-
(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
By Paul Thompson
Studying a fiber1 left on
the end of a plant: Did
it come from clothes?
Or from burlap used for
transporting
marijuana?
VOICE ONE:
This is Steve Ember.
VOICE TWO:
And this is Shirley Griffith with the VOA Special English program EXPLORATIONS. Today we visit the desert
of the American Southwest to learn about a group of people called the Shadow Wolves.
((INDIAN MUSIC))
VOICE ONE:
A Shadow Wolf is hunting. He is not looking for animals. He is hunting people.
The Shadow Wolf walks slowly across the extremely hot desert sand. His eyes move
slowly over the ground. Most people would only see sand, dirt, rocks and some small
plants. The Shadow Wolf sees a story.
He looks closely2 at the ground. He can tell that five men passed this way. Four of them
carried heavy loads. He can also tell they are moving quickly. They are not yet running,
but they are moving as fast as their heavy loads permit. One is not carrying a heavy load.
The Shadow Wolf knows this person is the group’s leader.
The Shadow Wolf increases his own speed across the dry, hot desert. Soon, he can tell
that the five men are running. They know he is following them.
Moments later, in the far distance, a group of birds suddenly flies away from the ground.
The five men have frightened the birds. The Shadow Wolf slowly pulls out his radio and
calls for help.
The five men are captured3 within an hour. They are arrested for trying to bring illegal drugs into the United
States. Once again, the Shadow Wolf hunters of the United States Customs Service have been successful.
VOICE TWO
For thousands of years, people were hunter-gatherers. They survived by hunting wild animals and gathering4 kinds
of food that were not easily found. Their hunting skills were extremely important. The ancient hunter-gatherers of
the world learned5 to follow the signs or marks left on the ground as animals moved along a path.
This skill is called tracking. A good tracker would often spend days following the signs of a group of animals
until he could make a successful kill for food.
VOICE ONE:
These skills have disappeared in most of the modern world. Yet, special members of the United States Customs
Service use them to find and arrest people who try to sell illegal drugs. These Customs Service agents are Native
Americans.
The group is called the Shadow Wolves. There are Eighteen men and one woman in the group. They belong to a
number of different tribes7, including Tohono O’Odham (tuh-HO-no ode-um), Navajo (NA-veh-ho), Lakota,
Omaha, Pima(PEE-mah), Yorock (YORE -ock) and Sac&fox (sack n' fox).
Trackers on the Tohono
O'Odham reservation8 in
southern Arizona.
(Customs Service photos -
James R. Tourtellotte)
The Shadow Wolves live by a saying that tells a lot about them and their work. The
saying is, ”In brightest day, in darkest night, no evil9 shall escape my sight, for I am
the Shadow Wolf.
”
((INDIAN MUSIC))
VOICE TWO:
The Shadow Wolves have been members of the United States Custom Service for
about thirty years. They work on the second largest area of American Indian land in
the United States. It is called the Tohono O’Odham Reservation. It is a few
kilometers west of the city of Tucson, in the southwestern state of Arizona.
The huge reservation shares a one-hundred-twenty-kilometer border with Mexico. People who want to sell illegal
drugs in the United States carry the drugs on their backs across the desert land of the Tohono O’odham
Reservation. They try to move from the border to the nearest road, about forty kilometers away. Usually about
three or four people carry the drugs through the reservation at night. Their shoes leave marks in the dirt.
The Shadow Wolves follow these shoe marks to find the drug dealers10 and arrest them. The Shadow Wolves have
been very successful at this.
VOICE ONE:
The Congress11 of the United States approved the idea of the Shadow Wolves thirty years ago for several reasons.
Police agencies12 in Arizona and the United States Custom Service had all the modern technology needed to help
catch people who tried to sell illegal drugs. But they lacked the skills of the ancient hunter-gatherers who could
follow the signs left by people as they passed through the desert.
Customs Service officials knew drug dealers were coming across the border and into the Tohono O’Odham
Reservation. The government asked Indians who lived on the reservation to help in the fight against the drug
dealers. The first members of the Shadow Wolves were members of the Tohono O’Odham tribe6.
A few years ago, the first members of the unusual group began to retire. The group asked if skilled13 trackers from
other tribes wanted to become Shadow Wolves. The answer was yes.
VOICE TWO:
The Shadow Wolves do not use only their ancient tracking skills. They also use modern devices14 that help them
see in the dark. They use modern radios to communicate. They use airplanes, helicopters and other methods of
transportation in their work.
They have a very good record. In the first fifteen days of March two-thousand-one, the Shadow Wolves tracked
and captured almost one-thousand-fifty kilograms of illegal drugs. In the following six months, they captured
more than eighteen-thousand kilograms of illegal drugs. One day in April of this year, they seized dealers
carrying more than one-million -six -hundred-thousand dollars worth of drugs through the Tohono O’Odham
Reservation.
((MUSIC BRIDGE))
VOICE ONE:
The Shadow Wolves main task is finding15 and stopping illegal drug dealers. Sometimes they are asked to help
rescue people who become lost in the desert.
Three of the Shadow Wolves are Gary Ortega, Jason Garcia and Lambert Cross. Lambert Cross has been a
tracker for almost thirty years. In two-thousand-one, the three Shadow Wolves saved the life of a little boy who
had become lost in the desert.
The child and his dog left their home and walked into the desert. No one could find them. Search aircraft were
used. Experts with dogs were called. The aircraft and the dog experts searched but could not find the little boy.
The three Shadow Wolves then joined the search. They found very little evidence of the boy in the desert. But
they found just enough for them to begin tracking the child. They continued to follow the marks left by the little
boy until they found him and his dog. They returned them to their home.
VOICE TWO:
The Shadow Wolves also share their skills with other law agencies. Jason Garcia and two other members of the
group traveled to Kosovo. They trained border guards there to track people who deal in stolen weapons. They
also helped train police and border guards in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan.
The police and border guards in those countries were often surprised when the Shadow Wolves began teaching16
them ancient methods of tracking. The Shadow Wolves say the police and guards expected to learn how to use
some kind of modern electronic equipment. Instead they were taught ancient hunting skills.
VOICE ONE:
Bryan Nez is from the Navajo tribe. He has worked with the Shadow Wolves group for twelve years. He learned
to track as a child.
Mister17 Nez says he learned more by finding lost children and people on holiday who became lost in the desert.
Other Customs Officers say it is interesting to watch him work. Most people would not see anything unusual in
an area. Yet, Mister Nez sees a lot of evidence of people passing through. He says anyone can be followed
because they leave signs on the ground. He says he can follow them even at night, or over rocks.
Sometimes, he says, the evidence he needs is something that he sees. Other times the evidence is something that
he does not see. Sometimes it is just a feeling that he has.
VOICE TWO:
The work of the Shadow Wolves is dangerous. Sometimes the illegal drug dealers carry weapons. Shots have
been fired more than once.
Each of the Shadow Wolves wears a small gray colored feather on his clothing. It reminds them that their work
can be dangerous. It also honors18 Shadow Wolf Glenn Miles. He was shot and killed by illegal drug dealers in
nineteen-eighty-seven. The person responsible for the crime was never caught.
Several of the Shadow Wolves followed the killer19. The signs he left on the ground crossed the Mexican border
nine kilometers from where the shooting took place.
VOICE ONE:
Each month, the Shadow Wolves find hundreds of kilograms of illegal drugs and arrest those carrying the drugs.
The group knows it will never catch all the criminals who try to move illegal drugs through their area. However,
the Shadow Wolves will continue to prove that ancient skills can be used to solve modern crimes.
((INDIAN MUSIC, FADES INTO THEME)
)
VOICE TWO:
This program was written by Paul Thompson. It was produced by Cynthia Kirk. This is Shirley Griffith.
VOICE ONE:
And this is Steve Ember. Join us again next week for another EXPLORATIONS program in Special English on
the Voice of America.
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1 fiber | |
n.纤维,纤维质 | |
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2 closely | |
adv.紧密地;严密地,密切地 | |
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3 captured | |
俘获( capture的过去式和过去分词 ); 夺取; 夺得; 引起(注意、想像、兴趣) | |
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4 gathering | |
n.集会,聚会,聚集 | |
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5 learned | |
adj.有学问的,博学的;learn的过去式和过去分词 | |
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6 tribe | |
n.部落,种族,一伙人 | |
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7 tribes | |
n.部落( tribe的名词复数 );(动、植物的)族;(一)帮;大群 | |
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8 reservation | |
n.保留条件,限制条件;预订座位 | |
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9 evil | |
n.邪恶,不幸,罪恶;adj.邪恶的,不幸的,有害的,诽谤的 | |
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10 dealers | |
n.商人( dealer的名词复数 );贩毒者;毒品贩子;发牌者 | |
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11 Congress | |
n.(代表)大会;(C-:美国等国的)国会,议会 | |
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12 agencies | |
n.代理( agency的名词复数 );服务机构;(政府的)专门机构;代理(或经销)业务(或关系) | |
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13 skilled | |
adj.(in)熟练的,有技能的;需要技能的 | |
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14 devices | |
n.设备;装置( device的名词复数 );花招;(为实现某种目的的)计划;手段 | |
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15 finding | |
n.发现,发现物;调查的结果 | |
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16 teaching | |
n.教学,执教,任教,讲授;(复数)教诲 | |
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17 mister | |
n.(略作Mr.全称很少用于书面)先生 | |
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18 honors | |
n.礼仪;荣典;礼节; 大学荣誉学位;大学优等成绩;尊敬( honor的名词复数 );敬意;荣誉;光荣 | |
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19 killer | |
n.杀人者,杀人犯,杀手,屠杀者 | |
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