Leão ENLOUQUECE após DEVORAR PRIMEIRO HUMANO e causa TRAGÉDIA na ÁFRICA

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Imagine viver em uma pequena aldeia, cercada pela ampla savana africana, onde o silêncio é quebrado ...
Video Transcript:
Imagine living in a small village, surrounded by the wide African savannah, where the silence is broken only by the distant sound of wild animals. Now, imagine that, in the midst of this mysterious environment, an animal with a voracious hunger breaks the peace and harmony between man and nature. He is called Chiengi Charlie, the man-eating White Lion, a pale-colored beast with a disability in his tail, which has condemned him to a solitary life.
This frustration of not being accepted among his kind was directed against the human residents of the place, and they were now the target of his fury. Here people lived in constant terror, each night a harrowing wait: when and where will the next attack be? And no matter how much they begged for help, it seemed that their requests disappeared in the wind, while the beast continued to run wild, feeding, and teaching other lions to behave like him.
Leave your like and subscribe to this channel, it's completely free and it also helps us reach 500 thousand subscribers. Leave your like and let's go. In 1909, in vast and wild Northern Rhodesia, what we now know as Zambia, there lived a small, peaceful village, isolated on the shores of Lake Mweru, close to the border with Congo.
At that time, the place was a land of raw beauty, where life was shaped by wild nature. The natives of the region were simple people, who lived off the land and what the environment offered them, dependent on the nature around them. Although life there was hard, it was the only one they knew and there was a natural peace that allowed the days to go on peacefully – until the appearance of a creature that would break this balance.
These people were already accustomed to the presence of lions and other large animals. When they got too close, the tribe itself took charge of shooting them down. However, there was something different about that beast that began to appear in the surroundings.
He was not like other lions. Charlie Chiengi, as he was nicknamed, was a lonely lion, a rejected nomad probably because of his peculiar appearance. Most lions had dark golden fur, blending into their surroundings, but Charlie was different – ​​his fur was strangely light, almost white, which made him look like an apparition.
The lion was not actually white, but with very light fur compared to the others. Furthermore, he had a physical disability that he would probably have been born with: his tail was incomplete. His penetrating gaze and threatening posture made his every appearance a remarkable event for the residents, after all, the lion seemed to observe the village from higher ground.
He spent hours watching, as if he were analyzing the routine of each member of the tribe. The hunters only killed animals that came too close to the tribe, and since observing did not cause any harm, they chose to ignore the lion. Charlie Chiengi disappeared for weeks, until he decided to return, but this time in a terribly destructive way.
The first tragedy happened on a quiet night. The sun had set and the village was enveloped in darkness, lit only by the glow of the fires that were part of its protection against the local fauna. It was then that, in the silence of the night, a deep and terrifying roar echoed across the savannah.
No one moved immediately, after all, lions were common in the region, and the fires were high. Normally, no feline would get too close. After a few minutes screams came from the direction of the hut of a village hunter, a strong man called Mwamba.
He was making preparations for the next hunt when he was surprised by Charlie. In a precise and fierce leap, the lion fatally attacked him. A single bite on the neck and the lion dragged him away.
However, there were witnesses. Mwamba's wife and children who were in the hut with him. The eldest son ran desperately to try to save his father's life.
However, the lion disappeared among the rocks, and the boy was unable to locate him. Upon returning to the village, the boy found hunters gathering with their spears to try to find their companion. Little did they know that this was just the beginning of months of terror and misfortune.
The men gathered in two groups walked through the savannah at night, determined to find their friend. But the night savannah is even more dangerous. .
. Charlie Chiengi was lurking, just waiting for the right moment. In a single movement, the lion emerged from the tall vegetation, snatching the first man in the line of tribal hunters and dragging his body miles away.
The other warriors were unable to reach him, and lost sight of the feline. There was no chance of those men escaping with their lives and two losses in a single night was too much for them. .
. The hunters returned to the village and from that night, no one slept in peace. Now the village's fires burned brighter, the hunters took turns watching, to provide protection for their families.
However, this security was illusory, after all the village was large, and the number of hunters could not cover the entire area. Initially they were in pairs, after all fighting a lion is not a simple task. But Charlie Chiengi, seemed relentless and would not be intimidated.
The third attack happened in the same week. This time, during the early hours of the morning. He returned silently, with the hunger of a predator that had not finished its hunt.
This time, he did not go directly to the village, but rather to an isolated hut on the outskirts, where a family of shepherds lived who tended goats. The screams began suddenly, breaking the silence of the night like the crack of lightning. There was no one to protect them.
One of the youngest children in the family, he had been taken from his bed by the lion and dragged for kilometers to become his meal. All that was left were trails of blood in the dirt and the disturbing sight of the lion's footprints. In the morning a group of men followed the trail in the hope of finding and killing the lion.
But the only thing they could find were the boy's remains. The brutality of the attack deeply shocked the village. fear began to turn into despair.
The people, once courageous and resilient, now felt powerless in the face of the invisible enemy that stalked their lands. The nights were tormented by the distant roars of the lion, and no one dared to go out after sunset. The night watchmen, who had previously been in pairs, decided to split up, alone, to try to cover a wider area, and this was an irreparable mistake.
The hunters who were once the protectors of those people were now attacked, one by one, taken by surprise, like easy prey in the claws of a hungry lion. With fear gripping everyone, the village leaders sent messengers to the most distant cities, begging for help. They needed a hunter with firearms, as their spears did not seem to frighten Charlie Chiengi.
Requests for help seemed to be ignored. . .
Weeks and months passed and no foreign hunter was seen arriving on the horizon. The attacks persisted and those people were succumbing to a wild animal. Eleven months had passed since the first attack, and the village had lost many lives to the lion.
It was then that an Indian hunter heard the story echoing in the nearby town and went to the village to help. Everyone believed they were finally saved. But that was just another illusion.
When he left to hunt for Charlie Chiengi, the man never returned. Part of his clothes and his rifle were found by residents. The condition of the clothes indicated that the hunter had been attacked and probably killed by a feline, they believed it was Charlie Chiengi.
The person responsible. The rifle was used by the tribe, but they did not know how to handle this type of weapon and the ammunition ran out during training, before they even went out to try to eliminate Charlie. At that moment everyone was hoping for a miracle.
And that miracle came in the form of a man named Luke Davies. Thirteen months after the first attack, hunter Luke Davies, an experienced forty-four year old British tracker, heard the call for help and went to find out the facts. According to him, due to the fact that the Indian hunter had not returned to the city, rumors grew even more about the lion that was terrorizing the tribe close to the river.
After four days in the tribe, Luke tracked the lion to a clearing near the village. Armed with a long-range rifle and knowing the dangers he would face, he waited patiently for the perfect opportunity. Suddenly, Charlie appeared.
His eyes glowed in the dark. His light coat and the lack of part of his tail indicated that he was the cold and calculating killer who haunted those people. But before the feline could get close enough, Luke fired.
A single shot rang out and Charlie fell, already lifeless, onto the savannah floor. The nightmare was finally over. As a way of honoring the end of the nightmare and remembering their victory over the beast, the tribe distributed parts of the lion's skin and teeth among themselves.
Those who received these symbols treated them as talismans, a reminder of how cruel and unforgiving nature, in its magnificence, can be. Luke counted around 90 victims of Charlie Chiengi, but after a few years, in 1915, historians who were researching what happened, documented that other nomadic lions copied Charlie's behavior, and that in some attacks the lion was not completely alone. Some of Charlie Chiengi's teeth are on display at the Natural Sciences Museum in Lusaka, capital of Zambia.
According to the World Atlas website, Charlie Chiengi ranked third as the most feared lion in all of Africa. His legend spanned generations and became one of the most talked about lion attack stories in African history. And about the other lions in the Ranking, we have complete videos about them here on the channel.
Unfortunately, lion attacks on humans continue to be a reality to this day. According to 2019 data, between 30 and 100 people lose their lives to lions each year in Africa alone. Most of these attacks occur in rural regions, where the expansion of human habitat into lion territory increases the likelihood of fatal encounters.
Zambia, Tanzania and Mozambique are among the countries with the highest number of reported incidents, especially in areas where lions live in close proximity to human communities. But what about you, what do you think of this story? Register in the comments.
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