Maps
and photo of Homo naledi, whose fossilized bones were discovered in South
Africa
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Some prominent South
Africans have dismissed the discovery of a new human ancestor as a racist
theory designed to cast Africans as "subhuman", an opinion that
resonates in a country deeply bruised by apartheid. "No one will dig old
monkey bones to back up a theory that I was once a baboon. Sorry," said
Zwelinzima Vavi, former general secretary of the powerful trade union group
Cosatu, a faithful ally of the ruling African National Congress (ANC).
"I
am no grandchild of any ape, monkey or baboon -- finish en klaar (Afrikaans for
"that's it")," he said on his Twitter account, which is followed
by more than 300,000 people.
His
comments were backed by the South African Council of Churches (SACC), which was
historically involved in the fight against apartheid.
AFP report continues:
Vavi
recalled that when South Africa was under apartheid rule he was a target of
racist remarks: "I been also called a baboon all my life so did my father
and his fathers."
Apartheid
ended in 1994 after Nelson Mandela was elected as the country's first black
president in a democratic South Africa.
Vavi's
comments came after last week's discovery of Homo naledi, described by
scientists as a new distant ancestor of humans.
The
discovery of the ancient relative generated a huge amount of international
interest.
A
reconstruction of a Homo naledi face by paleoartist John Gurche at his studio
in Trumansburg ©Mark Thiessen (National Geographic/AFP)
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But
the South African backlash has perplexed people around the world at a time when
Darwin's theory of evolution is widely accepted as fact.
It
"breathes new life into paranoia," said prominent British biologist Richard
Dawkins on his Twitter account this week. "Whole point is we're all
African apes."
Lee
Berger, an American working at Johannesburg's University of the Witwatersrand
and overseeing the Homo naledi dig, tried to keep his distance from the charged
debate, though he did specifically clarify that man doesn't descend from
baboons.
"For
our scientists the search for human origins is one that celebrates all of
humankind's common origins on the continent of Africa," he told AFP.
"The
science is not asking questions of religion nor challenging anyone's belief
systems, it is simply exploring the fossil evidence for the origins of our
species."
The
body of Homo naledi resembles that of a modern man, but researchers say its
orange-sized brain places it closer to Australopithecus, a group of extinct
hominids that walked on two legs and lived around 2 million years ago.
Some
1,550 fossils were unearthed in the "Rising Star", a cave located in
the "Cradle of Humankind", a site 50 kilometres northwest of
Johannesburg that has proven over the years to be a rich source for
palaeontologists.
The
bones haven't been dated, but researchers claim they will reveal more about the
transition between the primitive Australopithecus and the Homo genus, the
family tree of our direct ancestor.
- 'Africans not
respected'-
The
discovery of the new ancestor supports the West's "story that we are
subhumans," said ANC member of parliament and former chief whip Mathole
Motshekga.
"That
is why today no African is respected anywhere in the world because of this type
of theory," he said in an interview with television network ENCA.
The
finding "seems to be calculated to affirm what apartheid and colonialists
did to say that we are subhumans who develop from the animal kingdom and
therefore gave us the status of subhuman beings to justify slavery,
colonialism, oppression and exploitation."
The
South African Council of Churches (SACC), added fuel to the controversy.
"To
my brother Vavi, I would say that he is spot on," SACC president Bishop
Ziphozihle Siwa said in response to the former Cosatu leader's comments.
"It's
an insult to say that we come from baboons. We must continue to engage,"
he said.
Scientists
should continue to provide evidence but also "listen to what God is saying
to us and not make a jump to quick, foolish conclusions."
The
official government reaction to the Homo naledi find was, however, positive,
with Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa saying "our common umbilical cord is
buried" in Africa.
Homo naledi underlines that
"we are bound by a common ancestor," he declared.
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