YANN ARTHUS-BERTRAND - THE COLORS OF WATER
VILLAGE IN THE WHITE NILE SWAMPS
Near Bor, Jonglei, South Sudan
6°22’ N – 31°32’ E
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Humans have always settled near water—by springs, rivers, and lakes, where food is abundant. Water allowed us to move beyond a nomadic life, build the first villages, and invent agriculture.
Its pull remains just as strong today. Water is life. In South Sudan, fishing communities still live as they did 5,000 years ago. They have settled deep in the marshlands, as close as possible to their food source. Here, the only available land is on old termite mounds. The clay from these mounds is used to build houses—and even to create tiny gardens.
Fish, dried under the sun, is their only source of protein. For these nearly self-sufficient communities, it is also their only currency—their only means of trade with the outside world, should a passing boat appear.
Excerpt from the film A Thirsty World
by Yann Arthus-Bertrand, Baptiste Rouget-Luchaire, and Thierry Piantanida
© 2012 Hope Production