
The real-life Mowgli who grew up with Africa's wild animals |
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Tippi enjoys the ultimate school run Photo: SYLVIE ROBERT / BARCROFT MEDIA LTD. FROM TIPPI MY BOOK OF AFRICA
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Playtime: Tippi Degré with local tribesmen Photo: SYLVIE ROBERT / BARCROFT MEDIA LTD. FROM TIPPI MY BOOK OF AFRICA
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Who needs a bike? Photo: SYLVIE ROBERT / BARCROFT MEDIA LTD. FROM TIPPI MY BOOK OF AFRICA
1:30PM GMT 12 Nov 2008
Her "brother" was an elephant, her best friend a leopard and her playground the African bush.
Now Tippi's new book, 'Tippi: My Book of Africa', showcases the magical images that have led to comparisons with Rudyard Kipling's young hero in The Jungle Book.
Born in Windhoek, Namibia in 1990, Tippi Benjamine Okanti Degre was named after Tippi Hedren, the actress who starred in Hitchcok's 'The Birds'.
Living with her French parents, wildlife photographers Sylvie Robert and Alain Degre, the three of them travelled extensively through Africa on a unique and incredible adventure.
"It was magical to be ale to be free in this nature with this child," explains Sylvie, Tippi's mother. "She was a very lucky little girl - she was born and raised until the age of ten totally in the wild. It was just the three of us living in the wild with the animals and not too many humans."
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From sitting on the back of an ostrich, lying peacefully with a young leopard or sitting on the trunk of an elephant, these amazing pictures show an unusual bond and tranquility between man and beast.
"Tippi always said that everybody was gifted and this was her gift," explains Sylvie. "She was in the mindset of these animals. She believed the animals were her size and her friends. She was using her imagination to live in these different conditions."
Using her innocence and imagination, the young 'Mowgli' befriended one of the giants of the animal kingdom, Abu the African elephant.
"She had no fear," says Sylvie. "She did not realise she was not the same size as Abu the elephant. She would look into its eyes and speak to him.
"She was a year and a half when they first me and it was a special time - just incredible. In another picture, you see her with the caracal, she looks almost sad in this photo but she is confident."
But some animals were so taken with Tippi, that she almost became an extension of them.
Her mother added: "Linda, an ostrich from one of the African farms we visited, was so nice that we couldn't even take a photo of Tippi riding her. Linda was so afraid of riding Tippi she didn't want to move."
However, despite the apparent ease and comfort with which they interact, Sylvie and Alain always put Tippi's safety first.
"You can't just meet any of these animals and act like this with them," explains Sylvie. "Wild animals will either run away or attack you if they are either frightened, injured or need to protect their young.
"But in the arid or semi desert regions of Southern Africa people have farms of 10 000 to 20 000 hectares. The farmers often keep orphan animals and raise them in their house. Sometimes they are tame or used to humans and so this is how Tippi was able to be so close with them."
However, there were moments when Sylvie and Alain, who have since divorced, had to keep a special eye on their daughter.
Sylvie said: "The photo with Tippi next to the young lion cub Mufasa sucking her thumb is wonderful.
"The year after this photo we came back and we went to see him and he was huge.
"Mufasa came to Tippi and he friendly brushed her with his long tail, like a cat would do, and she almost fell down. I had to take her away - I was not at ease."
Now aged 18 and having just started a degree in cinema at University in Paris, Tippi is facing a different jungle - the concrete kind.
But for Sylvie, her decision to bring up her child in the African wilderness was the correct choice - and she has no regrets.
"For me it was incredible to think you offer all of this to a child," she says. "Because I was at ease, because I liked it and because we had lived with the Meerkats in the Kalahari desert for six years before Tippi was born, I believed it was fantastic to have that to offer to a child compared to what I would be able to offer to a child living in a city for example.
This summer Tippi passed her Baccalaureate and entered La Sorbonne Nouvelle University in Paris where she follows her past two years of cinema studies at the Lyceum.
Sylvie added: "Tippi believes she is African and she wants to get a Namibian passport. She wants to become an ambassador for Namibia. It is like Mowgli's story, but Tippi's is true."
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Tippi - the real life Mowgli Photo: SYLVIE ROBERT / BARCROFT MEDIA LTD. FROM TIPPI MY BOOK OF AFRICA
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TIPPI - THE REAL LIFE MOWGLI Photo: SYLVIE ROBERT / BARCROFT MEDIA LTD. FROM TIPPI MY BOOK OF AFRICA
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TIPPI - THE REAL LIFE MOWGLI Photo: SYLVIE ROBERT / BARCROFT MEDIA LTD. FROM TIPPI MY BOOK OF AFRICA
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TIPPI - THE REAL LIFE MOWGLI Photo: SYLVIE ROBERT / BARCROFT MEDIA LTD. FROM TIPPI MY BOOK OF AFRICA
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TIPPI - THE REAL LIFE MOWGLI Photo: SYLVIE ROBERT / BARCROFT MEDIA LTD. FROM TIPPI MY BOOK OF AFRICA
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TIPPI - THE REAL LIFE MOWGLI Photo: SYLVIE ROBERT / BARCROFT MEDIA LTD. FROM TIPPI MY BOOK OF AFRICA
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TIPPI - THE REAL LIFE MOWGLI Photo: SYLVIE ROBERT / BARCROFT MEDIA LTD. FROM TIPPI MY BOOK OF AFRICA
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By Richard Savill 3:38PM GMT 12 Nov 2008
Tippi Degre grew up amongst some of the country's most dangerous animals, echoing the adventures of Rudyard Kipling's fictional character in The Jungle Book. For 10 years her "brother" was an elephant, her best friend was a leopard, and her playground was the African desert.
While Mowgli was possibly the son of an Indian woodcutter, and was raised by a pack of wolves, Tippi had a nomadic upbringing, living in tented camps in the African desert. The family spent 10 years travelling in a 4x4 vehicle in Botswana, Namibia, and South Africa.
The daughter of French filmmakers and wildlife photographers, Alain Degre and Sylvie Robert, Tippi was named after Tippi Hedren, the actress who starred in Alfred Hitchcock's 'The Birds'.
"She was born and raised until the age of 10 totally in the wild," said her mother.
Tippi, who believes she has the gift of talking to animals, is captured on film on the back of an ostrich called Linda; lying peacefully with a young leopard; sitting on the trunk of Abu, an elephant; and posing cross legged with a young cheetah.
12 Nov 2008
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12 Nov 2008
"She was in the mindset of these animals," her mother said. "She believed the animals were her size and her friends."
Tippi had no fear and befriended Abu when she was a year and a half old, said her mother. Her daughter would look into its eyes and speak to him.
Another photograph shows Tippi sucking her thumb next to Mufasa, a young lion cub.
"Mufasa came to Tippi and he brushed her with his long tail, like a cat would do, and she almost fell down," he mother said. "I had to take her away, I was not at ease."
Tippi's parents, who have since divorced, always tried to ensure their daughter's safety.
"Farmers often keep orphan animals and raise them in their house," her mother said. "Sometimes they are tame or used to humans and so this is how Tippi was able to be so close with them.
"If I had the least fear I would not have let Tippi anywhere near them. She was only ever bitten once and that was on the nose by a Meerkat."
Tippi, who was born in Namibia, is now aged 18, and is studying cinema at La Sorbonne Nouvelle University in Paris.
"Her story is like Mowgli's but it is true," said her mother, who has compiled one book and hopes to publish another.
"I have no regrets. We had lived with the Meerkats in the Kalahari desert for six years before Tippi was born. It was fantastic to have that to offer to a child compared to what I would be able to offer to one living in a city."
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