Out of Eden Walk

Out of Eden Walk Paul Salopek's Out of Eden Walk is a multi-year global journey in the path of early humans.

Nonprofit organization | Connecting humanity | Walking 38,000-km from Africa to South America | Led by NatGeo Explorer & Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Paul Salopek 👣🌍🌏🌎 https://www.outofedenwalk.org
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Thank you to The Economist for joining us on the Out of Eden Walk trail.
12/22/2024

Thank you to The Economist for joining us on the Out of Eden Walk trail.

Paul Salopek has been walking around the world since 2013. His journey is a lesson on slow journalism, what people have in common—and climate change https://econ.st/4gMIQkp

Photo: Soichiro Koriyama

✍️ “Keep some bags packed, folks. Don’t be lulled into complacency by the seeming permanence of ‘home’—our cities, templ...
12/21/2024

✍️ “Keep some bags packed, folks. Don’t be lulled into complacency by the seeming permanence of ‘home’—our cities, temples, markets, and farms. The world is up-shifting into accelerated change mode. So don’t be afraid to move along with it: Mobility is humankind’s oldest and most powerful survival tool.”

—Paul Salopek, “The Upsides of Nomadism in an Age of Drastic Change,” www.outofedenwalk.org 📍 Sanxingdui, China, 2023

We’re pleased to announce that this year’s crowdfunder campaign has more mileage ahead: Until December 31st, you can donate to join our global community and see your name added on a mile of the Out of Eden Walk’s 24,000-mile route.

We show our thanks to this community with other limited-time perks, too.

🥾 We’re 25,000 kilometers and 12 years into this global foot journey. Half the world lies ahead. This community keeps us moving forward.

🔗 To find out more and to support the Out of Eden Walk nonprofit organization, visit this link: www.outofedenwalknonprofit.org/campaign

Thank you to each and every person who has donated so far. 🙏

✍️ “Leam had framed the WALKING KOREA exhibition as an exercise in both ‘cutting out’ and ‘joining’ artistic ideas, much...
12/19/2024

✍️ “Leam had framed the WALKING KOREA exhibition as an exercise in both ‘cutting out’ and ‘joining’ artistic ideas, much as the sc******ng of legs simultaneously slice apart and stitch together walked landscapes.

Six Korean artists contributed work, which sometimes touched on the universal themes preoccupying the Walk: human migration and restlessness, cultural and gender frontiers, the body, states of exile, and the relationship between landscape and memory. Half of the artists joined the 650-kilometer Out of Eden Walk hiking trail through Korea. Over the summer, they paced off rural roads with Out of Eden Walk founder Paul Salopek and his trekking partner Junseok Lee. The days were blistering.

‘Walking with Paul and Junseok in August was like doing penance, but I needed such a challenge at that time,’ says Oksun Kim, a photographer and videographer whose exhibition work, titled ‘Interview,’ features women leaders who endured the country’s late-20th century dictatorships. ‘While walking 40 kilometers over two days, I was given the motivation to move forward just one step at a time, taking strength from those before who walked together. This hot journey opened the lid of the work that had been postponed, and I was able to start my new videos.’”

—Paul Salopek & Sooyoung Leam

🔗 At the link, read the newest story from the trail, “Celebrating Art, Storytelling—and Democracy—in South Korea,” by Paul Salopek & WALKING KOREA: Cut Pieces curator Sooyoung Leam: https://outofedenwalk.nationalgeographic.org/articles/2024-12-celebrating-art-storytellingand-democracy-south-korea

📝 Editor’s note: The WALKING KOREA: Cut Pieces exhibition is open from 11am-6pm through January 5th at The WilloW (더 윌로 The WilloW), 38 Gosanja-ro 36-gil, Dongdaemun District, 2F.

📸 The exhibition is hosting a community workshop for aspiring documentary photographers led by artist & National Geographic Explorer Youngrae Kim on Sat, Dec 28, 2024, 1pm-3pm at The WilloW.

Further details in the dispatch & contact: thewillow1955[at]gmail[dot]com

Pictured: Video artist Oksun Kim contributed a work about women pioneers in pre-democratic South Korea.

📸 Photo by Dave Pond.

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Since the journey began in 2013, World Press Award-winning National Geographic photographer John Stanmeyer has photograp...
12/18/2024

Since the journey began in 2013, World Press Award-winning National Geographic photographer John Stanmeyer has photographed eleven Out of Eden Walk stories in National Geographic Magazine.

During our annual crowdfunder for the Out of Eden Walk nonprofit, taking place now, John has generously offered to contribute any one photograph, selected from the twelve photographs shown here, to a member of the Out of Eden Walk community.

For a donation at the $1,500 level, one person can take home their choice of one of these twelve images documented by John on the Out of Eden Walk trail.

The high-quality, 30x20 inch, archival photograph—all are printed in editions of 150—will be signed by John.

Please note that this appreciation award is available to only one lucky recipient!

For details on how to claim your favorite print, please visit the crowdfunder link in our bio or visit www.outofedenwalknonprofit.org/campaign

We’ll update the crowdfunder campaign page when the award is no longer available.

Visit www.stanmeyer.com to see more of John’s globally renowned work.

Thank you, John!

All photos credit: John Stanmeyer

Leaving Seoul, South Korea, on bicycle paths. With Walking Partner Lee Junseok.
12/18/2024

Leaving Seoul, South Korea, on bicycle paths. With Walking Partner Lee Junseok.

12/16/2024

I want to play my komun’go
But my fingers hurt.
So let me place its strings
On the pinetree by the north window.
There they will hum sweet notes
In the wind.

—Songgye-yŏnwŏl, 18th Century, Korea.

✍️ “What is the purpose of art? Why do humans feel compelled to make it? Why do we admire it? Why do we collect it?Such ...
12/15/2024

✍️ “What is the purpose of art? Why do humans feel compelled to make it? Why do we admire it? Why do we collect it?

Such elementary but unanswerable questions tend to pop up often on the Out of Eden Walk, a multiyear journey that involves retracing, on foot, the pathways blazed by our ancestors on their first discovery of the Earth during the Stone Age. After all, whether we’re talking about 9,000-year-old depictions of wild bulls chiseled onto rocks in the Jordanian desert or observational videos looping inside a white-lit gallery in modern Shanghai, the impulse behind such creative work is likely the same: We paint, sculpt, sing, write, and film to better locate ourselves within the vast and mysterious experience of our lives. In this way, artists seem to offer Homo sapiens maps that steer us toward meaning. The destinations are rarely clear-cut. Like all exploration, art deals in uncertainty.

This was truly the case last Sunday in Seoul, South Korea, at the opening of the latest Out of Eden Walk art and storytelling exhibition, WALKING KOREA: Cut Pieces. Hosted at The WilloW Art Space, a former warehouse tucked into the center of the buzzing Gyeongdong vegetable market, the event was the second presentation organized for local artists and storytellers along our global walking trail.”

—Paul Salopek and Sooyoung Leam

🔗 Read the newest story from the trail, “Celebrating Art, Storytelling—and Democracy—in South Korea,” by Paul Salopek and curator Sooyoung Leam here: https://outofedenwalk.nationalgeographic.org/articles/2024-12-celebrating-art-storytellingand-democracy-south-korea

Amid a coup attempt, a new Out of Eden Walk art and storytelling exhibition opens in Seoul.

📝 Editor’s note: The WALKING KOREA: Cut Pieces exhibition is open from 11am-6pm through January 5th at 더 윌로 The WilloW, 38 Gosanja-ro 36-gil, Dongdaemun District, 2F.

📸 In addition, the exhibition is hosting a community workshop for aspiring documentary photographers led by artist and National Geographic Explorer Youngrae Kim. The workshop will introduce eight selected participants to the principles of documentary photography. Date: Saturday, Dec 28, 2024, 1pm–3pm at The WilloW, 38 Gosanja-ro 36-gil, 2nd Floor, Dongdaemun-gu.

Further details in the dispatch and contact: thewillow1955[at]gmail[dot]com

Pictured: Curator Sooyoung Leam (left), Paul Salopek (center), exhibition artists (left & right of Paul), and Walking Partner Lee Lee Junseok (right) give a talk at the opening of the WALKING KOREA exhibition.

📸 Photo by Youngrae Kim.

📍Seoul, South Korea: 37° 34' 46" N, 127° 02' 26" E

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Ordinarily, I’d agree. But there’s nothing ordinary in the world when you walk it. 📍 Seoul, South Korea📸 Paul SalopekIma...
12/14/2024

Ordinarily, I’d agree. But there’s nothing ordinary in the world when you walk it.

📍 Seoul, South Korea

📸 Paul Salopek

Image description in comments.

👣 Here are a few of the things your donations to the Out of Eden Walk nonprofit organization support:✨ “Slow Journalism”...
12/14/2024

👣 Here are a few of the things your donations to the Out of Eden Walk nonprofit organization support:

✨ “Slow Journalism” Workshops: Past collaborators include the Asian College of Journalism, NYU Shanghai, the Forestry and Grasslands Administration in China, and National Geographic Society. We’re also planning workshops in Japan & North America.

✨ Art & Storytelling Exhibitions: In partnership with local and global individuals and institutions, we’ll helm, with public support, in-country museum collaborations in communities along the trail. Two collaborations have already taken place: An exhibition at the Institute for Contemporary Arts in Shanghai and an exhibition at the 더 윌로 The WilloW in Seoul.

✨ Community Storytelling: HomeStories is a crowd-sourced storytelling map. Participants describe their experiences of “home.” Thousands of people have added their voices, and a team of 25 volunteers from diverse locales act as Story Gatherers.

✨ Equipment: The demands of being a writer on the move include keeping up with a fast-paced publishing schedule, often in “unwired” areas. This can mean satellite phone charges and periodic laptop, sound recorder, and phone replacement.

✨ Travel Essentials: These include basics such as food, water, lightweight camping equipment and foul-weather gear. Paul and Walking Partners travel with pack animals—such as camels, horses, mules—where the terrain demands; these four-legged walking partners are costly but essential.

✨ Home Base: Our core team in the US manages educational coordination, outreach, fundraising, financial management, international communications, and back-end logistical support for Paul & his Walking Partners.

✨ Walking Partners: Walking Partners help design and, often, dictate the routing through their native lands; they act as translators and interpreters; and they bring personal and in-depth cultural perspectives. Walking Partners are paid an above-standard wage for their key roles, and often spend several months on the trail.

🌱 To donate, visit this link: www.outofedenwalknonprofit.org/campaign

🌱🌱 All gifts are currently being matched dollar for dollar.

Sincere thanks to everyone who has donated so far! 🙏

📸 Photos by Paul Salopek & Walking Partners.

12/13/2024

✍️ “We were walking the Yeongnamdaero, the Old Scholars’ Road that once linked the South Korean cities of Seoul and Busan. For 500 years, from the 14th to the late 19th centuries, young men—always men—plodded the rugged, 600-kilometer track to take government exams at the Joseon court, hoping to obtain sinecures as clerks of a Confucian empire. Back then, the road was made of mud and stone and, sometimes, timber walkways. Aristocrats in tall stovepipe hats that protected their topknots rode saddled mounts along the road, moving in long caravans of soldiers and courtiers. Peasants encountered on the ‘royal’ road were fined and shoved aside—including off cliffs. We would have been too.

Today the Yeongnamdaero is largely vanished. Erased like so many ancient features in Korea. Wiped away by a war that pulverized the built environment in the 1950s. Paved over more recently by a dizzying economic boom.

A local historian showed us a stretch of horse trail carved into the forested hillside. I placed my hand on its stones polished to a high gloss by hooves. This relict trail petered out at a parking lot. Beyond the parking lot boomed a highway. There was a café along the highway. Photo-realistic murals of Manhattan circa 1995 decorated its walls. Paris themed bric-a-brac packed the counters. Ceramic ashtrays. A miniature Eiffel tower. South Korea is a landscape afflicted with amnesia, I told myself, sipping an iced Americano. It was all right, though. Many places have it.” —Paul Salopek

👣 Every hundred miles, Paul pauses to record the landscape and a person he meets.

Milestone 101 was recorded near Miryang, South Korea on day 4,241 of the Walk.

🔗 Explore “Milestone 101: A Landscape Afflicted With Amnesia” in full here: https://outofedenwalk.nationalgeographic.org/milestones/2024-11-milestone-101-landscape-afflicted-amnesia

Videography by Paul Salopek. Edited by Jessica Wang.

//

A note: Out of Eden Walk is glad to report that our friends in the Republic of Korea are safe, and we are closely following political events to ensure the ongoing safety of our collaborators. We are tremendously grateful for the support and commitment of our partners in the Republic of Korea at this time.

🙌 Thank you! With your generous donations, we’re almost halfway to our annual crowdfunding goal for the Out of Eden Walk...
12/08/2024

🙌 Thank you! With your generous donations, we’re almost halfway to our annual crowdfunding goal for the Out of Eden Walk nonprofit organization! Give today to double your impact. Donations are currently being matched at a 1:1 ratio. 🌱🌱

✨ Half the world lies ahead on this global foot journey, and our community keeps us moving, one step at a time.

Learn more and join us here: www.outofedenwalknonprofit.org/campaign

👣 We’re 12 years into the Out of Eden Walk. With your support, since 2013, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Paul Salopek has traversed more than 25,000 kilometers across 19 regions reporting on the major stories of our time at a human pace—and fostering a new generation of storytellers along the way.

🌿 During our annual crowdfunder, we invite you to join the Out of Eden Walk nonprofit community with a donation at any level. 100% of dollars raised go toward fulfilling our mission.

We are committed to creating fact-based, high-quality storytelling content and ethical journalism along our 38,000-km global route—but we need your help to keep going forward. 🥾

Your support keeps Out of Eden Walk independent and freely available to the public.

Out of Eden Walk is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. While we’re immensely grateful for support from our partner organizations, about 50% of our operating costs are funded by readers like you.

We need your support to continue elevating the voices of local people along our global route and to continue fostering a community of professional storytellers, journalists, and lifelong learners who are committed to building a more meaningfully connected world.

Your donations create opportunities for greater student reach and enhanced impact in global education programs, storytelling workshops, cross-cultural bridge-building, and so much more.

🙏 Sincere thanks to everyone who has donated.

Thank you for walking with us! 🌍🌏🌎

📷 Pictured: Paul in northwest China. Last year, Paul completed a groundbreaking walk across China as part of the 38,000-km Out of Eden Walk trek that began in Ethiopia in 2013.

Image description in comments.

✍️ “Every single day of my walk, my real destination is people.” —Paul Salopek👣 We’re 12 years into this global foot jou...
12/06/2024

✍️ “Every single day of my walk, my real destination is people.” —Paul Salopek

👣 We’re 12 years into this global foot journey: Half of the world lies ahead.

With your support, since 2013, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Paul Salopek has traversed more than 25,000 kilometers across 19 regions reporting on the major stories of our time at a human pace—and fostering a new generation of storytellers along the way.

✨ During our annual crowdfunder, we invite you to join the Out of Eden Walk nonprofit community with a donation at any level. 100% of dollars raised go toward fulfilling our mission. ✨

We are committed to creating fact-based, high-quality storytelling content and ethical journalism along our 38,000-km global route—but we need your help to keep going forward. 🥾

🌱 Donations may be made here: www.outofedenwalknonprofit.org/campaign

🌱🌱 During our limited-time matching campaign, all gifts are being matched dollar for dollar up to $30,000.

Your support keeps Out of Eden Walk independent and freely available to the public.

Out of Eden Walk is an independent 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. While we’re immensely grateful for support from our partner organizations, about 50% of our operating costs are funded by readers like you.

We need your support to continue elevating the voices of local people along our global route and to continue fostering a community of professional storytellers, journalists, and lifelong learners who are committed to building a more meaningfully connected world.

Your donations create opportunities for greater student reach and enhanced impact in global education programs, storytelling workshops, cross-cultural bridge-building, and so much more.

🙏 We would like to offer our sincere thanks to each and every person who has already donated.

Thank you all for walking with us! 🙌

📷 Pictured: Faces of the Out of Eden Walk. Just a few of the many, many people (and a few of the animals) we’ve encountered and walked with along this global foot journey.

🌍🌏🌎

Image description in comments.

“Walking Korea: Cut Pieces” will open at 더 윌로 The WilloW in Seoul, South Korea this weekend, on December 8th, 2024. This...
12/06/2024

“Walking Korea: Cut Pieces” will open at 더 윌로 The WilloW in Seoul, South Korea this weekend, on December 8th, 2024. This exhibition is inspired by Paul Salopek, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and National Geographic Explorer, and the ongoing Out of Eden Walk project.

For over 11 years, Salopek has documented the footsteps and migration history of humanity through walking, a practice rooted in “slow journalism.” Beginning in January 2013 in Ethiopia, this journey continues today, with Salopek traversing the Asia Rim from Incheon to Busan and onward to Japan since July of this year.

Curated in collaboration with independent curator Sooyoung Leam, Walking Korea: Cut Pieces likens the journey of walking together to the act of “cutting.” It is a motion that slices through continents, carving time and land with diligence. It is a motion that delves into the lives of individuals and communities encountered along the way, which are edited into narrative form.

Similarly, the works by participating artists in this exhibition—Oksun Kim, Youngrae Kim, Son Hyunseon, Alexander Ugay, Jun Jinkyoung, and Cha Ji Ryang—delicately cut into the social topography pushed to the periphery, carve through layers of history with fictional narratives, and reconfigure the functions of tools by merging them with the unfamiliar, or dwell on the wounds embedded in reality.

Collectively their works create a new temporary terrain at The WilloW nestled in Gyeongdong Market, a space defined by the relentless movement of goods and capital.

//

Walking Korea: Cut Pieces

Dates: 2024 Dec 8 – 2025 Jan 5

Opening Hours: Tue – Sun 11:00 – 18:00 (closed on public holidays)

Venue: The WilloW
Curated by Sooyoung Leam
In collaboration with Paul Salopek
Participating artists: Kim Oksun, Youngrae Kim, Alexander Ugay, Son Hyunseon, Jun Jinkyoung, Cha Ji Ryang
Graphic design: Moonsick Gang
Space design: Johoon Choi
Exhibition management: Sijeom
Organizer: Out of Eden Walk
Supporter: Out of Eden Walk nonprofit
Partner: The WilloW

With thanks to Walking Partner Lee Junseok.

👣 Twelve years ago, two-time Pulitzer Prize winning writer Paul Salopek left an ancient human fossil site at Herto Bouri...
12/04/2024

👣 Twelve years ago, two-time Pulitzer Prize winning writer Paul Salopek left an ancient human fossil site at Herto Bouri, Ethiopia, and set out to walk 38,000 kilometers to the tip of South America.

Paul’s mission: Follow the pathways of the first humans to walk out of Africa during the Stone Age, and collect stories of our shared humanity in a modern world fractured by borders, mistrust, and mutual incomprehension.

Far from being a solo journey, this collective effort engages a global community committed to using the power of storytelling for improving connectivity across borders.

✍️ Out of Eden Walk provides a thoughtful alternative to the frenzy of shallower, fast-paced media that often sows fear and ideological division.

🌱 We need your help to keep this slow, mindful voyage moving forward.

This , please consider joining the journey with a donation during Out of Eden Walk’s 30-day crowdfunder.

✨ All donations are currently being matched at a 1:1 ratio up to $30,000 thanks to a matching campaign generously donated by the Out of Eden Walk nonprofit Board of Directors. This means your giving will go twice as far. ✨

🔗 To give, visit this link: www.outofedenwalknonprofit.org/campaign

You’ll “walk along” with our worldwide community of readers, educators, scientists, artists, environmentalists, and storytellers who appreciate a boot-level view of our shared home—an old Earth made fresh and new by walking.

Out of Eden Walk is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. At least 50% of our baseline costs are covered by donors like you.

Thank you for your support and for joining the journey! 🙏

Pictured: Images of people, landscapes, animals, and food along this global foot journey. 🌍🌏🌎

Image description in comments.

“All great and precious things are lonely.” —John Steinbeck📍Seoul, South Korea📷 Paul Salopek Image description in commen...
12/03/2024

“All great and precious things are lonely.” —John Steinbeck

📍Seoul, South Korea

📷 Paul Salopek

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12/02/2024

In case you missed it, we’re delighted to announce that “Walking Korea: Cut Pieces” is due to open at 더 윌로 The WilloW, Seoul, South Korea on 8 December, 2024. This exhibition is inspired by Paul Salopek, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and National Geographic Explorer, and the ongoing Out of Eden Walk project.

For over 11 years, Salopek has documented the footsteps and migration history of humanity through walking, a practice rooted in “slow journalism.” Beginning in January 2013 in Ethiopia, this journey continues today, with Salopek traversing the Asia Rim from Incheon to Busan and onward to Japan since July of this year.

Curated in collaboration with independent curator Sooyoung Leam, Walking Korea: Cut Pieces likens the journey of walking together to the act of “cutting.” It is a motion that slices through continents, carving time and land with diligence. It is a motion that delves into the lives of individuals and communities encountered along the way, which are edited into narrative form.

Similarly, the works by participating artists in this exhibition—Oksun Kim, Youngrae Kim, Son Hyunseon, Alexander Ugay, Jun Jinkyoung, and Cha Ji Ryang—delicately cut into the social topography pushed to the periphery, carve through layers of history with fictional narratives, and reconfigure the functions of tools by merging them with the unfamiliar, or dwell on the wounds embedded in reality.

Collectively their works create a new temporary terrain at The WilloW nestled in Gyeongdong Market, a space defined by the relentless movement of goods and capital.

//

Walking Korea: Cut Pieces

Dates: 2024 Dec 8 – 2025 Jan 5

Opening Hours: Tue – Sun 11:00 – 18:00 (closed on public holidays)

Venue: The WilloW
Curated by Sooyoung Leam
In collaboration with Paul Salopek
Participating artists: Kim Oksun, Youngrae Kim, Alexander Ugay, Son Hyunseon, Jun Jinkyoung, Cha Ji Ryang
Graphic design: Moonsick Gang
Space design: Johoon Choi
Exhibition management: Sijeom
Organizer: Out of Eden Walk
Supporter: Out of Eden Walk nonprofit
Partner: The WilloW

With thanks to Walking Partner Lee Junseok.

👣 Thank you to everyone who has joined the journey! Here are a few types of support you’ll be providing to the Out of Ed...
12/02/2024

👣 Thank you to everyone who has joined the journey! Here are a few types of support you’ll be providing to the Out of Eden Walk nonprofit organization when you donate to our annual 30-day crowdfunder, taking place now:

🫖 $10.00 - A warming cup of boricha (mugicha), a barley tea, for Paul and his Walking Partner as they slog through the unseasonal (climate crisis) rains this Asian winter.

$30.00 - A week’s worth of seaweed rice rolls bought at convenience stores in Japan: walking fuel as Paul and his partners inch towards Hokkaido.

$50.00 - One night’s stay for Paul and his Walking Partner in ryokans—inexpensive family-run hostels located at trailside villages in Honshu, Japan’s very long (1,300 km/780 mi) main island.

✍️📷 $120.00 - A month of data to transmit text, photos and videos from the trail.

$250.00 (each) - An insulated, water-resistant lightweight parka for Paul and his Walking Partner as they migrate into the frozen latitudes of the Asian Pacific coast.

$500 - One week’s honorarium for local Walking Partners.

✨ Out of Eden Walk’s Board of Directors is generously matching all donations at a 1:1 ratio up to $30,000, so your gifts are being matched dollar for dollar. ✨

🌱 Donations may be made here: www.outofedenwalknonprofit.org/campaign

Many thanks to everyone who has given so far! 🙏

Pictured: Photos from many years of this global foot journey.

Image description in comments.

👣 Out of Eden Walk uses slow storytelling to examine our past and inform our future. We are grateful for this community ...
11/28/2024

👣 Out of Eden Walk uses slow storytelling to examine our past and inform our future. We are grateful for this community of readers and fellow walkers who have made it possible for us to continue through 19 regions, 22,000 kilometers, and more than 20 million steps. Half of the world still lies ahead of us.

If you haven’t already, please consider joining the journey. Our 30-day crowdfunding campaign is happening now, and Out of Eden Walk’s Board of Directors is generously matching all donations at a 1:1 ratio up to $30,000.

As a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization, Out of Eden Walk relies on public support to survive. Funding from our partner organizations covers only about 50% of our operating costs.

Thanks to this community, last year, Paul completed a groundbreaking walk across China as part of this 38,000-km trek that began in Africa in 2013.

We’ve come a long way—but still, half of the world lies ahead on the Walk’s global route.

Invest in tomorrow’s stories by joining Out of Eden Walk’s global nonprofit donor community today.

Your support will help to grow the footprint of a project that not only fosters understanding across human divides, but emphasizes practical outcomes as well: educational collaborations with schools and campuses along our upcoming North American walking route, and a workshop program that provides, for free, the powerful tools of immersive reportage to young media workers and students.

Donate today for double the impact thanks to Out of Eden Walk’s Board of Directors and their generous matching campaign. 🌱🌱

To give, visit this link: www.outofedenwalknonprofit.org/campaign

Many thanks to every person who has donated so far! 🙏

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Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and National Geographic Fellow Paul Salopek is retracing our ancestors’ ancient migration on foot out of Africa and across the globe. His 21,000-mile, multiyear odyssey began in Ethiopia—our evolutionary “Eden”—in January 2013 and will end at the tip of South America. Join the Journey: www.outofedenwalk.org

Photo Credit: John Stanmeyer