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@swim_ingly

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United States 参加日 Aralık 2010
263 フォロー中144 フォロワー
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BlackSword
BlackSword@Blacksword011·
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Clarinette
Clarinette@chibimnobi·
100+ Black people, including me, stood 7pm-6am at the Ukraine/Hungary border. We were blocked while fair skin passed. A soldier cocked his gun at me, threatening to shoot if I didn’t let a Moroccan girl pass because she was closer to white. I still have panic attacks from this.
Dami’ Adenuga@DAMIADENUGA

A Nigerian lady shares how moving to Ukraine for study to becoming a refugee due to an active war. 🏷️ IG/the_oluwaseyi_

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Dr. Lemma
Dr. Lemma@DoctorLemma·
I also read that he did this so consistently that the wild animals actually learned to recognize the sound of his engine. Elephants and buffalo would hear his specific truck coming from miles away and gather at the dry water holes to wait for him before he even arrived.
Massimo@Rainmaker1973

This man dedicated his life to hauling thousands of gallons of water to wildlife dying of thirst — and continued directing the mission from his hospital bed until his final days. He was only 54 when he died. In 2016, a devastating drought turned Kenya’s Tsavo West National Park into a parched wasteland. Horrified by the sight of a buffalo collapsing from thirst, local pea farmer Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua sold his possessions, bought a secondhand truck, and began delivering up to 3,000 gallons of water every day to desperate elephants, zebras, and antelope across the rugged terrain. His selfless work, captured in viral videos of thirsty animals rushing toward his truck, turned him into an international symbol of compassion. People from Vermont to Utah rallied behind the man known as the “Water Man of Tsavo,” donating generously to keep the lifeline flowing when rains failed. Even as kidney failure took a heavy toll on his health, Mwalua refused to stop. From his hospital bed, he continued managing operations, coordinating daily deliveries, and developing new solutions such as solar-powered pumps and beehive fences to protect both wildlife and local communities. Though he ultimately lost his battle with illness, his wife Rachel and the Mwalua Wildlife Trust carry on his work today. Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua’s legacy is a powerful reminder that while we cannot prevent every tragedy, there is deep dignity and meaning in choosing kindness and action in the face of suffering.

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carla★
carla★@inmys1eep·
showing this at coachella is so important
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BlackSword
BlackSword@Blacksword011·
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