He began in East Africa with nothing but a notebook, a borrowed truck, and the stubborn belief that elephants were not statistics but citizens. He learned their routes, tempers, and grief, watching matriarchs carry the weight of maps and memories in their minds. When poachers tore families apart, he refused to let their deaths dissolve into rumor. Each tuskless skull became a data point, a testimony, a challenge hurled at the world’s conscience.Those records helped push ivory from luxury to taboo, but his work ran deeper than any law. In dusty community halls and under flickering lanterns, he listened to farmers who feared ruined crops as much as rangers feared empty forests. Out of those tense nights came corridors, compromises, and the fragile idea that coexistence was still possible. His passing leaves no replacement, only a question: will the living honor what he died to protect?
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