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  • These monkeys live on a giant rock called Gibraltar, which is a part of the

  • mainland of Spain, here on the Iberian Peninsula but it's right on the very tip

  • and it actually belongs to Britain. Back when the world would fight wars with

  • like big countries fighting each other, this place was very strategic for Britain.

  • They have all these military assets up here that are a holdover from

  • when they had this whole place decked out and militarized for war.

  • Gibraltar, the town of 30,000 people has a really weird feel to it. It is Spanish,

  • kind of, kind of feel Spanish, you know it's kind of sun-soaked and things like that.

  • But it's totally British at the same time. It's abnormal, it's extraordinary.

  • To add to the strangeness, there are monkeys here.

  • These monkeys are a part of

  • the Barbary macaques species. They're the only primates living in the wild here in

  • Europe, besides humans. The monkeys have been here for no-one knows how long.

  • They're indigenous to northern Africa, but you'll notice that there is a large

  • body of water called the Mediterranean Sea in between this place and Africa so

  • no one really knows how they got over here. There's a lot of theories and legends.

  • Some people say pirates brought them over in like the 14th century from

  • Morocco, some people think they came across like thousands of years ago, but

  • there's been a lot of digging on this rock and there's really no evidence that

  • that's the case. One thing I love about these monkeys is that the male's play a

  • huge role in raising the infants. In fact all sexes and all ages are involved in

  • the raising of children. I respect that. So, there's actually a problem with these

  • monkeys in Morocco being exploited for tourism. When they eat food that is given

  • to them by humans, or are subject to having photos taken of

  • them all day, it can cause some really bad and psychological outcomes for

  • monkeys. What the people in Gibraltar have tried to do is basically ban anyone

  • from feeding them. This guy found food on his own. And they've also trained the

  • monkeys, they've almost domesticated them in a way to where interaction with

  • humans is not psychologically stressful. That being said, they are the biggest

  • tourist attraction of Gibraltar. And of course during World War Two this place

  • was bombed everyone had to flee, but the monkeys have stuck around. The British

  • Army actually took the monkeys under their wing and actually had in their

  • budget, nuts and berries and apples for the monkeys. So while the whole global

  • empire, strategic value of this place is long gone,

  • there still is value for Britain to have this place. So much of the world's trade

  • comes through this little bit of water between Europe and Africa, and Gibraltar

  • is situated right here on and strait. There's actually weird superstition that has

  • made it into politics. Some British people have thought in the past, that as

  • long as the monkey stay here Britain will for sure have control. After

  • World War Two, Winston Churchill reportedly heard that because of the

  • bombing and things there were only seven monkeys left, and because of this

  • superstition he ordered that the monkey population be replenished.

  • So this place is strategic, it probably will stay strategic in some ways and Britain

  • has no plan to give it back to Spain.

  • The Borders documentaries are finally launching. Up until now I've been making

  • these dispatches, just little videos while I've been traveling, but all of

  • this has been to build six documentaries. I'm going to be publishing the first

  • borders documentary on October 17th, and then publishing weekly thereafter on Tuesdays.

  • The videos are going to be publishing on Facebook and YouTube, and if you don't

  • want to miss the updates on when they publish, you can sign up for the

  • newsletter, which I'm putting the link down in the description. Really excited to

  • share these with you, you should tune back October 17th to watch the first one.

These monkeys live on a giant rock called Gibraltar, which is a part of the

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