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  • Chris Anderson: Dr. Jane Goodall, welcome.

  • Jane Goodall: Thank you,

  • and I think, you know, we couldn't have a complete interview

  • unless people know Mr. H is with me,

  • because everybody knows Mr. H.

  • CA: Hello, Mr. H.

  • In your TED Talk 17 years ago,

  • you warned us about the dangers of humans crowding out the natural world.

  • Is there any sense in which you feel

  • that the current pandemic is kind of, nature striking back?

  • JG: It's very, very clear that these zoonotic diseases,

  • like the corona and HIV/AIDS

  • and all sorts of other diseases that we catch from animals,

  • that's partly to do with destruction of the environment,

  • which, as animals lose habitat, they get crowded together

  • and sometimes that means that a virus from a reservoir species,

  • where it's lived harmoniously for maybe hundreds of years,

  • jumps into a new species,

  • then you also get animals being pushed into closer contact with humans.

  • And sometimes one of these animals that has caught a virus can --

  • you know, provides the opportunity for that virus to jump into people

  • and create a new disease, like COVID-19.

  • And in addition to that,

  • we are so disrespecting animals.

  • We hunt them,

  • we kill them, we eat them,

  • we traffic them,

  • we send them off to the wild-animal markets

  • in Asia,

  • where they're in terrible, cramped conditions, in tiny cages,

  • with people being contaminated with blood and urine and feces,

  • ideal conditions for a virus to spill from an animal to an animal,

  • or an animal to a person.

  • CA: I'd love to just dip backwards in time for a bit,

  • because your story is so extraordinary.

  • I mean, despite the arguably even more sexist attitudes of the 1960s,

  • somehow you were able to break through

  • and become one of the world's leading scientists,

  • discovering this astonishing series of facts about chimpanzees,

  • such as their tool use and so much more.

  • What was it about you, do you think,

  • that allowed you to make such a breakthrough?

  • JG: Well, the thing is, I was born loving animals,

  • and the most important thing was, I had a very supportive mother.

  • She didn't get mad when she found earthworms in my bed,

  • she just said they better be in the garden.

  • And she didn't get mad when I disappeared for four hours

  • and she called the police, and I was sitting in a hen house,

  • because nobody would tell me where the hole was where the egg came out.

  • I had no dream of being a scientist,

  • because women didn't do that sort of thing.

  • In fact, there weren't any man doing it back then, either.

  • And everybody laughed at me except Mom,

  • who said, "If you really want this, you're going to have to work awfully hard,

  • take advantage of every opportunity,

  • if you don't give up, maybe you'll find a way."

  • CA: And somehow, you were able to kind of, earn the trust of chimpanzees

  • in the way that no one else had.

  • Looking back, what were the most exciting moments that you discovered

  • or what is it that people still don't get about chimpanzees?

  • JG: Well, the thing is, you say, "See things nobody else had,

  • get their trust."

  • Nobody else had tried.

  • Quite honestly.

  • So, basically, I used the same techniques

  • that I had to study the animals around my home when I was a child.

  • Just sitting, patiently,

  • not trying to get too close too quickly,

  • but it was awful, because the money was only for six months.

  • I mean, you can imagine how difficult to get money

  • for a young girl with no degree,

  • to go and do something as bizarre as sitting in a forest.

  • And you know, finally,

  • we got money for six months from an American philanthropist,

  • and I knew with time I'd get the chimps' trust,

  • but did I have time?

  • And weeks became months and then finally, after about four months,

  • one chimpanzee began to lose his fear,

  • and it was he that on one occasion I saw --

  • I still wasn't really close, but I had my binoculars --

  • and I saw him using and making tools to fish for termites.

  • And although I wasn't terribly surprised,

  • because I've read about things captive chimps could do --

  • but I knew that science believed

  • that humans, and only humans, used and made tools.

  • And I knew how excited [Dr. Louis] Leakey would be.

  • And it was that observation

  • that enabled him to go to the National Geographic,

  • and they said, "OK, we'll continue to support the research,"

  • and they sent Hugo van Lawick, the photographer-filmmaker,

  • to record what I was seeing.

  • So a lot of scientists didn't want to believe the tool-using.

  • In fact, one of them said I must have taught the chimps.

  • (Laughter)

  • Since I couldn't get near them, it would have been a miracle.

  • But anyway, once they saw Hugo's film

  • and that with all my descriptions of their behavior,

  • the scientists had to start changing their minds.

  • CA: And since then, numerous other discoveries

  • that placed chimpanzees much closer to humans than people cared to believe.

  • I think I saw you say at one point that they have a sense of humor.

  • How have you seen that expressed?

  • JG: Well, you see it when they're playing games,

  • and there's a bigger one playing with a little one,

  • and he's trailing a vine around a tree.

  • And every time the little one is about to catch it,

  • the bigger one pulls it away,

  • and the little one starts crying

  • and the big one starts laughing.

  • So, you know.

  • CA: And then, Jane, you observed something much more troubling,

  • which was these instances of chimpanzee gangs,

  • tribes, groups, being brutally violent to each other.

  • I'm curious how you process that.

  • And whether it made you, kind of,

  • I don't know, depressed about us, we're close to them,

  • did it make you feel that violence is irredeemably

  • part of all the great apes, somehow?

  • JG: Well, it obviously is.

  • And my first encounter with human, what I call evil,

  • was the end of the war

  • and the pictures from the Holocaust.

  • And you know, that really shocked me.

  • That changed who I was.

  • I was 10, I think, at the time.

  • And when the chimpanzees,

  • when I realized they have this dark, brutal side,

  • I thought they were like us but nicer.

  • And then I realized they're even more like us

  • than I had thought.

  • And at that time, in the early '70s,

  • it was very strange,

  • aggression, there was a big thing

  • about, is aggression innate or learned.

  • And it became political.

  • And it was, I don't know, it was a very strange time,

  • and I was coming out, saying,

  • "No, I think aggression is definitely

  • part of our inherited repertoire of behaviors."

  • And I asked a very respected scientist what he really thought,

  • because he was coming out on the clean slate,

  • aggression is learned,

  • and he said, "Jane, I'd rather not talk about what I really think."

  • That was a big shock as far as science was concerned for me.

  • CA: I was brought up to believe a world of all things bright and beautiful.

  • You know, numerous beautiful films of butterflies and bees and flowers,

  • and you know, nature as this gorgeous landscape.

  • And many environmentalists often seem to take the stance,

  • "Yes, nature is pure, nature is beautiful, humans are bad,"

  • but then you have the kind of observations that you see,

  • when you actually look at any part of nature in more detail,

  • you see things to be terrified by, honestly.

  • What do you make of nature, how do you think of it,

  • how should we think of it?

  • JG: Nature is, you know,

  • I mean, you think of the whole spectrum of evolution,

  • and there's something about going to a pristine place,

  • and Africa was very pristine when I was young.

  • And there were animals everywhere.

  • And I never liked the fact that lions killed,

  • they have to, I mean, that's what they do,

  • if they didn't kill animals, they would die.

  • And the big difference between them and us, I think,

  • is that they do what they do because that's what they have to do.

  • And we can plan to do things.

  • Our plans are very different.

  • We can plan to cut down a whole forest,

  • because we want to sell the timber,

  • or because we want to build another shopping mall,

  • something like that.

  • So our destruction of nature and our warfare,

  • we're capable of evil because we can sit comfortably

  • and plan the torture of somebody far away.

  • That's evil.

  • Chimpanzees have a sort of primitive war,

  • and they can be very aggressive,

  • but it's of the moment.

  • It's how they feel.

  • It's response to an emotion.

  • CA: So your observation of the sophistication of chimpanzees

  • doesn't go as far as what some people would want to say

  • is the sort of the human superpower,

  • of being able to really simulate the future in our minds in great detail

  • and make long-term plans.

  • And act to encourage each other to achieve those long-term plans.

  • That that feels, even to someone who spent so much time with chimpanzees,

  • that feels like a fundamentally different skill set

  • that we just have to take responsibility for

  • and use much more wisely than we do.

  • JG: Yes, and I personally think,

  • I mean, there's a lot of discussion about this,

  • but I think it's a fact that we developed the way of communication

  • that you and I are using.

  • And because we have words,

  • I mean, animal communication is way more sophisticated

  • than we used to think.

  • And chimpanzees, gorillas, orangutans

  • can learn human sign language of the Deaf.

  • But we sort of grow up speaking whatever language it is.

  • So I can tell you about things that you've never heard of.

  • And a chimpanzee couldn't do that.

  • And we can teach our children about abstract things.

  • And chimpanzees couldn't do that.

  • So yes, chimpanzees can do all sorts of clever things,

  • and so can elephants and so can crows and so can octopuses,

  • but we design rockets that go off to another planet

  • and little robots taking photographs,

  • and we've designed this extraordinary way of you and me talking

  • in our different parts of the world.

  • When I was young, when I grew up,

  • there was no TV, there were no cell phones,

  • there was no computers.

  • It was such a different world,

  • I had a pencil, pen and notebook, that was it.

  • CA: So just going back to this question about nature,

  • because I think about this a lot,

  • and I struggle with this, honestly.

  • So much of your work, so much of so many people who I respect,

  • is about this passion for trying not to screw up the natural world.

  • So is it possible, is it healthy, is it essential, perhaps,

  • to simultaneously accept that many aspects of nature

  • are terrifying,

  • but also, I don't know, that it's awesome,

  • and that some of the awesomeness comes from its potential to be terrifying

  • and that it is also just breathtakingly beautiful,

  • and that we cannot be ourselves, because we are part of nature,

  • we cannot be whole

  • unless we somehow embrace it and are part of it?

  • Help me with the language, Jane, on how that relationship should be.

  • JG: Well, I think one of the problems is, you know, as we developed our intellect,

  • and we became better and better

  • at modifying the environment for our own use,

  • and creating fields and growing crops

  • where it used to be forest or woodland,

  • and you know, we won't go into that now,

  • but we have this ability to change nature.

  • And as we've moved more into towns and cities,

  • and relied more on technology,

  • many people feel so divorced from the natural world.

  • And there's hundreds, thousands of children

  • growing up in inner cities,

  • where there basically isn't any nature,

  • which is why this movement now to green our cities is so important.

  • And you know, they've done experiments,

  • I think it was in Chicago, I'm not quite sure,

  • and there were various empty lots

  • in a very violent part of town.

  • So in some of those areas they made it green,

  • they put trees and flowers and things, shrubs in these vacant lots.

  • And the crime rate went right down.

  • So then of course, they put trees in the other half.

  • So it just shows, and also,

  • there have been studies done showing that children

  • really need green nature for good psychological development.

  • But we are, as you say, part of nature

  • and we disrespect it, as we are,

  • and that is so terrible for our children

  • and our children's children,

  • because we rely on nature for clean air, clean water,

  • for regulating climate and rainfall.

  • Look what we've done, look at the climate crisis.

  • That's us. We did that.

  • CA: So a little over 30 years ago,

  • you made this shift from scientist mainly to activist mainly, I guess.

  • Why?

  • JG: Conference in 1986, scientific one, I'd got my PhD by then

  • and it was to find out how chimp behavior differed, if it did,

  • from one environment to another.

  • There were six study sites across Africa.

  • So we thought, let's bring these scientists together

  • and explore this,

  • which was fascinating.

  • But we also had a session on conservation

  • and a session on conditions in some captive situations

  • like medical research.

  • And those two sessions were so shocking to me.

  • I went to the conference a a scientist,

  • and I left as an activist.

  • I didn't make the decision, something happened inside me.

  • CA: So you spent the last 34 years

  • sort of tirelessly campaigning for a better relationship

  • between people and nature.

  • What should that relationship look like?

  • JG: Well, you know, again you come up with all these problems.

  • People have to have space to live.

  • But I think the problem is

  • that we've become, in the affluent societies,

  • too greedy.

  • I mean, honestly, who needs four houses with huge grounds?

  • And why do we need yet another shopping mall?

  • And so on and so on.

  • So we are looking at short-term economic benefit,

  • money has become a sort of god to worship,

  • as we lose all spiritual connection with the natural world.

  • And so we're looking for short-term monetary gain, or power,

  • rather than the health of the planet

  • and the future of our children.

  • We don't seem to care about that anymore.

  • That's why I'll never stop fighting.

  • CA: I mean, in your work specifically on chimpanzee conservation,

  • you've made it practice to put people at the center of that,

  • local people, to engage them.

  • How has that worked

  • and do you think that's an essential idea

  • if we're to succeed in protecting the planet?

  • JG: You know, after that famous conference,

  • I thought, well, I must learn more about why chimps are vanishing in Africa

  • and what's happening to the forest.

  • So I got a bit of money together and went out to visit six range countries.

  • And learned a lot about the problems faced by chimps, you know,

  • hunting for bushmeat and the live animal trade

  • and caught in snares

  • and human populations growing and needing more land

  • for their crops and their cattle and their villages.

  • But I was also learning about the plight faced by so many people.

  • The absolute poverty, the lack of health and education,

  • the degradation of the land.

  • And it came to a head when I flew over the tiny Gombe National Park.

  • It had been part of this equatorial forest belt right across Africa

  • to the west coast,

  • and in 1990,

  • it was just this little island of forest, just tiny national park.

  • All around, the hills were bare.

  • And that's when it hit me.

  • If we don't do something

  • to help the people find ways of living

  • without destroying their environment,

  • we can't even try to save the chimps.

  • So the Jane Goodall Institute began this program "Take Care,"

  • we call it "TACARE."

  • And it's our method of community-based conservation,

  • totally holistic.

  • And we've now put the tools of conservation

  • into the hand of the villagers,

  • because most Tanzanian wild chimps are not in protected areas,

  • they're just in the village forest reserves.

  • And so, they now go and measure the health of their forest.

  • They've understood now

  • that protecting the forest isn't just for wildlife,

  • it's their own future.

  • That they need the forest.

  • And they're very proud.

  • The volunteers go to workshops,

  • they learn how to use smartphones,

  • they learn how to upload into platform and the cloud.

  • And so it's all transparent.

  • And the trees have come back,

  • there's no bare hills anymore.

  • They agreed to make a buffer zone around Gombe,

  • so the chimps have more forest than they did in 1990.

  • They're opening up corridors of forest

  • to link the scattered chimp groups so that you don't get too much inbreeding.

  • So yes, it's worked, and it's in six other countries now.

  • Same thing.

  • CA: I mean, you've been this extraordinary tireless voice, all around the world,

  • just traveling so much,

  • speaking everywhere, inspiring people everywhere.

  • How on earth do you find the energy,

  • you know, the fire to do that,

  • because that is exhausting to do,

  • every meeting with lots of people,

  • it is just physically exhausting,

  • and yet, here you are, still doing it.

  • How are you doing this, Jane?

  • JG: Well, I suppose, you know, I'm obstinate, I don't like giving up,

  • but I'm not going to let these CEOs of big companies

  • who are destroying the forests,

  • or the politicians who are unraveling all the protections that were put in place

  • by previous presidents,

  • and you know who I'm talking about.

  • And you know, I'll go on fighting,

  • I care about, I'm passionate about the wildlife.

  • I'm passionate about the natural world.

  • I love forests, it hurts me to see them damaged.

  • And I care passionately about children.

  • And we're stealing their future.

  • And I'm not going to give up.

  • So I guess I'm blessed with good genes, that's a gift,

  • and the other gift, which I discovered I had,

  • was communication,

  • whether it's writing or speaking.

  • And so, you know,

  • if going around like this wasn't working,

  • but every time I do a lecture,

  • people come up and say,

  • "Well, I had given up, but you've inspired me,

  • I promise to do my bit."

  • And we have our youth program "Roots and Shoots" now in 65 countries

  • and growing fast,

  • all ages,

  • all choosing projects to help people, animals, the environment,

  • rolling up their sleeves and taking action.

  • And you know, they look at you with shining eyes,

  • wanting to tell Dr. Jane what they've been doing

  • to make the world a better place.

  • How can I let them down?

  • CA: I mean, as you look at the planet's future,

  • what worries you most, actually,

  • what scares you most about where we're at?

  • JG: Well, the fact that we have a small window of time, I believe,

  • when we can at least start healing some of the harm

  • and slowing down climate change.

  • But it is closing,

  • and we've seen what happens with the lockdown around the world

  • because of COVID-19:

  • clear skies over cities,

  • some people breathing clean air that they've never breathed before

  • and looking up at the shining skies at night,

  • which they've never seen properly before.

  • And you know,

  • so what worries me most

  • is how to get enough people,

  • people understand, but they're not taking action,

  • how to get enough people to take action?

  • CA: National Geographic just launched this extraordinary film about you,

  • highlighting your work over six decades.

  • It's titled "Jane Goodall: The Hope."

  • So what is the hope, Jane?

  • JG: Well, the hope,

  • my greatest hope is all these young people.

  • I mean, in China, people will come up and say,

  • "Well, of course I care about the environment,

  • I was in 'Roots and Shoots' in primary school."

  • And you know, we have "Roots and Shoots" just hanging on to the values

  • and they're so enthusiastic once they know the problems

  • and they're empowered to take action,

  • they are clearing the streams, removing invasive species humanely.

  • And they have so many ideas.

  • And then there's, you know, this extraordinary intellect of ours.

  • We're beginning to use it to come up with technology

  • that really will help us to live in greater harmony,

  • and in our individual lives,

  • let's think about the consequences of what we do each day.

  • What do we buy, where did it come from,

  • how was it made?

  • Did it harm the environment, was it cruel to animals?

  • Is it cheap because of child slave labor?

  • Make ethical choices.

  • Which you can't do if you're living in poverty, by the way.

  • And then finally, this indomitable spirit

  • of people who tackle what seems impossible

  • and won't give up.

  • You can't give up when you have those ...

  • But you know, there are things that I can't fight.

  • I can't fight corruption.

  • I can't fight military regimes and dictators.

  • So I can only do what I can do,

  • and if we all do the bits that we can do,

  • surely that makes a whole that eventually will win out.

  • CA: So, last question, Jane.

  • If there was one idea, one thought,

  • one seed you could plant in the minds of everyone watching this,

  • what would that be?

  • JG: You know, just remember that every day you live,

  • you make an impact on the planet.

  • You can't help making an impact.

  • And at least, unless you're living in extreme poverty,

  • you have a choice as to what sort of impact you make.

  • Even in poverty you have a choice,

  • but when we are more affluent, we have a greater choice.

  • And if we all make ethical choices,

  • then we start moving towards a world

  • that will be not quite so desperate to leave to our great-grandchildren.

  • That's, I think, something for everybody.

  • Because a lot of people understand what's happening,

  • but they feel helpless and hopeless, and what can they do,

  • so they do nothing and they become apathetic.

  • And that is a huge danger, apathy.

  • CA: Dr. Jane Goodall, wow.

  • I really want to thank you for your extraordinary life,

  • for all that you've done

  • and for spending this time with us now.

  • Thank you.

  • JG: Thank you.

Chris Anderson: Dr. Jane Goodall, welcome.

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