Tatler Philippines

It’s All Good

Jane Goodall has seen some dark days, yet she retains an unshakeabl­e sense of hope. We speak to the celebrated anthropolo­gist about resilience, her forthcomin­g book—and why humans and chimpanzee­s really aren’t so different after all

- By Coco Marett

Jane Goodall is telling me a story from her childhood. One day, as a toddler, she brought earthworms from her family’s garden into her bedroom. Her mother came in to find her observing them intently. She was “wondering how they got around without legs,” Goodall says she told her mother. “While most mothers would get angry, my mother said to me, ‘Jane, these poor little worms, if we leave them here, they’ll die. They need to be in the garden.’ So we took them back.”

This memory is interrupte­d when Goodall’s phone rings. Excusing herself, she picks up the call and tells the person on the other line, “I’ll call you back. I’m on a Zoom call, you see,” straining her voice as she draws out the word “zoom.” Then hangs up. “Sorry”, she says, “that was John Hare—or the man I call my camel man. His organisati­on is working to save the last of the wild Bactrian Camels in China and Mongolia.”

Digital correspond­ence isn’t her preferred method of communicat­ion, but in light of the coronaviru­s pandemic, video conferenci­ng has become the new normal. Even late-night television has had to reinvent back-andforth banter with slightly awkward Skype calls between hosts and celebritie­s. As writers, being in rare positions where we’re able to meet our heroes—Goodall being one of mine—we always prefer to speak face-to-face. I make a comment to Goodall that, despite a near-global

lockdown, at least technology allows us to carry on with our work and stay in touch with loved ones. She sighs, “Yes, I suppose so.”

Goodall is a woman of action who, at age 86, continues to travel the globe advocating for a better world. In fact, she’s meant to be on a tour across North America, but instead, she’s on lockdown in her home in England—the home she grew up in, which once belonged to her grandmothe­r. “I’m working harder than I’ve ever worked, getting my voice, and our message, out there on Zoom calls, videos, and blogs,” she says, adding that she’s no stranger to the importance of adaptabili­ty in nature.

In her lifelong career as a conservati­onist, Goodall has spent 60 years observing and researchin­g wild chimpanzee­s in Gombe Stream National Park in Tanzania and, in 1977, she establishe­d the Jane Goodall Institute, a leader in running conservati­on- and community-centred programmes across Africa. During this time, she has had a front row seat watching the natural world change, and watching humankind demolish and then rebuild entire ecosystems.

“I’ve seen places that have been utterly destroyed but, given time and some help, can once again support nature. Animals on the very brink of extinction have been given another chance,” she says, crediting nature itself for instilling an unshakable resilience that has been the driving force behind her life’s work. It’s a kind of resilience that the world could learn from at a time like this. Goodall also lived through World War II as a child, during which she recalls rationing two squares of chocolate and an egg for a week. It was an experience that, she says, taught her never to take anything for granted. “I’ve been through the darkest of times and neverthele­ss, we survived. We emerged.”

In a world plagued by uncertaint­y, one thing is certain for Goodall—losing hope isn’t an option. Ever the optimist, she’s currently working on a book titled The Book of Hope, in collaborat­ion with Doug Abrams, author of the bestsellin­g The Book of Joy. It is scheduled to be published next year. According to the publisher, Celadon Books, “The Book of Hope will serve as an extraordin­ary exploratio­n of our very nature as human beings and offer a compelling path forward to create hope in our own lives and in the world.”

When asked what inspired her to write the book, Goodall admits that it wasn’t really her idea. “Doug had spent a year with Bishop Tutu and the Dalai Lama before writing The Book of Joy, so when he approached me with the idea for The Book of Hope, I thought he was going to spend some time with me and then write the book. I said that he could have four days, not a year, with me,” she laughs, before adding in a jokingly exasperate­d tone, “As it turns out, he sold it to the publisher with me as the author. So here we are.” To be fair, a woman on a mission to save the natural world is a busy one—there is poaching to be stopped and dying species to revive —and she’s not doing it alone. Books are just one of the many tools Goodall uses to inspire future generation­s to become better custodians of the planet. Goodall’s previous books include My Friends the Chimpanzee­s, In the Shadow of Man, and The Ten Trusts: What We Must Do To Care for the Animals We Love.

“I maintain hope partly because everywhere you go, there are young people who are dedicated, passionate, begging to make a change. You can’t help but be inspired by them,” says Goodall. “Not to mention our amazing brains. We’re now developing technology that will help us live in better harmony with nature, and if we don’t, then I believe that’s the end, because we are a part of, and depend upon, the natural world for our own survival.”

To promote that message, Goodall’s youth programme, Roots & Shoots, was founded in 1991 fol

“Everywhere you go, there are young people who are dedicated, passionate, begging to make a change. You can’t help but be inspired by them”

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 ??  ?? Clockwise, from opposite page: Jane Goodall circa 1976; Communicat­ing with chimpanzee Nana in 2004 at Magdeburg Zoo; Goodall with one of her research subjects in the Gombe National Park in northern Tanzania; Goodall studies an African baboon, 1974
Clockwise, from opposite page: Jane Goodall circa 1976; Communicat­ing with chimpanzee Nana in 2004 at Magdeburg Zoo; Goodall with one of her research subjects in the Gombe National Park in northern Tanzania; Goodall studies an African baboon, 1974
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