Jane Goodall: This Love Is More Than Love

Jane Goodall: This Love Is More Than Love

Jane Goodall And The Chimps She Loves

Born on April 3, 1934, in London, England, Jane Goodall set out to Tanzania in 1960 to study wild chimpanzees. She immersed herself in their lives, bypassing more rigid procedures to make discoveries about primate behavior that have continued to shape scientific discourse.

A highly respected member of the world scientific community, she advocates for ecological preservation through the Jane Goodall Institute.

Jane Goodall And Friend

The general public was introduced to Jane Goodall’s life work via Miss Goodall and the Wild Chimpanzees, first broadcast on American television on December 22, 1965. Filmed by her first husband, and narrated by Orson Welles, the documentary showed the shy but determined young English woman patiently watching these animals in their natural habitat, and the chimpanzees soon became a staple of American and British public television.

Miss Goodall and the Wild Chimpanzees (1965) – Wildlife Documentary – A National Geographic Film

Through these programs, Goodall challenged scientists to redefine the long-held “differences” between humans and other primates.

In 2017, additional footage from the Miss Goodall shooting was pieced together for Jane, a documentary that included recent interviews with the famed activist to create a more encompassing narrative of her experiences with the chimps.

“Chimpanzees have been living for hundreds of thousands of years in their forest never overpopulating, never destroying the forest. I would say that they have been in a way more successful than us as far as being in harmony with the environment.”

— Jane Goodall

2010: Jane Goodall brings Lara Logan and “60 Minutes” cameras back to the forests of Tanzania, where she began her love affair with chimpanzees 50 years ago, to remind the public that chimps are endangered.

Many of Goodall’s endeavors are conducted under the auspices of the Jane Goodall Institute for Wildlife Research, Education and Conservation, a nonprofit organization that promotes the protection of chimpanzees and strong environmental practices. Founded in 1977, the organization is based in Virginia but boasts some two dozen offices around the world.

Tanzania In Africa

In July 1960, accompanied by her mother and an African cook, Jane Goodall arrived on the shore of Lake Tanganyika in the Gombe Stream Reserve of Tanzania, Africa, with the goal of studying chimpanzees.

Goodall’s first attempts to closely observe the animals failed; she could get no nearer than 500 yards before the chimps fled. After finding another suitable group to follow, she established a nonthreatening pattern of observation, appearing at the same time every morning on the high ground near a feeding area along the Kakombe Valley.

The chimpanzees soon tolerated her presence and, within a year, allowed her to move as close as 30 feet to their feeding area. After two years of seeing her every day, they showed no fear and often came to her in search of bananas.

Baby In Gombe Stream National Park, Tanzania

Goodall used her newfound acceptance to establish what she termed the “banana club,” a daily systematic feeding method she used to gain trust and to obtain a more thorough understanding of everyday chimpanzee behavior. Using this method, she became closely acquainted with a majority of the reserve’s chimps. She imitated their behaviors, spent time in the trees and ate their foods.

Jane Goodall Ted Talk: What separates us from chimpanzees?

By remaining in almost constant contact with the chimps, Goodall discovered a number of previously unobserved behaviors: She noted that chimps have a complex social system, complete with ritualized behaviors and primitive but discernible communication methods, including a primitive “language” system containing more than 20 individual sounds.

She is credited with making the first recorded observations of chimpanzees eating meat and using and making tools. Tool making was previously thought to be an exclusively human trait.

Goodall also noted that chimpanzees throw stones as weapons, use touch and embraces to comfort one another and develop long-term familial bonds. The male plays no active role in family life but is part of the group’s social stratification: The chimpanzee “caste” system places the dominant males at the top, with the lower castes often acting obsequiously in their presence, trying to ingratiate themselves to avoid possible harm. The male’s rank is often related to the intensity of his entrance performance at feedings and other gatherings.

Upending the belief that chimps were exclusively vegetarian, Goodall witnessed chimps stalking, killing and eating large insects, birds and some bigger animals, including baby baboons and bushbucks (small antelopes).

On one occasion, she recorded acts of cannibalism.

In another instance, she observed chimps inserting blades of grass or leaves into termite hills to insects onto the blade. In true toolmaker fashion, they modified the grass to achieve a better fit, then used the grass as a long-handled spoon to eat the termites.

Goodall’s fieldwork led to the publication of numerous articles and books. In the Shadow of Man, her first major work, appeared in 1971.

In The Shadow Of Man

The book, essentially a field study of chimpanzees, effectively bridged the gap between scientific treatise and popular entertainment. Her vivid prose brought the chimps to life, revealing an animal world of social drama, comedy and tragedy, although her tendency to attribute human behaviors and names to chimpanzees struck some critics being as manipulative.

Watch: Animal Rights Icon Jane Goodall Visits Ellen for the First Time

Goodall outlined the moral dilemma of keeping chimpanzees captive in her 1990 book, Through a Window: “The more we learn of the true nature of nonhuman animals, especially those with complex brains and corresponding complex social behavior, the more ethical concerns are raised regarding their use in the service of man—whether this be in entertainment, as ‘pets,’ for food, in research laboratories or any of the other uses to which we subject them,” she wrote.

Through A Window

“This concern is sharpened when the usage in question leads to intense physical or mental suffering—as is so often true with regard to vivisection.”

Jane Goodall Shares The Love In Touching Hug

Her 1989 work, The Chimpanzee Family Book, written specifically for children, sought to convey a more humane view of wildlife. The book received the 1989 UNICEF/UNESCO Children’s Book of the Year Award, and Goodall used the prize money to have the text translated into Swahili and French and distributed throughout Tanzania, Uganda and Burundi.

The Chimpanzee Family Book

In March 2013, Goodall attracted media attention for her book Seeds of Hope: Wisdom and Wonder from the Plants, with Gail Hudson. The book had not yet hit store shelves when Goodall was accused of plagiarism. According to The Washington Post, the famed scientist borrowed sections from Wikipedia and other sources in her new book without giving them proper credit.

The publisher subsequently announced the release of the book would be delayed to address the unattributed sections. Goodall, through a statement from her institute, apologized for these unintentional mistakes: “This was a long and well researched book, and I am distressed to discover that some of the excellent and valuable sources were not properly cited, and I want to express my sincere apologies,” she said. Seeds of Hope was reissued in 2014.

Jane Goodall always travels with a stuffed animal named Mr. H to remind her of the ‘indomitable human spirit’

In 1962, Baron Hugo van Lawick (1937-2002), a Dutch wildlife photographer and filmmaker, was sent to Africa by the National Geographic Society to film Goodall at work. The assignment ran longer than anticipated and the couple fell in love; they were married on March 28, 1964, and their European honeymoon marked one of the rare occasions on which Goodall was absent from Gombe Stream. In 1967, she gave birth to a son, Hugo Eric Louis, known as “Grub.”

A Trove of Unseen Footage Reveals Jane Goodall’s Early Explorations

After divorcing van Lawick in 1974, Goodall was married to Derek Bryceson (1922-1980), a member of Tanzania’s parliament and director of its national parks, until his death from cancer.

Jane Goodall Reflects On Her Younger Self, As Seen In Recently Discovered Footage

Jane Goodall was born on April 3, 1934, in London, England, to Mortimer Herbert Goodall, a businessperson and motor-racing enthusiast, and the former Margaret Myfanwe Joseph, who wrote novels under the name Vanne Morris Goodall. Along with her sister, Judy, Goodall was reared in London and Bournemouth, England.

Goodall’s fascination with animal behavior began in early childhood. In her leisure time, she observed native birds and animals, making extensive notes and sketches, and read widely in the literature of zoology and ethology. From an early age, she dreamed of traveling to Africa to observe exotic animals in their natural habitats.

Goodall attended the Uplands private school, receiving her school certificate in 1950 and a higher certificate in 1952. She went on to find employment as a secretary at Oxford University, and in her spare time also worked at a London-based documentary film company to finance a long-anticipated trip to Africa.

A Film: Dr Leakey and the Dawn of Man (1966)

At the invitation of a childhood friend, Goodall visited South Kinangop, Kenya, in the late 1950s. Through other friends, she soon met the famed anthropologist Louis Leakey, then curator of the Coryndon Museum in Nairobi. Leakey hired her as a secretary and invited her to participate in an anthropological dig at the now famous Olduvai Gorge, a site rich in fossilized prehistoric remains of early ancestors of humans. Additionally, Goodall was sent to study the vervet monkey, which lives on an island in Lake Victoria.

Leakey believed that a long-term study of the behavior of higher primates would yield important evolutionary information. He had a particular interest in the chimpanzee, the second most intelligent primate. Few studies of chimpanzees had been successful; either the size of the safari frightened the chimps, producing unnatural behaviors, or the observers spent too little time in the field to gain comprehensive knowledge.

Leakey believed that Goodall had the proper temperament to endure long-term isolation in the wild. At his prompting, she agreed to attempt such a study. Many experts objected to Leakey’s selection of Goodall because she had no formal scientific education and lacked even a general college degree.
Professorships and Educating the Public
Goodall’s academic credentials were solidified when she received a Ph.D. in ethology from Cambridge University in 1965; she was just the eighth person in the university’s long history permitted to pursue a Ph.D. without first earning a baccalaureate degree.

Goodall subsequently held a visiting professorship in psychiatry at Stanford University from 1970 to 1975, and in 1973, she was appointed to her longtime position of honorary visiting professor of zoology at the University of Dar es Salaam in Tanzania.

On September 12th 2018, ethologist and conservationist Dr. Jane Goodall, DBE, founder of the Jane Goodall Institute & UN Messenger of Peace, spoke at TEDxPaloAltoSalon. Dr. Goodall was in conversation with Guy Kawasaki.

After attending a 1986 conference in Chicago that focused on the ethical treatment of chimpanzees, Goodall began directing her energies toward educating the public about the wild chimpanzee’s endangered habitat and about the unethical treatment of chimpanzees that are used for scientific research.

To preserve the wild chimpanzee’s environment, Goodall encourages African nations to develop nature-friendly tourism programs, a measure that makes wildlife into a profitable resource.

She actively works with business and local governments to promote ecological responsibility.

Goodall’s stance is that scientists must try harder to find alternatives to the use of animals in research. She has openly declared her opposition to militant animal rights groups who engage in violent or destructive demonstrations. Extremists on both sides of the issue, she believes, polarize thinking and make constructive dialogue nearly impossible.

While reluctantly resigned to the continuation of animal research, she feels that young scientists must be educated to treat animals more compassionately.

“By and large,” she has written, “students are taught that it is ethically acceptable to perpetrate, in the name of science, what, from the point of view of animals, would certainly qualify as torture.”

The Jane Goodall Institute

In recognition of her achievements, Goodall has received numerous honors and awards, including the Gold Medal of Conservation from the San Diego Zoological Society in 1974, the J. Paul Getty Wildlife Conservation Prize in 1984, the Schweitzer Medal of the Animal Welfare Institute in 1987, the National Geographic Society Centennial Award in 1988, and the Kyoto Prize in Basic Sciences in 1990.

United Nations Messenger Of Peace Jane Goodall Speech In 2018

“The greatest danger to our future is apathy.”
—Jane Goodall

Listen: Jane Goodall on ‘Revisiting the Best Days of Her Life’ in ‘Jane’ and Her Message to Trump

She points to the Trump administration, which has been overturning checks and balances that have been put in place by previous administrations. “I’m totally shocked,” she says. What would she say to President Donald Trump, if given the chance? “I’m told I would have 30 seconds max to get any point across, and I’m not sure what I could say in 30 seconds that would make the slightest bit of difference.”

Jane’s work continues.

Please support her work through the Jane Goodall Institute

Donate to the Jane Goodall Institute

Jane Goodall Giving Freedom To Chimp — Beautiful

Chimp Family

 

 

 

 

Canned Hunting Exposed: Savage Cruel Bloodthirsty

Canned Hunting Exposed: Savage Cruel Bloodthirsty

“We need, in a special way, to work twice as hard to help people understand that the animals are fellow creatures, that we must protect them and love them as we love ourselves.”
César Chávez

Zebra Killed In Canned Hunt
Zebra Killed In Canned Hunt

Heard the old expression. “Like shooting fish in a barrel?”

Maybe you have. Maybe you haven’t. But it describes a form of canned hunting — killing animals that have no possibility or hope of escape. Animals awaiting their deaths at the hands of high-paying savages who pay big money to kill an animal that has more value to the world than they do.

Try as I might, there is simply no understanding people who are able to murder in cold-blood an animal that is captive whether that is behind the bars of a cage, fenced-in on a Texas ranch or game farm in Africa, or drugged and unable to escape the monster with the lethal weapon in their hands.

Trapped Behind A Fence Awaiting the Canned Hunter
Trapped Behind A Fence Awaiting the Canned Hunter 

“This, for many people, is what’s most offensive about hunting—to some, disgusting: that it encourages, or allows, us not only to kill but to take a certain pleasure in killing”
Michael Pollan

This “hunting,” really it is just cold-blooded murder by a different name, is not solely the province of the socially deviant, the mentally disturbed or the sociopath. Ordinary Americans, some admired by millions, are able to profit from canned hunts without a thought.

American actor Matthew McConaughey was exposed in recent years for using his Texas ranch to profit from the death of penned-up deer. For myself, since McConaughey is a prominent paid endorser of Lincoln cars, I cannot imagine buying any Ford product.

Fenced In Deer - Slated To Be Victims Of Canned Hunters
Fenced In Deer – Slated To Be Victims Of Canned Hunters

I will not support shooting fish in a barrel.

Singer Troy Lee Gentry paid to shoot a tame bear that was imprisoned in a small area unable to experience freedom because of the electrified fence that kept him a prisoner until his death. Gentry then falsified records and lied to friends about the “hunt.”

Owner Lee Marvin Greenly sold the bear for $4,650 and orchestrated the hunt, which Gentry videotaped and edited to make it appear the bear had been killed in a fair chase hunt, according to authorities.

Montgomery Gentry, which includes co-singer Eddie Montgomery, are known for hits such as “My Town” and “If You Ever Stop Loving Me.”

Do you really want to support the murder of captive animals by purchasing the music of Montgomery Gentry? I don’t. I won’t.

Animals of all sorts are kept on fenced-in, escape-proof, ranches especially in Texas. If you have the money, greedy evil canned hunting operators will provide you the animal of your choosing.

Graduation present? Reward for a good report card? Using the death of another living being as a way of feeling powerful when you know how powerless you really are? No problem. If you pay enough.

Teaching Kills That Murder Is Sport - To A Sick Few
Teaching Kills That Murder Is Sport – To A Sick Few
Beautiful Bison Killed By Ugly Hunter
Beautiful Bison Killed By Ugly Hunter

Looking for a way to impress the other bored, dysfunctional members of your 1% social circle?

Then by all means join the other Ugly Americans who feel good only when they have inflicted pain and death on a creature more valued by the world by you.

Canned Hunting Exposed: Savage Cruel Bloodthirsty

Ugly American Murder Beautiful Rhino
Ugly American Murder Beautiful Rhino
No Matter How Gentle The Zebra Someone Wants To Murder It
No Matter How Gentle The Zebra Someone Wants To Murder It

Too fat to walk to the enclosure, fence, or pen? Too fat to get in the vehicle that will drive you to your vehicle. Canned hunt operators now make it possible to shoot and kill a beautiful animal from the comfort of your computer keyboard — and then you can waddle or be transported to the corpse.

Fat Ass Tiny penis Killer And The Noble Lion Whose Life He Ended
Fat Ass Tiny penis Killer And The Noble Lion Whose Life He Ended

As wealthy bored heartless Americans flock to Africa to kill, the problem becomes one of species on the verge of extinction. Not enough targets.

But that wonderful American virtue, greed, is the mother of invention. Sensing money to be made, degenerates, especially in South Africa are breeding animals like lions solely and specifically to be killed in canned hunts.

Blood Lions Raised To Be Killed By Wealthy Americans
Blood Lions Raised To Be Killed By Wealthy Americans

Ellen DeGeneres

“I ask people why they have deer heads on their walls. They always say because it’s such a beautiful animal. There you go. I think my mother is attractive, but I have photographs of her.”

Ellen DeGeneres

But greed, killing and savagery have opponents. A magnificent documentary exposing the horror of breeding lions for trophy hunters and the canned hunting industry is changing the tide.
“Blood Lions” is an eye-opening expose and a challenge to all of us who love and respect animals. It is surely one film that must be seen by every man, woman and child on our planet.
To Be Continued…
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