The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Helping animals can often end up helping people too

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BAYANGA, CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC — The cutest primates on earth may be Inguka and Inganda, gorilla toddler twins who playfully tumble over each other here in the vast Dzanga Sangha rain forest, one of the best places to see gorillas, antelopes and elephants play.

The only risk: They are so heedless and unafraid of people that they may tumble almost into your lap — and then their 375pound silverback dad may get upset. His name is Makumba, and he expresses displeasur­e with a full-speed charge, hurtling toward you until he’s only inches away.

This area where Central African Republic, Cameroon and the Republic of Congo come together is one of the wildest and most remote parts of the world, and the three countries have establishe­d bordering national parks.

When I turn sentimenta­l at the majesty of wildlife, I sometimes feel uneasy. I wonder: Does honoring animal rights come at the expense of human rights?

One study found that research subjects were more upset by stories of a dog beaten by a baseball bat than of an adult similarly beaten. Other researcher­s found that if forced to choose, 40 percent of people would save their pet dog over a foreign tourist.

Years ago, I visited a rain forest camp where a couple dozen young Americans and Europeans were volunteeri­ng in difficult conditions to assist gorillas as part of a conservati­on program. It was impressive­ly altruistic — but these idealists were oblivious to Pygmy villagers nearby dying of malaria for want of $5 mosquito bed nets.

So are we betraying our own species when we write checks to help gorillas (or puppies or wild horses)? Is it wrongheade­d to fight for elephants and rhinos (or farm animals at home) while 5 million children still die each year before the age of 5?

It’s a legitimate question that I’ve wondered about over the years. But I’ve come to believe that, on the contrary, conserving rhinos or gorillas — or speaking up for tortured farm animals at home — is good for humans, too.

Overseas conservati­on organizati­ons have also gotten much better at giving local people a stake in the survival of animals. The World Wildlife Fund, which helps manage the Dzanga Sangha Protected Area, supports a health clinic and is starting an education initiative. The refuge hires 240 local people, from rangers to trackers who locate the gorillas and get them habituated to people.

“These efforts are good for us,” said Dieudonné Ngombo, one of the trackers. “We work and get a salary, and then our kids live better and we sleep well.”

Simply put, one of the most important resources some poor countries have is wildlife. Northern white rhinos are on the verge of extinction because of poaching to feed Chinese demand for rhino horn, with the last male in the world dying recently in Kenya. When the animals are gone, economic prospects for humans diminish as well.

So compassion for elephants or rhinos or gorillas is not soggy sentimenta­lity, but a practical recognitio­n of shared interests among two-legged and four-legged animals. Go ahead and embrace animal causes without a shred of guilt.

“What’s good for the animals is also good for the Pygmies,” Dieudonné Kembé, a Pygmy working in Dzanga Sangha, told me. Without conservati­on efforts, he said, “the animals would be gone, and we might be gone, too.”

 ??  ?? Nicholas D. Kristof He writes for the New York Times.
Nicholas D. Kristof He writes for the New York Times.

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