts to stop the illegal trade in ivory, which is fuelling so much misery in Africa.
- We should remember merits of 'white elephant' projects
- Fight to save African elephant taking on new dimensions
- Elephant that traveled 1,700 km from India to Bangladesh dies
- Yunnan park shores up security after wild elephant rampage
- Rangers struggle to control elephant's highway rampages
- Elephant damages cars on tourist road
- Move sought for oldest elephant may be too late
- Car-crazy Mexico City celebrates World Carfree Day
- Death toll rises to 52 after migrant boat capsizes off Egypt
- China and US should move forward regardless of election result
- Threat of 'lone wolf' terrorism rises: Aussie PM
- DPRK warns of retaliation against US, ROK
- US fighter jet crashes off coast of Okinawa, Japan: DM
- Li, Trudeau inaugurate 'new annual dialogue'
- Milan Fashion Week: Prada Spring/Summer 2017
- Panchen Lama prayers at foot of Qomolangma
- Ai Fukuhara and her newlywed husband show up in Taiwan
- 8 things you may not know about Autumn Equinox
- Italian sets new record with Ferrari on 'miracle road'
- Students compete for flight attendant jobs in Sichuan
- 1st Sushi restaurant opens in DPRK
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Anti-graft campaign targets poverty relief |
Cherry blossom signal arrival of spring |
In pictures: Destroying fake and shoddy products |
China's southernmost city to plant 500,000 trees |
Cavers make rare finds in Guangxi expedition |
Cutting hair for Longtaitou Festival |
Today's Top News
Trump outlines anti-terror plan, proposing extreme vetting for immigrants
Phelps puts spotlight on cupping
US launches airstrikes against IS targets in Libya's Sirte
Ministry slams US-Korean THAAD deployment
Two police officers shot at protest in Dallas
Abe's blame game reveals his policies failing to get results
Ending wildlife trafficking must be policy priority in Asia
Effects of supply-side reform take time to be seen
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |