Jane Goodall is an English Animal Rights activist, famously dubbed as “The Woman who redefined man”
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Jane Goodall is an English Animal Rights activist, famously dubbed as “The Woman who redefined man”
Jane Goodall born at
In 1964, Jane married a Dutch wildlife photographer, Baron Hugo Van Lawick, who was sent to Gombe by National Geographic Society to shoot the project she was working on. They had a son, Hugo Eric Louis, but they got divorced in 1974.
Later in 1974, she got married to Member of Tanzanian Parliament, Derek Bryceson, who died of cancer in 1980.
She believes in a great spiritual power which is bigger and stronger than anybody in the world. Her life is dedicated to nature and wildlife since the past 60 years and she continues to fight for their conservation by traveling around 300 days a year to various countries and continents.
Dame Jane Morris Goodall was born on 3 April, 1934 in London to Mortimer Herbert Morris-Goodall, a businessman and Margaret Myfanwe Joseph, a novelist. She had a younger sister, Judy.
As a child, she received a toy resembling lifelike chimpanzee by her father that kindled her curiosity and love for animals.
In her early years, she used to observe nature and wildlife which increased her fondness for them over the years. She dreamt of traveling to Africa to watch and explore animals in their natural habitats.
She left school at the age of 18 because of her love for wildlife in order to pursue her dream.
She was employed as a secretary in Oxford University and also worked at a London based documentary film company to finance her trip.
Through her friends, she met the famous anthropologist and paleontologist, Louis Leakey, in Kenya. Leakey believed that observing chimpanzees, the second most intelligent primate would give way to some new information on evolution. He provided her an opportunity of study them in Gombe Reserve National Park and she took it happily because of her own passion.
Though she had no scientific knowledge or a graduate degree, Jane successfully observed chimpanzees and inferred some major breakthroughs on similarities between humans and chimpanzees.
In 1962, Leakey enrolled her in Cambridge University by raising funds and she obtained a PhD degree in ethology.
In 1977, she established Jane Goodall Institute to protect wildlife, especially chimpanzees all over the world.
Jane is best known for her research in Gombe Reserve National Park for more than four decades. While going through her research, she adopted an unusual pattern of identifying chimpanzees by naming them instead of numbering which was the common practice at that time.
Before her observations, it was believed that only humans possess the skill of tool making and it distinguishes them from other primates. But after her studies about chimpanzees this belief was abandoned. She observed them as an intelligent primate, taking twigs from trees and removing leaves from it in order to make it an effective tool for fishing termites. Her mentor, Leaky wrote in an article to scientific community,”We must now redefine man, redefine tool, or accept chimpanzees as human”.
Through her continuous monitoring, she also established the fact that chimpanzees are non-vegetarians and quite capable of establishing affectionate bonds by expressing various emotions through hugs and kisses. On the other hand, she also encountered the tendency of violence and killer instinct among them similar to humans.
In order to protect chimpanzees, she founded Jane Goodall University in 1977 which now has its groups all around the world. Its global youth program “Roots & Shoots” began in 1991 focusing on saving them and their habitats.
She is the former president of Advocates for Animals which raised its voice against the use of animals for medical and laboratory research purposes.