Daily Press

New Nat Geo documentar­y shows hopeful Jane Goodall

- By Jonathan Landrum Jr. Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — Even though the planet has reaped the benefits of a cleaner environmen­t from society shutting down during the coronaviru­s outbreak, Jane Goodall worries about human behavior resorting back to a “business as usual” mindset after the pandemic is over.

The famed primatolog­ist wants people to grow wiser and live an enjoyable life without harming the environmen­t and animals that live within it.

“We have to learn how to deal with less,” said Goodall, who began her lauded career as a pioneering researcher of chimpanzee­s in Africa more than 50 years ago. She’s worked for decades on conservati­on, animal welfare and environmen­tal issues.

Since 1991, Goodall has encouraged young people to become stewards in their communitie­s through her Roots & Shoots program, which operates in 60 countries. She normally travels 300 days per year to advocate her endeavors, but these days she’s been staying busy inside her family home in Bournemout­h, England, to practice social distancing. She calls it more “exhausting than traveling.”

In a recent interview, the 86-year-old Goodall shared her thoughts on the coronaviru­s and her new documentar­y, “Jane Goodall: The Hope,” which premieres Wednesday on National Geographic and Nat Geo WILD, while streamed on Disney Plus and Hulu. The two-hour documentar­y focuses on her lauded career of transformi­ng the scope of environmen­talism.

Q: How would you like for the world to react when the pandemic is over?

A: Hopefully we should emerge wiser. I think there will be greater awareness of how we brought this pandemic on ourselves and that people will change. I hope there’s a groundswel­l of enough millions of people who’ve never before breathed clean air in cities, who’ve never been able to look up at night and see a clear sky with twinkling stars. I hope that they’ll be enough of them to eventually force big business and politician­s to stop carrying on with business as usual. But the fear is that so many leaders now around the world don’t seem to care about future generation­s, don’t seem to care about the health of the planet.

Q: What’s the solution?

A: We need a different way of thinking about things. We need to realize that unlimited economic developmen­t on a world with finite natural resources and growing human population­s can’t work. Already, in some cases, we’re using up natural resources before nature can replenish them. So we cannot expect to survive very far into the future unless we make some changes. We have to learn to do with less in the wealthier sections of society. Most of us have far more than we actually need.

Q: What do you want people to take away from your documentar­y?

A: I hope that they take away a feeling that their lives are important. That it’s very, very crucial to think about the health of the planet as it relates to future generation­s. Above all, to understand that each day they live, they can make an impact and think about the consequenc­es of the little choices they make like: “What did we buy? Where did it come from? How was it made? Did it harm the environmen­t? Was it cruel to animals? Is it cheap because of child slave labor?” We have to make ethical choices, and how we interact with people and nature.

 ?? MICHAEL HAERTLEIN/NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC ?? Jane Goodall walks along the beach of Africa’s Lake Tanganyika in the documentar­y “Jane Goodall: The Hope.”
MICHAEL HAERTLEIN/NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC Jane Goodall walks along the beach of Africa’s Lake Tanganyika in the documentar­y “Jane Goodall: The Hope.”

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