Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Too clever to save ourselves

Primatolog­ist Jane Goodall, 82, is preoccupie­d with humans, writes

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FOR all her stature and striking self-possession, Jane Goodall is softspoken and undemonstr­ative to the point of seeming slight and retiring.

This, though, is the deceptive exterior of an essential gentleness that is the well-spring of her indefatiga­ble activism. Empathy – controvers­ially in some scholarly circles – was the unorthodox mainstay of her ground-breaking scientific research into the behaviour of chimpanzee­s and it remains the watchword of her punishing 300-days-a-year travelling schedule to convince people not only to see the world differentl­y, but to be in the world differentl­y.

On this, she believes, the quality of life on the planet depends.

In July 1960, at the age of 26, Jane Goodall travelled from England to what is now Tanzania and ventured into the little-known world of wild chimpanzee­s.

So begins the brief biography of probably the world’s most famous primatolog­ist on the website of her own Jane Goodall Institute, an organisati­on that today spans nearly three dozen countries.

This network, coupled with her Roots and Shoots organisati­on (operating in 100 countries) for young people, is founded on the reputation she built almost singlehand­ed in the forests of Tanzania.

With the scantest resources – little more than a notebook and binoculars, and a modestly equipped camp – and no formal training beyond a long-nurtured fascinatio­n with nature, and with Africa, Goodall delivered pioneering insights.

She was fortunate on a visit to Kenya – at the invitation of a childhood friend – to meet the acclaimed anthropolo­gist Louis Leakey. Leakey believed studying the behaviour of “higher primates” such as chimpanzee­s could yield important informatio­n on evolution and felt that Goodall was the right person for the job.

He was right – though the task was tougher than at first it seemed.

Few studies of chimpanzee­s had succeeded because of the difficulty of getting near enough to them, and watching them for long enough. And, to start with, Goodall found she could never get any nearer than 500m before her intended subjects fled.

But, having establishe­d a camp on the shore of Lake Tanganyika in the Gombe Stream Reserve, she was in the for the long haul, gradually making herself familiar to the animals, and winning their trust. It is recorded that “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.”

Her growing intimacy with the animals – instead of numbering them, she gave them names, such as David Greybeard, Fifi, Goliath, Freud and Frodo – attracted criticism from the science community, for appearing to lack dispassion and rigour.

Yet, as Wikipedia notes: “Goodall observed things that strict scientific doctrines may have overlooked” and she “observed what no other primatolog­ists before her had seen or appreciate­d”.

Among these insights were that the animals had unique and individual personalit­ies, and emotions expressed in complex community and family bonds. “These findings suggest that similariti­es between humans and chimpanzee­s exist in more than genes alone, but can be seen in emotion, intelligen­ce, and family and social relationsh­ips.” She also witnessed aggression, violence and aberrant behaviour.

In particular, her Gombe Stream research challenged two longstandi­ng beliefs: that only humans could make and use tools (she saw chimpanzee­s using, sometimes reshaping, stalks of grass to extract termites from the ground), and that chimpanzee­s were vegetarian. She witnessed hunting, and the sharing of meat.

Her work is acknowledg­ed to have helped “redefine the relationsh­ip between humans and animals in ways that continue to resonate around the world”, as her institute puts it.

If she began her work without so much as a diploma, it is no surprise it was the subject of a PhD in ethology from Cambridge in 1965, Goodall becoming the eighth person in the university’s long history to be permitted to do a doctorate without an undergradu­ate degree.

She still has a home in Tanzania, and visits Gombe at least twice a year, but her understand­ing of the indivisibi­lity of life has impelled her efforts towards deepening human understand­ing, and improving the lives of people. Goodall is an unlikely globalist – and not in the usual sense – but she is, today, on a global mission to get more people “to take action on behalf of all living things and the planet we share”.

It was tiring, she confessed, and she would “love to get off the roundabout, and do more writing”. Travelling has been her life since 1986 – but, “having been blessed with a strong body, and the gift of communicat­ion, that’s what I feel I must do. And I wouldn’t do it if it did not have an impact.”

Wherever she goes in the world, Goodall is accompanie­d by a stuffed toy named “Mr H”, a chimp-like mascot with a history. When she visited Cape Town this week (addressing an invited audience at Kirstenbos­ch as the guest of the foundation establishe­d by auditing

 ?? PICTURE: MICHAEL NEUGEBAUER ?? Goodall with Freud at the Gombe National Park in Tanzania.
PICTURE: MICHAEL NEUGEBAUER Goodall with Freud at the Gombe National Park in Tanzania.
 ?? PICTURE: GOODALL FAMILY ?? Jane Goodall with orphan chimpanzee, Uruhara, in Kenya.
PICTURE: GOODALL FAMILY Jane Goodall with orphan chimpanzee, Uruhara, in Kenya.
 ?? PICTURE: JANE GOODALL INSTITUTE/HUGO VAN LAWICK ?? The primatolog­ist with baby chimpanzee, Flint, at Gombe.
PICTURE: JANE GOODALL INSTITUTE/HUGO VAN LAWICK The primatolog­ist with baby chimpanzee, Flint, at Gombe.
 ?? PICTURE: JANE GOODALL INSTITUTE/HUGO VAN LAWICK ?? Goodall types up her field notes in her tent at Gombe in the 1960s.
PICTURE: JANE GOODALL INSTITUTE/HUGO VAN LAWICK Goodall types up her field notes in her tent at Gombe in the 1960s.

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