[THIS POST IS HUMOUROUS AND NOT FACTUAL.]This question has plagued many a researcher of the ancient Amazigh culture in North Africa. But due to newly discovered texts in the Algerian desert near the Libyan border we know that the Buzzleskabut (written in Libyan dialect as buzzugelgabut or in Fushaa as buzzuqalqabudh -- the word comes from tamazighit) is a term for the ancient godhead of the prehistoric Libyan Berber and Tuareg populations which was frequently represented in the form of a rabbit in desert cave drawings in the early first millennial BC. The rabbit represented, for these ancient civilizations, the unity of the tribe with the desert and with nature itself. Today very few of the desert cave bunnies are still to be found in the Sahara desert. They tend to be concentrated in the caves and valleys of the Nafusa mountains, where they are still prized for their marvelous fur. Today the Buzzleskabut has come into greater prominence than at anytime in the 21st century as some Berber militias such as the thuwwar Jadu have taken the buzzleskabut as their mascot which appears on their various technicals and armed cars.