Just a simple lunch among the Hadza of Tanzania, but one that reflects a way of life that has survived for thousands of years. Unlike most of the modern world, where meals come from supermarkets and restaurants, the food shared here was likely gathered, hunted, or harvested directly from the surrounding landscape through skills passed down across countless generations.
For the Hadza, one of the last remaining hunter-gatherer peoples on Earth, food is rarely just about eating. It is about sharing, community, and survival. Whatever is found during the day, whether meat, berries, tubers, or wild honey, is often enjoyed together, strengthening the bonds that hold the group together.
What may look like an ordinary lunch is actually a glimpse into a lifestyle that existed long before cities, agriculture, and modern technology, a reminder of how humans lived for most of our history.
π€―π± OMG,
this technology is confusing me too! π€β‘π§
π Can anyone explain how this works? π€π Iβve watched it several times and Iβm still trying to figure it out! π π₯π #MindBlown π€―β¨