Home     About     Services     Projects     Opportunities     Donate     eList     Contact

IFCAE Project:

Congo Basin Aka Education





   
Timeframe:  2007-2010
Project Leads:    Barry Hewlett, Bonnie Hewlett
Administration: Institute for Culture and Ecology
Funding: Private Donors.  Additional private donations and grant funds are being pursued.
   
Project Overview  
The Aka are hunters and gatherers that live in the tropical forests of the Congo Basin.  Aka foragers’ way of life and their knowledge about the tropical forest are threatened from encroaching development projects (e.g., logging for tropical forest hardwoods, gold mining).  Approximately half of the Aka children die before reaching age fifteen.  The Aka in the area of this project do not attend the public schools because they are discriminated against by the more dominant farming people in the area.  Aka are often perceived as animals and natural thieves by farmers.  Consequently Aka do not know how to read, write or count money as people all around them exploit  the natural resources in their subsistence areas.  At the request of the Aka this project has been developed to improve the capacity of a small school that has been established in the area.  This includes providing basic supplies, school teachers, to develop curriculum that builds on the extensive Aka knowledge of the forest ecosystem, and to create applied educational opportunities such as participatory mapping of traditional Aka homelands.  This project will help enable current and future generations of Aka to speak and act for themselves at the local, national and international levels.