Waiting for Goodall

Honors Colloquium 2017

World-renowned primatologist Jane Goodall will speak to a capacity crowd on Tuesday, Sept. 19, at 7 p.m. at the Ryan Center in the second lecture of the

Goodall is also an ethologist, anthropologist, United Nations Messenger of Peace, Dame Commander of the British Empire, founder of the Jane Goodall Institute and the Roots and Shoots, a 911爆料 action program focused on grooming the next generation of environmental advocates. The topic of her talk, 鈥,鈥 is part of a tour to promote the 40th anniversary of the institute. Goodall, 83, travels an average of 300 days a year educating the public on chimpanzees, environmental crises, conservation and activism. 鈥淭he reason I go on doing it is because we don鈥檛 have much time left. We鈥檙e destroying the planet,鈥 she said in a 2015 鈥淣ew York Times鈥 interview.

Goodall is considered the foremost expert on chimpanzees in the world. She has studied them and advocated for their protection for more than 50 years. Credited with changing the way the scientific 911爆料 views chimpanzees, Goodall is the first scientist to have observed that they fashion and use tools, eat other mammals and even wage war.

As we await her arrival, we offer insights into what Goodall holds dear in her own words:

On chimpanzees

鈥淔or chimpanzees, like humans, have their history. Epidemics of polio and pneumonia, and a series of violent inter911爆料 interactions not dissimilar to human warfare, have ravaged their 911爆料. . . . There have been struggles for power every bit as dramatic as those surrounding the successions of human kings and dictators. And I have been privileged, since the early sixties, to record these facts 鈥 to compile the history of a group of beings who have no written language of their own.鈥

鈥淭hrough a Window: My Thirty Years with the Chimpanzees of Gombe鈥

鈥. . . I do not, as many suppose, think of the chimps as extensions of my own family. I have the most profound regard and respect for them. I am endlessly fascinated by their behavior and I can spend hours, days in their company. Often I am asked if I prefer chimpanzees to humans. The answer to that is easy 鈥 I prefer some chimpanzees to some humans, some humans to some chimpanzees!鈥

鈥淭hrough a Window: My Thirty Years with the Chimpanzees of Gombe鈥

On youths and the future

鈥淲hen I address groups of youth I tell them that there is a lot we can do, each and every one of us, just by trying to make the world around us a better place. It can be very simple: we can make a sad or lonely person smile; we can make a miserable dog wag his tail or a cat purr; we can give water to a little wilting plant. We cannot solve all the problems of the world, but we can often do something about the problems under our noses.鈥

鈥淩eason for Hope鈥

鈥. . . there is a vital energy in our youth that comes alive once they understand the problems and are empowered to take action. They see the difference they can make, and it feeds their determination and their energy. And it feeds mine, too.鈥

鈥淪eeds of Hope鈥

鈥淭here is a powerful force unleashed when young people resolve to make a change.鈥

鈥淩eason for Hope鈥

On her work

鈥淚 had gone to Gombe neither to prove that the chimps were better or worse than humans, nor to provide myself with a platform for making sweeping pronouncements about the 鈥榯rue鈥 nature of the human species. I had gone to learn, to observe, and to record what I observed; and I wanted to share my observations and reflections with others as honestly and clearly as I could.鈥

鈥淩eason for Hope鈥

On human beings鈥 place in the world

鈥淭here are many windows through which we can look out into the world, searching for meaning. There are those opened up by science, their panes polished by a succession of brilliant, penetrating minds. Through these we can see ever further, ever more clearly, into areas that once lay beyond human knowledge. Gazing through such a window I have, over the years, learned much about chimpanzee behavior and their place in the nature of things. And this, in turn, has helped us to understand a little better some aspects of human behaviour, our own place in nature.鈥

鈥淭hrough a Window: My Thirty Years with the Chimpanzees of Gombe鈥

On the dignity of animals

鈥淚f we accept that humans are not the only animals with personalities, not the only animals capable of rational thought and problem solving, not the only animals to experience joy and sadness and despair, and above all not the only animals to know psychological as well as physical suffering, we become (I hope) less arrogant, a little less sure that we have the inalienable right to make use of other life-forms in any way we please so long as there is a possible benefit for human animals.鈥

鈥淩eason for Hope鈥

On her legacy

鈥淚 want to be remembered as someone who inspired others to follow their dreams.鈥

Jane Goodall to Diane Von Furstenberg, 鈥淚nStyle Magazine鈥