Chicago Sun-Times

CHIMP CHAT

Jane Goodall wishes group of CPS students ‘ goodmornin­g’ in chimpanzee before talk

- BY STEFANO ESPOSITO, STAFF REPORTER sesposito@suntimes.com | @slesposito

The onetime secretaria­l student and former waitress began her talk Tuesday with “good morning”— in chimpanzee.

A few decades ago, Jane Goodall was so petrified, she could barely breathe in front of an audience. Now, as one of the world’s bestknown primatolog­ists and conservati­onists, Goodall— who turned 84 thisweek— routinely starts her “little talks” with a full- throated and prolonged call: “Ooo- oo- oo- oo- OOO!”

It’s a quirky ice- breaker that delights her audience, just as it did Tuesday, for a group of female Chicago Public Schools students listening in awe to the diminutive scientist, her hair pulled back in its trademark silver pony tail.

Many of the women, gathered at the Sheraton Grand Chicago in an event hosted by the Field Museum, are interested in STEM ( science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s) fields. They listened to a woman recalling how people once laughed at a young English girlwith a dream of studying animals in Africa.

“Except my mother, who said, ‘ If you really want this thing, you’re going to have to work hard, take advantage of opportunit­y and never give up,’ ” Goodall explained in the quiet voice of a woman who has spent a lifetime listening to the sounds of nature.

Goodall’s parents had money enough to send her to secretaria­l school, not university. And to pay for her first trip to Africa, where she would eventually become the world’s best- know expert on chimpanzee behavior, she took a waitressin­g job.

In 1960 at the age of 26, with no degree but the confidence of the famed Kenyan anthropolo­gist Louis Leakey, she set off from England for Africa, immersing herself in a Tanzanian forest to study chimp behavior. Her studies are considered groundbrea­king. Goodall told the CPS students that she dealt with many frustratio­ns in the early days— as the chimps, unaccustom­ed to a “white ape,” repeatedly ran from her.

“If you give up, you despise yourself forever. If you make a conscious choice to move from A to B, then you’ll be proud of yourself forever,” Goodall said.

Then, finally, in a “very seminal moment,” after failing to entice a chimp with a palm nut, “He very gently squeezed my fingers, which is how chimpanzee­s reassure each other. It was perfect communicat­ion in a language that surely predates our human words,” she said.

Goodall said she still travels some 300 days each year, giving lectures all over the world.

“Iwant to go on doing this as long as I can,” she said. “There are an awful lot of places I haven’t been that need this kind of message.”

Jada Jefferson, 18, who attends ITW David Speer Academy, said she felt “starstruck” listening to Goodall, but also at ease.

“I really felt like I knew her, even though I don’t know her,” Jefferson said. “The way she came into the room, and her presence, it just made me feel really comfortabl­e. … I wasn’t expecting her to be so chill.”

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN/ SUN- TIMES ?? Jane Goodall addresses young women from Chicago Public Schools on Tuesday about conservati­on and women in science.
ASHLEE REZIN/ SUN- TIMES Jane Goodall addresses young women from Chicago Public Schools on Tuesday about conservati­on and women in science.
 ?? NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC CREATIVE/ HUGOVAN LAWICK ?? Jane Goodall and an infant chimpanzee reach out and touch hands during her studies in Tanzania.
NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC CREATIVE/ HUGOVAN LAWICK Jane Goodall and an infant chimpanzee reach out and touch hands during her studies in Tanzania.

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