Tchimpounga Chimpanzee Sanctuary, Congo:
Meet a Jane Goodall Institute Ranger

“It is the missing piece of the puzzle in conservation, protecting endangered species and nature itself. We must all come together to ensure we protect the rangers themselves on the front line.”

Dr. Jane Goodall

Every day, park rangers risk their lives to protect wildlife and wild places from poaching and other threats. Sadly, it’s estimated that over 1,000 park rangers have been killed in the line of duty over the past 10 years. A large percentage of these are due to commercial poachers and armed militia groups. Park rangers are generally under-equipped, underpaid, and often under-appreciated. We think they are heroes. 

Becoming a park ranger is no easy feat, Their tasks are multifaceted and include a HUGE range of not only dangers and hazards, but they quite literally put their life on the line every day to ensure the safety of some of our most treasured wildlife. Rangers are real life super heroes, and their work is only possible thanks to generous donors like you.

Earth Warriors

Getting there is not a job for the faint hearted. Many of the Jane Goodall Institute Rangers are the ‘boots on the ground’ in Africa’s protected areas. Including Tchimpounga. 

These rangers are in charge of undertaking rigorous patrols of law enforcement and wildlife monitoring, community engagement and conservation management activities. It takes a unique type of individual to perform tasks expected of a park ranger in what are often extreme conditions. Due to the physical nature of the job, a high level of fitness and of course strength is required. 

Our friends and partners at the Thin Green Line Foundation know firsthand just how gruelling this onboarding can be. Sean Wilmore, President of the International Ranger Federation, Founder of The Thin Green Line Foundation and our Park Ranger program, has worked closely and tirelessly in a joint effort with the Jane Goodall Institute rangers to oversee and ensure a longstanding protection program is in place for chimpanzees across Tchimpounga. 

“Rangers are the missing link in conservation. ”  –Dr. Jane Goodall

DONATE TO TCHIMPOUNGA

   

Some of the below may be confronting for some readers. Reader discretion is advised due to some difficult subject matters.

Deo, a young chimpanzee, was kept in a cage when rescuers found her

Tragically 75 per cent of rangers have been killed since 2016 as a direct result of poaching and wildlife trafficking, many murdered by the poachers that they were attempting to stop.

The Jane Goodall Institute has a long history with rangers and relies on these strong allies to keep our conservation initiatives functioning and progressing. In our many protected areas of research and conservation throughout Africa, we depend on rangers for many things, including:

     • Resource protection/management
     • Public safety
     • Patrolling grounds
     • Enforcing regulations
     • Conducting investigations
     • Performing search and rescues
     • Assistance in medical emergencies
     • And arguably most imperatively: Preventing wildlife poaching

The front line of fighting extinction

In the Congo Basin poachers kill thousands of chimps as a part of the illegal bushmeat trade, allowing only the smallest to live to be sold off as pets. The animal lives saved is an enormous figure directly thanks to the work of rangers preventing these poachers from succeeding. Without these protectors, endangered species like chimpanzees may be gone from this world forever.

Tchimpounga Park Rangers meeting the new Park Conservator Mr. Mpika. They are wearing masks during the Covid Pandemic.

You may have heard of the term ‘wildlife trafficking,’ in the context of graphic imagery of elephants being brutally murdered for their tusks, or piles and piles of the fins of sharks drying on the concrete. 

Public demand for wildlife and wildlife products has resulted in a boom of illegal trade, that is quickly pushing endangered species toward extinction. Working on the ground to prevent this tremendous loss of life is a fight against extreme danger and cruelty. It is because of the heroism of park rangers, that so many have been saved.

Everyday Jane Goodall Institute rangers risk their safety to protect chimps and their habitats at the 50,000 hectare Tchimpounga Nature Reserve. Without their bravery and self-sacrifice, our vision to ensure the long-term survival of chimpanzees would not be achievable.

“We work to equip, train and support rangers fighting on the front line of conservation, predominantly in conflict zones and developing countries,” explains Sean. “We also give direct support to the widows and families left behind.”

SPONSOR A  TCHIMPOUNGA CHIMP

From dawn to dusk

A morning routine commences at dawn, yet sleep is not something our rangers often receive. Their routine foot patrols start from one of three permanent bases that are strategically placed to maximise the rangers ability to detect illegal activity. 

Even though they always follow the same route, no two days are alike. Sometimes they’ll be removing dozens of snares that have been set to trap animals for bush meat. Other times they’ll come across illegal hunting of logging camps. 

Dangers after dark

Night time is the most dangerous for our rangers. 

Often these camps are unattended, so the rangers confiscate any remaining weapons or illicit material such as animal remains or charcoal, then dismantle any structures that have been built. The rigorous training our rangers receive means they’re ready and able to respond to potentially life-threatening situations, such as encounters with armed poachers. 

The rangers also conduct random patrols from temporary camps to access remote areas, catch people that may have become aware of their usual routes, or respond to reports of illegal activity from the community. While stationed at these camps, which can be set up for weeks at a time, the rangers live in small tents.

Although this is tough, the rangers know their work is crucial to the protection of the reserve, so they persevere. 

MAKE A REGULAR GIFT

JGI Tchimpounga rangers bring tents with them and spend the night in different places for watching the forest and defending it from poachers and illegal activities.

 Team work

The permanent bases are placed to allow the rangers to carry out vehicle checks in high-traffic areas too. Here they work with the Republic of Congo’s first canine wildlife detection unit to inspect all vehicles entering and exiting the reserve. 

This team of five highly-trained dogs help the rangers detect weapons, ammunition, animal remains, and timber that people attempt to smuggle out. They’ve been so successful at managing illegal activities that the Congolese government is working with JGI to expand the program into nearby protected areas like Conkouati Douli National Park.

A fourth permanent base is located along the Kouilou River near Tchimpounga Chimpanzee Rehabilitation Centre (TCRC)’s island sites. Rangers stationed here conduct boat patrols to maintain the safety of the chimps. They make sure villages using the river maintain an appropriate distance from the islands and remove any illegal fishing nets they discover.

Sniffer dogs. JGI vet team takes care of them.

In addition to patrols and vehicle checks, each year during the dry season the rangers set up breaks to protect the chimps and sanctuary from uncontrolled fires. Local communities burn fields and Savannah within the reserve to make the foraging of mushrooms and plants easier. Unchecked these fires pose a significant threat to the sanctuary, so the rangers use breaks to minimise their risk. 

Eternal gratitude

We thank the unflinching heroism of people in the field making sure that our wild places remain wild, and safe. We would especially like to thank our Eco-Guards ever present at our Chimp Rehabilitation centre at Tchimpounga.

The dedication of our rangers means the chimps within the Tchimpounga Nature Reserve are far less vulnerable to the threats of poaching, habitat loss, and disease. Because of the generosity of supporters like you, they’re able to carry out this crucial, courageous work. 

GIVE TODAY: BECOME A CHIMP GUARDIAN

Perrine is a baby chimp that lives at Tchimpounga main sanctuary with chimps of his same age. You can sponsor him monthly as a Chimp Guardian.

Historic first resolution on wildlife trafficking adopted by the United Nations Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice

As an International Champion of the Global Initiative to End Wildlife Crime, the Jane Goodall Institute Global welcomes a historic resolution on illicit trafficking in wildlife.

The resolution, adopted during the 31st Session of the United Nations Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice, invites Member States to “provide the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime with their views on possible responses, including the potential of an additional Protocol to the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organised Crime (UNTOC), to address any gaps that may exist in the current international legal framework to prevent and combat  illicit trafficking in wildlife.”

The Commission is the primary policymaking body of the United Nations in the field of crime prevention and criminal justice. The Commission also acts as the governing body of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime which has led global research efforts on wildlife crime with its ground-breaking World Wildlife Crime Reports published in 2016 and 2020.

This is the first time that a United Nations resolution has specifically mentioned a potential new global agreement on tackling illicit wildlife trafficking. This is important because there is currently a gap in international criminal law when it comes to wildlife trafficking.

The UNTOC was adopted in 2000 to promote cooperation to prevent and combat transnational organized crime more effectively. It is supplemented by three protocols against Trafficking in Persons, Smuggling of Migrants and Illicit Manufacturing of and Trafficking in Firearms respectively.

Since its inception in 2020, the Global Initiative to End Wildlife Crime has sought to garner support for a fourth protocol. This protocol would position wildlife trafficking within the scope of international criminal law and provide a framework for state obligations. This would include adopting legislation criminalizing the intentional illicit trafficking of specimens of wild fauna and flora (in any whole or part, whether living or deceased), increasing coordination and exchanging intelligence regarding known organised groups and techniques of concealment, sharing forensic samples, strengthening border and authenticity controls, as well as implementing demand reduction strategies.

Representative to the Global Initiative to End Wildlife Crime, Zara Bending, welcomed the resolution with the following statement:

“The Jane Goodall Institute Global joined the Global Initiative in 2020 and we remain steadfast in our position that an additional Protocol to UNTOC is the most appropriate and high-impact means to disrupt this multi-billion dollar criminal enterprise. This is an historic moment in the fight to end wildlife trafficking and we extend congratulations and thanks to our colleagues at EWC and everyone within our Jane Goodall Institute and Roots & Shoots networks who engaged Member States from around the world in the lead up to the 31st Session.”

The resolution was submitted by Angola, Kenya, and Peru; and was co-sponsored by Colombia, Ecuador, Egypt, Gabon, Ghana, Honduras, Malawi, Morocco, Mozambique, Paraguay, the Philippines, and the United States of America.

JGI Global’s IWT expert Zara Bending with Perri Reynolds, alum of the Centre for Environmental Law Roots & Shoots Illegal Wildlife Trade (ForeverWild) Group.

Read more about the resolution in this press release from EWC.

Kangaroos intercepted in anti-smuggling operation in India

In April, two kangaroos were rescued from Gajoldoba, a tourist destination in the Jalpaiguri district of north Bengal. The trafficking of exotic animals in India has spiked over the past decade. © Hindustan Times

Three kangaroos were recently spotted roadside by villagers in eastern India before being transported to a wildlife park for treatment. One had perished.

How did three iconic native Australian animals come to be in such dire straits so far from home?

Local authorities suggest that the kangaroos likely originated from a private breeding facility in southeast Asia but were abandoned while in transit once officers commenced an anti-smuggling operation. It is reported that the chief warden of West Bengal had received a tip-off indicating wildlife were being smuggled into the state and was quick to respond, resulting in mass vehicle searches. Further kangaroo sightings have been reported in the weeks since.

JGI Global’s wildlife trafficking expert and JGI Australia Board Director, Zara Bending, shared her thoughts on the seizure:

“It’s heart-wrenching to see any animal in a state of fear or confusion, let alone one of our much-loved national animals. Like many parts of the world, the market for exotic pets is booming in India as a sign of status and they’ve tried to get a handle on the range of non-native and exotic species in the country by enacting a voluntary disclosure scheme in 2020.

Kangaroos were among the species identified in the 32, 645 disclosure applications listing exotic pets received by early 2021.

Having data is important, but local laws only criminalise the smuggling of species rather than their possession. So, once animals are in the country it’s simply a case of claiming they were bred domestically in captivity. There needs to be effective legislation aimed to monitor not just what is in the country but the conditions in which animals are being kept, including those bred in private collections. We have grave concerns for public health due to the risk of zoonoses, the involvement of organised crime, as well as for the welfare of animals involved.”

Australia is a biodiversity hotspot boasting species of flora and fauna that cannot be found elsewhere on Earth. In addition to marsupials including kangaroos and gliders, native Australian birdlife (notably parrots), reptiles (including turtles, lizards, and snakes), and spiders can find themselves smuggled overseas to meet the demands of the exotic pet trade. There are even markets for bird and reptile eggs.

But it’s important to know that the illegal wildlife trade doesn’t just affect animals. In fact, medicinal plants formed a large quantity of the more than 7,000 recorded wildlife seizures related to Australia between 1999-2014, as reported by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.

What can you do?

As part of the Jane Goodall Institute Global’s ForeverWild campaign, we are asking all our followers to join us in the fight to end wildlife crime.

If you have any information that you suspect may be related to the illegal capture, importation, breeding, advertising, or sale of wildlife please alert Crime Stoppers by calling 1800 333 000 or by visiting www.crimestoppers.com.au

Report suspicious online content or advertisements by following our global ‘report harmful content’ recommendations.

Download and make reports through ‘Wildlife Witness’- an app co-designed by Taronga Zoo and TRAFFIC. This allows tourists and locals to report wildlife trade by taking a photo, pinning the exact location of an incident and sending that intel to TRAFFIC for follow-up.

Zara Bending
JGIA Board Director

Worldwide friendships: Introducing Roots & Shoots Global Pen Pal Program

“She likes music and her friends. The music she likes is Billie Eilish – she is the best singer of her life. She writes very well too. I want to say hi to the Jane Goodall group, and thank them for allowing me to join this because it is interesting and enjoyable.”

~Roots & Shoots Global Pen Pal Program participant, Uganda

Cross-cultural connections

The Global Pen Pal Program is an initiative run by Jane Goodall’s Roots & Shoots Australia with other global Roots & Shoots chapters, that started in September 2021. It provides primary, secondary and university students with a chance to connect to young people in other cultures, build friendships, develop literacy and communication skills, plus deepen global engagement.

Roots & Shoots members write bi-monthly letters to one another, sharing around key themes such as: environmental conservation; peace and wellbeing; family and culture; faith and belief; and their dreams for the future.

Beginnings: Australia to Africa

In May 2021, a group of Australian Roots & Shoots volunteers with deep connections to Uganda and Sierra Leone had the idea for a digital letter-writing program to link Australia with their roots in Africa. The goal was to support girls secondary education engagement across the African nations, after they were disproportionately affected by the consequences of the Covid-19 global pandemic.

Via a small fee for Australian parents, the program also raises vital funds for our Girls Empowerment project in Uganda – helping girls achieve a full education by ending period poverty.

Today: Creating a worldwide network

The current pilot includes Roots & Shoots chapters in Australia, Sierra Leone, Uganda and Tanzania. Later this year Turkey, Austria, Canada and the Democratic Republic of Congo will also join. The program provides a unique opportunity for global Roots & Shoots chapters to connect relationally as a global community.

“When I wrote my letter I shared what foods and animals I like. Foods which I like most are turkey, irish potato. The animal I like the most is the chimpanzee.

“My friend in Australia likes mangoes. I was so excited to hear that she also likes mangoes, as I thought that people from Australia don’t eat Mangoes.”

~Roots & Shoots Global Pen Pal Program participant, Uganda

Acting local, thinking global

By taking part in Global Pen Pals and building wonderful connections, Roots & Shoots equips members across the world to:

• Share their lives across cultures and languages with other students
• Make new friends across the world in various continents
• Improve their confidence in reading, writing and communication

The program is vital in:

• Building cross-cultural awareness and empathy across nations, cultures and continents
• Girls developing friendships by improving their relational and communication skills
• Increasing girls educational engagement in participating nations, improving literacy and language skills
• Building a global sense of identity as a Roots & Shoots community

Future leaders, trained today

The program continues to grow as new Roots & Shoots chapters join across the world!

A small team of Australian volunteer facilitators currently perform regular child safety checks as a global ‘Post Office’. This year, we aim to train additional global facilitators and develop a digital platform to assist in easy, safe and effective letter exchanges.

“I’m proud of the girls and this initiative. I’m very happy for those who started because it has really helped the girls and motivated their talent. They learn about plants, trees and natural things from other countries, plus how to read.”

~Royal Alinaitwe, Roots & Shoots Patron and Teacher, Everest High School, Uganda

Video Credit: Roots & Shoots Uganda

Dr. Jane Goodall’s Message for Earth Day 2022.

Dr. Jane Goodall, DBE, founder of the Jane Goodall Institute and UN Messenger of Peace shares her message for Earth Day 2022.

As we face existential crises, Jane shares her deep commitment to the power of hope and all we can do as individuals and collectively to make a difference for people, other animals, and the planet we share. Today and every day, let us rebuild our connections to the natural world – for as Jane shares – we are a part of it and have a responsibility to protect it:-

Hello, today is Earth Day. It’s a day to think about the planet, Mother Earth.

I’m sure that all of you have seen photos of planet earth shot from space. A small, green and blue globe surrounded by the cold, black immensity of space.

What is so wonderful about this little planet of ours is that during the millions of years of evolution, it supports such a rich variety of life forms.

From microscopic bacteria and algae to whale and elephants and the giant redwoods. There are some species that live in the earth, such as earthworms and naked mole-rats. Others that fly, like butterflies and beetles and birds and bats. Some spend all or almost all their time in the trees, like sloths and galagos and spider monkeys. Some move ever so slowly across the land, like tortoises, while others like cheetahs can run really fast.

Then there are all those who spend their entire lives in the water, the corals and fish and whales, whilst others like otters and penguins spend time on land but are really good swimmers. Then, think about the hundreds and thousands of plants and trees and fungi and ferns.

What an amazing tapestry of living things.

We, humans, are just one species. But oh dear, our footprint on the planet is gigantic.

This wasn’t so all those years ago when we were just hunter-gatherers, but the one difference between us and all the other creatures is that we developed an oversized brain, probably because we have no natural defences and we had to compete with fears, predators that roamed the country back then.

From that time on, we had an increasing advantage over other animals. Then came the agricultural revolution, and humans were able to settle in one place, and populations began to grow.

Next came the industrial revolution. From then on, our impact has become ever more destructive.

You all know the problems we face today. These include climate change, loss of biodiversity, and of course, the COVID pandemic.

Well, we only have ourselves to blame because, for years, humans have shown so little respect for the natural world and animals.

We’ve destroyed forests and other ecosystems. We’ve polluted land, air, and water with agricultural, industrial, and household waste, much of it full of toxic chemicals.

We’ve burned increasing amounts of fossil fuel. This has created massive amounts of the most prevalent greenhouse gas, CO2. It’s those gases that form a blanket around the globe, trapping the heat of the sun, leading to global warming.

We’ve killed wild animals for food, clothing, pets, and sport. Yes, sport. Traffic them around the world, crowded wild animals into tiny unhygienic spaces in wildlife markets, and crowded domestic animals into horrendous factory farms. All these have created conditions that make it relatively easy for a pathogen, such as a virus, to spillover from an animal to a person, where it may create a new disease, such as COVID-19.

I cannot send out this message without reference to put into war in Ukraine. The scale of human and animals suffering is horrendous and heartbreaking. Think also of the harm to the environment caused by the emissions from tanks and planes and bombs and all the rest of it.

Today, Earth Day, is a time for all of us to think about how we, as individuals, can help this precious blue and green planet. What each one of us can do to help.

Today, more people are aware how everything is interconnected, and that we need to alleviate poverty. Because the poor will destroy the environment just to create more cleared land for growing food or making money from charcoal or timber, buy the cheapest food because they can’t afford other options.

But, it’s cheap because of unfair wages or horrible cruelty to animals.

We need to reduce the unsustainable lifestyles of the rest of us and learn to recycle and reuse.

We must, through consumer pressure, persuade businesses to operate in ways that are socially and environmentally ethical, rather than carry on with business as usual.

More people are beginning to understand that long-term protection of the environment and indigenous cultures is more important than short-term profit.

We must do anything we can to encourage our governments to heal the widening gap between the haves and the have nots because this inequality leads to violence and hatred. On this day, we should think about the communities of plants and animals with whom we share or should share the planet, and all that we have done to harm them.

More importantly, let’s think about what we can do to protect and restore.

The Jane Goodall Institutes around the world are working to protect chimps and other wildlife and environments. Also, helping local disadvantaged communities to find ways of living without destroying their environment. Then giving them the tools to monitor and protect the health of the natural world around them.

They understand that this is not only to protect biodiversity and wildlife, but for their own future, so they become our partners in conservation. More people are understanding the One Health idea. That our human health is closely related to the health of the local environment and that of the wild and domestic animals who live there.

We all depend on the health of all.

Our Roots & Shoots members, hundreds and thousands of them of all ages, in over 60 countries, are working on projects of their choice to make the world better for this interconnected world. People, animals, and the environment.

I think there will be a lot of tree planting and programs to restore and protect forests around the world. Many people will be volunteering in shelters for homeless animals, doing projects to raise money for a whole variety of causes.

Some people are determined to move towards a plant-based diet. Some are supporting restorative agriculture, permaculture, and so on.

Around the globe, there will be prayers for the suffering of the Ukrainians and all the other suffering underprivileged people, and for the animals around the world. There’ll be volunteers rolling up their sleeves and helping where they can.

Although the overall picture seems overwhelmingly grim, that simply means we must all get together, roll up our sleeves, and each do our bit to help heal our planet. We must get together now before it’s utterly too late.

There’s one thing I want to beg of everyone who watches this. Don’t help planet earth on this one Earth Day only. It is so important to do something to help every day, even the smallest things.

Don’t forget that millions of small things cumulatively lead to major change.

Finally, do let us know what you do for Earth Day and your plans to make every day Earth Day.
So that we can share the cumulative benefits of everything that we do with our community.

Thank you all, and have a productive and wonderful Earth Day.

Tchimpounga Chimpanzee Sanctuary, Congo:
Meet a Jane Goodall Institute care giver

Care Givers are vital in the fight to end poaching and protect endangered chimpanzees. Tchimpounga only exists thanks to their patience, kindness and love. Meet Antonette a very special team member who’s healed hundreds of chimps.

Rescued chimps are stolen from their mothers by poachers, often witness terrible violence and are forced to live in tiny cages with little food. This means the young orphan is in terrible physical and emotional condition on arrival at the Tchimpounga Chimpanzee Rehabilitation Centre.

These tiny infants share 98% of their DNA with humans, so need urgent care to recover from their disturbing ordeal. This is where the Jane Goodall Institute’s (JGI) incredible local staff step in – especially our brilliant, gifted chimpanzee caregivers.

The VIPs behind the scenes

Tchimpounga would not exist without chimpanzee carers like Antonette. Her dedication and kindness enables the Jane Goodall Institute to give rescued endangered chimps the second chance they deserve. Antonette can only continue her vital work thanks to our generous monthly donors. Together, Chimp Guardians like you from all across the world help make that happen.

Orphan JeJe and his caregiver Antonette at the JGI’s Tchimpounga Chimpanzee Rehabilitation Center in the Republic of Congo.

Introducing Antonette

Chimpanzees, like human children, have a long development period and often rely on their mothers until the age of eight or older. They are helpless for six months, dependent on their mothers for two years, and still cling until at least four years old.

When stolen chimps are traumatically torn from their mothers Antonette acts as their surrogate mother. Antonette devotes 24-hour care and affection to these babies when they arrive. Her goal is to make the baby chimpanzee feel protected, safe, and loved, as this early period is crucial for their psychological development. It has been a powerful journey for Antonette, and she has cared for a great many rescued orphans over the years.

ADOPT A CHIMPANZEE

Caring through civil war

The Republic of the Congo’s capital of Brazzaville saw tremendous violence during the civil war. At the Brazzaville Zoo, where caregivers from the Aspinall Foundation cared for baby gorillas, both humans and animals were not safe. Therefore the Aspinall Foundation decided to move them to the Jane Goodall Institute’s Tchimpounga Centre to be secure away from the ongoing conflict.

Local resident Antonette was selected by the foundation given her experience to became one of the caregivers. She boldly took on the responsibility of caring for five infant gorillas during the war. With Anonette’s care and commitment to the infant gorillas they survived and were sent to a safe sanctuary to live out their lives in harmony.

Shortly after the war ended, Tchimpounga staff offered her a chimpanzee caregiver job at Tchimpounga, where she has been ever since.

Ebelle is a baby that arrived at Tchimpounga from a small village close to Imphondo city. He was kept as a pet.

Saving a species, one day at a time

A typical work day for Antonette looks very different to many of ours. Her offices are enclosures and forests, her commute is by boat along the Kouilou River and her colleagues include the 140 rescued chimpanzees that rely on her care!

A carer’s day starts with giving the chimps their first meal. For Antonette, looking after Tchimpounga’s youngest orphans, this means bottles of baby formula. 

Antonette found that caring for chimpanzee babies was very similar to caring for gorilla babies. She is a natural. In some ways, she realised, it’s like caring for human babies. Each one needs love, care and attention. Antonette shows patience to help them succeed, guides them to be their best, and ensures they grow up to be healthy, strong, social members of their integrated chimpanzee communities.

Providing a constant sense of love and protection is crucial to the babies’ rehabilitation. Antonette knows that through patience and love she can help the babies be their best. During her many years at Tchimpounga she’s nurtured some of our most traumatised chimps back to health and watched them grow to be strong, socially integrated members of their communities. 

Donate to Tchimpounga

Healing the horrors of poaching

For Antonette her job never stops. Many of the babies come to Tchimpounga anxious and afraid after being violently torn from their mothers as a result of poaching and illegal wildlife trafficking. To help them overcome their deep trauma and suffering, 

Antonette fully embraces her surrogate mother role, dedicating herself to providing round the clock care, just as she did with her own children. This includes sleeping with the infant chimps and waking throughout the night for feedings. 

George, Vienna, Kabi and Tina with JGI caregiver Antonette.

Eat, play, sleep, repeat

Once the chimps have had their fill of food they’re free to relax, play and explore. Antonette escorts the babies to a nearby forest where they can safely climb the trees, splash in the streams and taste the plants under her doting eye.

Providing a constant sense of love and protection is crucial to the babies’ rehabilitation. During her many years at Tchimpounga she’s nurtured some of our most traumatised chimps back to full health.

For Antonette her job never stops. Many of the babies come to Tchimpounga anxious and afraid. To help them overcome their deep trauma and suffering,

Antonette fully embraces her surrogate mother role, dedicating herself to providing round the clock care, just as she did with her own children. This includes sleeping with the infant chimps and waking throughout the night for feedings.

With each chimpanzee, Antonette witnesses the terror and depression they arrive with disappear. This transformation has everything to do with her love, which transcends species.

How you can help

Our Chimp Guardian monthly donors fund the tireless efforts of super heroes like Antonette, who devote themselves to healing Tchimpounga’s rescued chimps. By becoming better informed and taking action through a donation to the Jane Goodall Institute together we can secure a future where wildlife can thrive, forests can return and chimpanzees are no longer endangered.

It’s only thanks to people like you that Antonette’s work is possible: we are so grateful to our Chimp Guardians for their continued, generous support!

Become a Chimp Guardian today


See for yourself below the connection Antonette has with Anzac, and all the other Tchimpounga infants who think of her as Mum:

Celebrate International Women’s Day: Meet Zara Bending

This week we’re celebrating just a few of the thousands of incredible woman who make up the Jane Goodall Institute Australia (JGIA) family – and beyond!

After yesterday’s starter with Roots & Shoots Tasmania Coordinator, Vineeta, today we introduce you to policy powerhouse Zara Bending.

Fighter for wildlife, award-winning lecturer, passionate animal activist, prolific published writer and volunteer Board Director of the Jane Goodall Institute Australia. Zara wears many complimentary, and connected, hats.

Born in Western Sydney, Zara is the dedicated, deeply knowledgeable lead of the Jane Institute’s global Forever Wild campaign – fighting wildlife trafficking worldwide of all species. An award-winning lecturer and associate at the Centre for Environmental Law at Macquarie University, Zara’s biggest passion is protecting wildlife. A recognised expert on illegal wildlife trade, Zara serves in criminal proceedings, parliamentary inquiries, campaigning and activism – to stop our fellow earthlings be commodified, hunted to extinction and abused.

What does International Women’s Day mean to you? And why do you think it’s still important?

International Women’s Day is an opportunity for women and our allies to acknowledge all we have achieved towards gender equality, despite near insurmountable odds and just how far we still need to push. For me it comes down to celebrating three R’s: resilience, resistance and representation.

How did you get involved with JGIA?

I joined the JGIA Board in 2015 and now also work with JGI-Global as an expert on illegal wildlife trade. What stood out for me was how strongly inclusion featured in the position advert. Once joining, one of the first things I worked on was formalising our Equal Employment Opportunity Policy with then CEO Nancy Moloney.

What qualities and attributes of Jane keep you motivated?

Jane is many things to many people, but for me it’s her work ethic, compassion for all life on Earth, intellect (I still get butterflies when I see her track changes on a document!) and ability to move people to action that keeps me on-task.

Help create hope for endangered wildlife. Donate today >>

For you, what are the most vital issues facing women – and our entire planet – today?

So many of the ills facing our planet could be solved if we promote women’s autonomy and self-determination: reproductive health and rights, equal access to education and employment, freedom from gender-based violence – including forced marriage. Women are disproportionately impacted by climate change, economic downturn and all the existential crises bearing down on our species.

What advice would you give 10-year-old you with hindsight?

If you want to be successful in anything, failing is part of the process (or, ‘first attempt’ as we say in learning). Be brave, learn from your mistakes, be kind to others and yourself, and when you fail, just try to fail forwards, not backwards.

What is your key message to other women with similar goals?

Our planet, and all the various forms of life with whom we share it, requires more from us to survive – let alone thrive. When 50% of our species are arbitrarily and systemically disenfranchised, we deny everyone the chance at a future with less suffering and greater prosperity. The fight for gender equality is a fight for our collective future. So, anytime the world taunts you to “fight like a girl”, take the invitation and show them. #ChooseToChallenge.

Empower more incredible leaders like Zara: join our donor community >>

Further Reading:


Celebrate International Women’s Day: Meet Vineeta Gupta

Our famous founder is one of many bold, brilliant, game-changing women at the Jane Goodall Institute (JGI). From the youngest Roots & Shoots members to our global CEO, we are very lucky to have countless curious, compassionate female leaders among us. All courageously committed to creating hope in their communities for the future of our interconnected earth.

Here in Australia we have some particularly inspiring local legends. As we celebrate International Women’s Day together with our global family, this week we will showcase five of them – all tirelessly working towards this year’s theme to #BreakTheBias for a more diverse, equitable and inclusive world. (We could easily have made it fifty).

From leading-edge scientists to social-justice campaigners, global law-transformers to political powerhouses, we hope you are as inspired reading about them – as we are working with them. So, let’s begin.

Vineeta Gupta: Microbiologist, Climate Leader, Campaigner & Organiser 

Vineeta, or Vini, is vital in growing our Roots & Shoots youth empowerment program across Australia.

Currently the State Coordinator for Tasmania, Vini is growing our movement down south to build a community of young, empowered change makers of hope. 100% voluntarily, she’s driven by her own deep passion for environmentalism, alongside studying Microbiology at the University of Tasmania, working as a researcher and campaigning with the Australian Youth Climate Coalition plus she’s Climate Reality Leader.

Previously Vini was part of our dynamic National Youth Leadership Council training program. Every year we recruit a collective of incredible young people to learn skills, gain confidence, build networks and develop direction as future environmental leaders. As an engaged, enterprising member she was offered the long-term oppurtunitiy to build Roots & Shoots in Tasmania.

Empower more young women like Vini: donate today >>

Vini has a keen interest in the cross-pollination of environmental advocacy with social justice, particularly the intersectional relationships between the environmental crisis and social inequality. In less than a year she helped host film festivals, co-developed the wellbeing program Return To Nature, increased the number of grants for Roots & Shoots projects and is now leading an ambitious advocacy campaign raising awareness about destructive Fast Fashion impacts – on animals, people and environment.

She believes that our environment is an integral part of our social well-being, and that we must do everything we can to conserve it. On days she hopes to inspire people in the same way as Dr Jane some day.

What does International Women’s Day mean to you? And why do you think it’s important?

Vini and a colleague carrying out research as part of her Microbiology major at University of Tasmania
Vini and a colleague carrying out research as part of her Microbiology major at University of Tasmania

International Women’s Day is a time of celebrating the women of our planet and letting them know that ‘they are enough’. You don’t have to be a CEO or martial arts black belt to be a strong, independent woman. You are all you ever need to be.

It’s a time to celebrate the achievements women have made around the world, starting with acknowledging our own. We often forget how important we are as individuals.

Yet, it is also a time to acknowledge that gender inequality is not something of the past. Regardless of where you live or what you do, whether you’re a female worker in the cotton industry or work in Parliament House, gender inequality chases women of all walks of life – even today.

Our earth needs you: give to keep Jane’s hope alive >>

International Women’s Day is a time of celebration, but also a time for us to look forward and assess what needs to be done to ensure a truly gender equal society.

This isn’t something only women should be thinking about; men need to stand in solidarity with women to create a future where gender inequality is truly something of the past.

Who are your top three female inspirations and why?

The three most important women in my life are:

Vini with her mum, while celebrating her parents' 25th wedding anniversary
Vini with her mum, while celebrating her parents’ 25th wedding anniversary

My Mum.

She was the first female role model I had. She’s compassionate, caring, holds her ground and manages work-life balance with an ease I have yet to master.

Dr Marie Curie

She inspired me to pursue STEM and reminds me everyday that women can excel in any field they persue – male dominated or not. And to never give up on our dreams.

Being the 1st person to have won the Nobel Prize twice, she proved that women can be at the forefront of accomplishments and be the first at achieving something unachievable.

Dr Jane Goodall.

Jane inspires me to be hopeful everyday in a world where hope can be difficult to find. She inspires me to get up and take action for what I believe in – whether that be social and climate justice, or creating a world that’s better for those to come – for, as she says: “the greatest danger to our future is apathy.”

Help young leaders: Join The Hope our donor community >>

What advice would you give to a 10-year-old with hindsight?

Let your imagination go crazy and know that as a woman you can also soar. No matter what you decide to do, always remember that you are enough and don’t let anyone tell you otherwise.

There’s no such thing as a woman’s job or a man’s job, all jobs are equal.

Remember to always do what brings you joy and instills you with hope.

What is your key message to other women with similar goals this IWD?

In a time of such uncertainty, it can be difficult to focus on our goals and aspirations, particularly justice focused aspirations.

Like myself I’m sure there are others who wake up thinking what’s the point of trying and trying again when all we face is failure to be heard and taken seriously. But always remember, if we can inspire one other person to care, then one day, we’ll have inspired the world.

~

Be a part of Vini’s work: join Roots & Shoots Tasmania’s Facebook Group or email tas@janegoodall.org.au

Jane’s World Wildlife Day message: “We are part of and depend on the natural world”

“We must face the shocking fact that we’re living through the sixth great extinction in the history of life on planet Earth.

“Fortunately we’re beginning to tackle the problems that we’ve created. We’re beginning to use our extraordinary intellect to put things right. People are waking up and realising that if we don’t take action to protect and restore biodiversity we’re doomed.

“It’s not too late…”

Dr. Jane Goodall shares her message for UN World Wildlife Day 2022. As we face the sixth great extinction, we not only recognise the tremendous loss of biodiversity – but also incredible individuals of these species. Dr. Goodall underscores the innate value and amazing beauty of global wildlife, as well as the urgent need to protect individuals and species, before they’re gone forever.

Help plant hope for generations to come!

Join our VIP donor community >> janegoodall.org.au/thehope
Or make a one off donation >> janegoodall.nationbuilder.com/donate

Statement: Dr. Jane Goodall on the Ukraine crisis

“I Jane Goodall, stand with the brave President and his people of Ukraine as they fight so courageously, and with such determination, to protect their homes, families and country from unprovoked aggression.”

~ Jane Goodall, DBE

Dr. Jane Goodall, DBE, Founder of the Jane Goodall Institute shares her thoughts on the conflict in Ukraine.

In an official statement and video, Jane underscores the importance of the indomitable human spirit and the people who are the “helpers,” creating a community spirit that ensure that we overcome the worst of times. She sends her support and reminder that the good of humanity will prevail.

“This is what makes us human. This indomitable spirit that rises above disaster, that rises above despair.”

“My heart is with those in the Ukraine.”

JGI Global stands for understanding and peaceful resolution of conflicts and all of our thoughts are with the people of Ukraine and anyone affected. We will continue to share information to share to the network as and when we receive it.