2011年8月14日星期日
Dian Fossey, 1932-1985: She Worked to Protect the Mountain Gorillas of Central Afric
By George Grow
2011-1-22
Photo: Reuters
Competitors take part in the Great Gorilla Run in central London every year to raise money for the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund.
Fossey met with Louis Leakey and discussed the importance of scientific research on the great apes. She decided to study mountain gorillas, which were in danger of disappearing. Later on her trip, she traveled to the mountains of Rwanda. This is where she first saw mountain gorillas.
FAITH LAPIDUS: Dian Fossey left California and moved to the state of Kentucky. She accepted a position at the Kosair Crippled Children's Hospital in the city of Louisville. People there said she had a special gift of communicating with children with special needs. Yet she also had a desire to see more of the world.
Dian Fossey made a large number of public appearances to publicize her book and the efforts to save the mountain gorillas. Then she returned to Rwanda. On December twenty-sixth, nineteen eighty-five, she was found murdered at her camp. A few days later, her body was buried near the remains of some of her gorillas.
(MUSIC)
Reuters
Every year, competitors wear gorilla suits and walk, run or jog a 7km path in the the city of London to raise money for the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund.
She formed a small force to help guard mountain gorillas against humans. She destroyed traps used to catch the animals. She threatened the hunters and the people who helped them. National Geographic magazine published a report about her efforts. Many people who read the story sent money to support the campaign.
FAITH LAPIDUS: This program was written by George Grow. Lawan Davis was our producer. I'm Faith Lapidus.
However, not everyone supported what Fossey was doing. Some people condemned her treatment of the hunters. Rwandan officials opposed her efforts to control an area that she did not own. And, some animal experts criticized her strong emotional links with the gorillas. They also questioned her work as a scientist.
(MUSIC)
FAITH LAPIDUS: Dian Fossey spent thousands of hours observing mountain gorillas. She worked hard to gain acceptance among the animals. To do this, she copied their actions and sounds. She studied the gorillas daily and developed an understanding of each individual.
STEVE EMBER: Fossey borrowed money and made a six-week trip to Africa in nineteen sixty-three. She visited a camp operated by the famous research scientists Louis and Mary Leakey. The Leakeys were best known for their studies of the development of human ancestors.
Fossey learned a lot about the gorillas. But it became difficult for her to remain an independent observer. She believed that the animals would disappear forever unless something was done to protect them and their environment.
Fossey had observed Digit for many years and treated him almost like a friend. His remains were placed with those of other dead gorillas in a special burial area near her camp.
AP
Dian Fossey plays with a group of young mountain gorillas in Rwanda's Virunga Mountains in central Africa, 1982.
(MUSIC)
STEVE EMBER: Fossey returned to central Africa in nineteen sixty-six. She spent a short time observing Jane Goodall. Then she began setting up her own research camp in what was then the country of Zaire. Fossey sought help from the local native people who knew how to follow mountain gorillas in the wild.
Fossey returned to Rwanda to find that hunters were killing some of what she called "her gorillas." The hunters earned money by selling the heads, hands and feet of the animals. Among the gorillas killed was one called Digit.
In nineteen eighty, Fossey left Karisoke and accepted a position at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York.? There, she began to write a book about her years with the mountain gorillas. Her book was published in nineteen eighty-three. It is called "Gorillas in the Mist." By then, there were only about two hundred mountain gorillas in the world.
STEVE EMBER: And I'm Steve Ember. Join us again next week for in VOA Special English.
Three years after her death, a major American motion picture based on her book was released. It is also called "Gorillas in the Mist." It helped tell her story to millions of people around the world.
STEVE EMBER: Even now, her death remains unsolved. Some people believe that she was killed by someone who opposed her strong attempts to protect the gorillas.
She changed her program of study to occupational therapy. Occupational therapists help injured and sick people learn to do their day-to-day activities independently. She completed her studies at San Jose State in nineteen fifty-four.
FAITH LAPIDUS: Dian Fossey needed money to continue her research project. She believed that she could get more financial assistance for her work by getting an advanced degree. She left Africa in nineteen seventy and attended the University of Cambridge in England. She received a doctorate in zoology a few years later.
STEVE EMBER: After Digit was killed, Fossey established a program to increase international support for efforts to protect mountain gorillas. It was called the Digit Fund. Fossey also began an active campaign to stop the killing of the gorillas. She opposed efforts by Rwandan officials to increase the number of visitors to the animals' native environment.
Dian Fossey loved her work and used her research to help save the gorillas and their environment. Today, the mountain gorilla population is increasing. Some people have said that without her efforts the animals would no longer exist. The Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund International continues her work.
Through friends, she became interested in Africa. She read a book about the wild mountain gorillas of central Africa written by American zoologist George Schaller. The mountain gorilla is the largest of the world's apes.
Many people had believed that mountain gorillas are fierce. Fossey found just the opposite. She learned that gorillas are both gentle and intelligent. They use their strength mainly when defending other members of their family or group.
STEVE EMBER: In nineteen seventy, the National Geographic Society wanted to publish a story about Fossey and her research. It sent a photographer named Bob Campbell to Karisoke to take pictures. He took a picture of an adult male gorilla named Peanuts touching Fossey's hand. This became the first friendly gorilla-to-human action ever recorded. The picture appeared on the front cover of National Geographic magazine. It helped to make Fossey and her work famous.
(MUSIC)
A group called the Wilkie Foundation agreed to support her research. The Wilkie Foundation already supported another researcher, Jane Goodall, in her study of wild chimpanzees. Fossey also received help from a major scientific and educational organization -- the National Geographic Society.
FAITH LAPIDUS: Fossey returned to the United States with a desire to work in Africa. She met with Professor Leakey a second time when he visited the United States to give a series of talks. This time, he asked her to begin a long-term study of the gorillas. He said information she collected might help to show how human ancestors developed.
FAITH LAPIDUS: Dian Fossey suffered from a number of health problems. As she grew older, she spent less time in the field and more time at her camp doing paperwork. This was partly because she had college students assisting in her research efforts.
Dian was interested in animals all her life. She started making plans to be a veterinarian, a doctor who treats animals. After high school, she attended San Jose State College in California. There, she was successful in some subjects, but not others.
AP
A Mountain Gorilla sits in the Congo jungle in this Oct. 1997 photo. The gorilla project was established by the Denver-based Morris Animal Foundation in 1985, the year gorilla expert Dian Fossey was killed at her camp in Volcano National Park in Rwanda.
The American researcher was able to sit among the gorillas and play with them and their young. She made notes of everything she saw. She took a count, or census, of the gorilla population. She noted what the animals ate and their environment.
Dian Fossey kept a written record of her daily activities. She wrote: When you understand the value of all life, you think less about what is past and think instead about the protection of the future.
STEVE EMBER: I'm Steve Ember.
FAITH LAPIDUS: And I'm Faith Lapidus with PEOPLE IN AMERICA in VOA Special English. Today we tell about Dian Fossey. She studied the wild mountain gorillas of central Africa. Her work resulted in efforts to save these rare and endangered animals.
A short time later, political unrest forced her to move to nearby Rwanda. She settled in a protected area between two mountains, Karisimbi and Visoke. There, she established the Karisoke Research Center. This would be her home for most of the next eighteen years. Much of that time, she worked alone.
STEVE EMBER: Dian Fossey was born in nineteen thirty-two in San Francisco, California. Her parents ended their marriage when she was young. She stayed with her mother, who married another man a short time later. Dian said she had a difficult relationship with both her mother and stepfather.
(MUSIC)
博客归档
-
▼
2011
(641)
-
▼
八月
(253)
- 布什的伊拉克新面孔
- 独家:娱乐是最好的控诉武器
- 叶匡政:寻求土地分配正义的解决
- 男子因写嫖娼日记被抓冤不冤?
- 2007中国外交:淡杂音增和声
- 一句“不许笑”,我看到在中国个性成长的悲哀
- 小贩之死搞垮总统的蝴蝶效应
- 08年的一次采访内容
- 辛亥革命百年游将成为最大的旅游热点?
- 推动动真格的教改,恢复公众对中国教育的信心
- 麦凯恩两次错引毛泽东语录
- 55秒,史上最牛的“新闻发布会”!)
- 叶匡政:孔子为何哭了 !
- 铁道部部长刘志军鲜为人知的故事
- 靠加分政策优惠吸引大学生村官难持续
- 文强在临死前和王立军说了什么?
- 阜宁加油!世博加油!
- 执政党给予公众公共财政分享的新愿景
- 关于言论自由
- “猫养老鼠”与“急善近恶”
- 建世界一流大学,究竟靠什么
- 美将东北亚引向绝路
- 中美关系亟需化浮躁为冷静
- 安徽诗人获诺奖提名?闹剧而已! (深圳商报)
- 小泉做SHOW
- MBO是否与“股份制改造”南辕北辙?
- 赖昌星引渡:敲响贪官警钟
- 美女护士千万别上了色狼的床
- 青岛的记忆
- 叶匡政:30个作协主席的从良之举
- 成熟的文明个性是怎么炼成的?
- 伤残农夫工难获医治抵偿,前日惨逝世
- “圈养”教导有治否?
- 废除教导恶疾,新任部长需勇敢摸索新办学体系
- 中国房市泡沫源自官商合谋
- "爱国作家“?
- 荣幸的潘基文与严格的考验
- 马英九打量蒋介石毛泽东合影
- 恩师下跪,尊严何在?
- 《桑田》有段能够说的机密
- 《出版参考》/ 叶匡政:纸生态,焕发汉语辉煌
- 幸好跟韩寒传绯闻的不是郭敬明
- 独家:中国油田埃塞遭袭凸显中国策略思维滞后
- 这世道,谁不是“弱势群体”?
- 新浪评论特约:田亮退役背地的中国体育之痒
- 许昌人化石是否解开中国人起源之谜?
- 古代快报:警察照片吓小偷的治安反讽
- 82岁传授的举报征程与40岁教学“被停课”
- 华人诺奖取得者的教导背景回味无穷
- 政府公共外交的义务
- 国防白皮书中的两岸关系
- 被民心挟持的政党?
- 新浪独家专稿:美驻叙使馆遭袭还击布什反恐新论
- 首批学生未入校,南科大为何就成了“名校”
- 大学生村官打算不应当是“常设”工程
- 奇妙化解上合峰会为难
- 跑到国外“考核”学校危房改革?
- 大学排行榜,毕竟谁威望?
- 《苹果》何以成禁果?
- 乐见性教育纳入公民教导系统
- 碰壁的不仅是性学硕士
- 城管与狗不得入内的事实反讽
- 应加快推动重点大学去当地化过程
- Britain Notes Big Change in Royal Wedding Souvenirs
- Antibiotic Resistance Called Growing Threat to Hum...
- Sierra Leonean President Reduces Fuel Prices
- 春运期间一票难求的气象还会连续多久?
- 假教改,真牟利
- “圣男”齐达内遭受意大利式愿望 历史难辩
- 青藏铁路攸关跟谐繁华,无关第三方策略指向
- “消息官”治不了“央企病”
- Finding the Biological Roots of a Virus That Ruins...
- 美国的利比亚策略得失相当
- “制止上访讨薪”岂止“表述有误”?
- Music from Los Lonely Boys / Question about Helen ...
- 地铁塌方又是“草他妈”干的?
- 总理到韩国第一件事亲身休会TD通话
- 我就是要打击名不副实的主
- 政府工作讲演找看点
- 好民主必定是有坚固基础的
- 在美国防止可能责备后中国保障稳固货泉 China Vows Stable Currency afte...
- 奥巴立刻任百天应答困难 Obama Tackles Range of Issues in First...
- 媒体的危险
- 南科大学生谢绝高考有种
- 奥巴马在拷贝阿富汗泥潭
- Boeing Protests Air Force Contract on Tanker
- MF下降寰球经济预期 IMF Slashes Global Economic Forecast
- 用一种话语霸权,抗衡另一种话语霸权!!
- 老师连环顶替案彰显教导治理乱象
- Starting Young to Build a Healthy Hear
- 唐福珍住第九区吗?
- 3D版“白蛇”:亚洲最贵未必最好
- 高校引导腐朽案的真正警示是什么
- 作客新浪(三)
- Scores Killed in South Sudan Raid
- 骆新发言:贫困比矿难更恐怖?
- Learning Words, Donating Ric
- 多少内亚总统决选后局面极为缓和 Tensions High in Guinea After Pres...
- 本来学术界。。。。。。
- Kenyan Women's University Prepares Students to Com...
-
▼
八月
(253)