In the late 1929, Stephanus Cecil
Rutgert Barnard sighted his rifle on an elephant
with tusks that stretched to the ground. This
event was to mark a turning point for the famed
elephant poacher, who is better remembered by
his Shangaan nickname of Bvekenya. The encounter
is dramatically recounted in TV Bulpin’s
book The Ivory Trail. For years Barnard had dreamt
of this moment, of shooting the elephant called
Dhlulamithi (a Shangaan word meaning, ‘taller
that the trees’), but Bvekenya couldn’t
bring himself to pull the trigger and then and
there decided to give up the way of the gun.
In years since Bvekenya left his favorite haunts
around Crooks Corner, where the boundaries of
South Africa, Zimbabwe and Mozambique meet, the
question has been asked: whatever happened to
Dhlulamithi? Did he live out his days roaming
the Gona-re-Zhou area in south eastern Zimbabwe
where Bvekenya came across him or did he perhaps
fall victim to another elephant poacher?
At first check it appears that Dhlulamithi did
fall prey to a bullet, fired not by a poacher
but rather a hunter. In August 1967 a South African
Defense Force general, Victor Verster, shot a
massive bull elephant in the Gona-re-Zhou nature
reserve. Its tusks weighing 46 and 60kg were some
of the largest to come out of the southern Africa.
In the book he edited, neem uit die verlede, U
de V. Pienaar claimed that this was Bvekenya’s
elephant.
But Richard Harland, the professional hunter
who guided Verster on the day he shot the elephant,
is of a different opinion. “Firstly, Dhlulamithi
is actually a hereditary title given to any big
bull. And secondly, it was about 40 years after
Bvekenya came across his elephant, so I think
Bvekenya’s Dhlulamithi would have been long
dead,” he says.
Elephant expert Anthony Hall Martin agrees with
Harland. “When an elephant has tusks of
that size, it’s probably in the last five
years of its life,” he explains.
So to find out what happened to Bvekenya’s
elephant we have to head further back into the
past, where the likely suspects are somewhat obscured
by history legend and bush rumor.
The most incredible story that is associated with
Dhlulamithi is told by professional hunter and
author Brian Marsh. While Marsh was operating
in south eastern Zimbabwe in the 1960’s
he and the game authorities used to come across
dead elephants that had been show with a 4-bore
muzzle loading rifle. According to Marsh, the
story goes that the poacher was actually Bvekenya’s
son by a Shangaan woman.
“He was a real will-o-the-wisp. The authorities
could never catch him. He must have been a big
man to handle a gun of that size.” Says
Marsh. “It is said he even called himself
Bvekenya and like his father, used to give meat
to the local Shangaans who in return would hide
hi and tell him when the authorities were in the
area. It was also rumored that he shot Bvekenya’s
Dhlulamithi.”
As to who this shadowy poacher actually was is
a bit of a mystery, Bvekeny’s son. Izak,
has no idea who this supposed half brother was
and warns that it wouldn’t be the first
time someone had impersonated his legendary father.
“At least three people have pretended they
were either my father or a family member,”
says Izak.
Ron Thomson, author of the book The Adventures
of Shadrek – Southern Africa’s Most
Infamous Elephant Poacher, says “I only
know of two poachers of any consequence who operated
in south eastern Zimbabwe the first was Bvekenya
and the second was Shadrek.” Shadrek’s
life was just as colorful as that of Bvekenya,
the son of a local Ndou chief, Shadrek poached
elephant until he temporarily reformed his ways
and worked with Thomson in the then Rhodesian
game department.
Later the two of them were responsible for locating
several ZANLA guerrilla camps in Mozambique during
the Rhodesian bush War. “He was a short
man and not a good shot, but he killed a lot of
elephant.” Recalls Thomson.
However, Shadrek was too young to have shot Dhlulamithi.
Nor, according to Thomson, did he ever hunt with
a 4-bore muzzle loading rifle. “His weapon
of choice was a 10.57 rifle and later an AK.47,
” says Thomson.
But perhaps the best clue as to what happened
to the original Dhlulamithi lies in two black
and white photographs. The first is believed to
have been snapped by British South African (BSAP)
policeman George Style, and appeared in the BSAP
magazine. Outpost. The photograph shows a huge
elephant who according to Izak, is the Dhlulamithi
his father encountered.
During the 1920’s Style was stationed at
Nuanetsi in Zimbabwe. Part of the area he had
to police was Bvekenya’s old hunting ground.
In an article he wrote for Outpost, he described
how he eventually met up with the Bvekenya in
South Africa and the two became friend, Style
knew of the elephant that Bvekenya was obsessed
with and took a photograph of it.
The second photograph appears in the book Conservationist
and the Killers, by John Pringle, and shows a
pair of huge tusks that are claimed to have come
from Dhlulamithi. The caption says the tusks were
sent to ivory trader R. Balmer in Lourenco Marques
(Mat to) in 1932. He in turn exported them to
England for auction by S Figgis and co. The tusks
weighed a whopping 73 and 73.5kg.
“The two tusks are quite unusual and you
can see by comparing the two photographs that
they came from the same elephant,” says
Izak.
But where those tusks are today remains a mystery,
as does the identity of the person who pulled
the trigger on Dhlulamithi.
The Shangaan word Dhlulamithi means taller than the
trees and it is a hereditary title bestowed on any large
tusker that roams the Gona-re-zhou area.
Stephanus Cecil Rutgert Barnard – the famed elephant
poacher. Better know by his Shangaan nickname of Bvekenya