Give thanks. Because this isn’t one of those Thanksgiving
lists of things for which we should be grateful -- although health, family,
friends, laughter, etc., would certainly all be on mine.
And Jane Goodall.
Yes, that Jane Goodall, the woman we all grew up with
watching those National Geographic specials on TV as she communed with the
chimpanzees of Tanzania’s Gombe National Park in East Africa. Everyone I know
seems especially to remember those scenes of chimps ingeniously utilizing straw
and blades of grass to poke around in mounds hunting for termites, proof that
they know how to make and use tools. I still have trouble opening a can of
tuna.
Goodall was interviewed by my colleague Bill Moyers for this
week’s edition of BILL MOYERS JOURNAL on PBS. She began her work in Africa in
1960 at the age of 26, spurred by the encouragement of her English mother and
the great anthropologist Louis Leakey, as well as the African adventure books
she read as a child. “I was in love with Tarzan,” she told Moyers. “I was so
jealous of that wimpy Jane. I knew I would have been a better mate for Tarzan.”
I’m especially thankful to Jane Goodall after reading the
passage in Sarah Palin’s GOING ROGUE in which the erstwhile vice presidential
candidate and former governor of Alaska writes that she doesn’t “believe in the
theory that human beings -- thinking, loving beings -- originated from fish
that sprouted legs and crawled out of the sea. Or that human beings began as
single-celled organisms that developed into monkeys who eventually swung down
from trees.”
She could learn a thing or two from the chimps. Goodall sees
our affinity with them as like “the bond between mother and child, which really
for us and chimps and other primates is the root of all the expressions of
social behavior you can sort of see mirrored in the mother/child relationship.”
But chimpanzees can be violent, too, and Goodall says, “Some
people have reached the conclusion that war and violence is inevitable in
ourselves. I reach the conclusion that I do believe we have brought aggressive
tendencies with us through our long human evolutionary past. I mean, you can’t
look around the world and not realize that we can be, and often are, extremely
brutal and aggressive.”
But, she adds, “Equally, we have inherited tendencies of
love, compassion, and altruism, because they’re there in the chimp. So, we’ve
brought those with us. So, it’s like each one of us has this dark side. And a
more noble side. And I guess it’s up to each one of us to push one down and
develop the other.”
Jane Goodall has never seen a conflict between religion and
evolution. “I don’t think that faith, whatever you’re being faithful about,
really can be scientifically explained,” she said. “And I don’t want to explain
this whole life business. Truth, science. There’s so much mystery. There’s so
much awe.
“I mean, what is it that makes the chimpanzees do these
spectacular displays, rain dances -- I call them waterfall dances. At the foot
of this waterfall, [they] sit in the spray and watch the water that’s always
coming and always going and always there. It’s wonder. It’s awe. And if they
had the same kind of language that we have, I suspect that [they would turn it]
into -- some kind of animistic religion.”
In 1986, after two and a half decades of quiet research in
the African forest, Goodall’s career took a dramatic turn at a conference of
scientists studying chimpanzees. During a session on conservation, she said
that it was “shocking” to learn that across Africa, because of deforestation,
the explosion of human population and commercial hunting of animals for food,
the chimpanzee population had “plummeted from somewhere between one and two
million at the turn of the last century to, at that time, about 400,000. So I
came out -- I couldn’t go back to that old, beautiful, wonderful life.”
She now spends more than 300 days out of the year traveling,
speaking out, rallying people to see ourselves as caretakers of the natural
world, and inspiring us with word that all is not yet lost. Her Jane Goodall
Institute works ceaselessly for the worldwide protection of habitat, and her
program “Roots and Shoots” now has chapters in 114 countries, working to make
young people more environmentally aware. “I could kill myself trying to save
chimps and forests,” she said to Bill Moyers. “But if we’re not raising new
generations to be better stewards than we’ve been, then we might as well give
up.”
The worldwide chimp population is down to fewer than 300,000
now, spread across isolated fragments of forest, Goodall says, in 21 African
nations. Moyers asked, what do we lose if the last chimp goes? “We lose one
window into learning about our long course of evolution,” she replied.
“I’ve spent so long looking into these minds that are
fascinating, because they’re so like us. And yet they’re in another world. And
I think the magic is I will never know what they’re thinking . . . And so, it’s
like elephants and gorillas, and all the different animals that we are pushing
toward extinction . . .
“There’s a saying, ‘We haven’t inherited this planet from
our parents, we’ve borrowed it from our children.’ When you borrow, you plan to
pay back. We’ve been stealing and stealing and stealing. And it’s about time we
got together and started paying back.”
That’s as good a Thanksgiving wish as I can imagine.
Michael Winship is senior writer of the weekly
public affairs program, Bill Moyers Journal, which airs Friday night on PBS. Check
local airtimes or comment at The
Moyers Blog.