Listen to Jane Goodall’s final — and urgent — message

Her final interviews are essential listening for everyone.

 

British primatologist Jane Goodall dies at age 91

Jane Goodall, who has died at the age of 91, was a titan in the world of conservation who revealed much of what we know about chimpanzees and animal behavior.

Benji Jones is an environmental correspondent at Vox, covering biodiversity loss and climate change. Before joining Vox, he was a senior energy reporter at Business Insider. Benji previously worked as a wildlife researcher.

Jane Goodall, one of the most influential environmental figures in human history, has died at 91 while doing what she’s done for most of her later years — touring the country to deliver an urgent message about nature and human existence.

Goodall, who revolutionized what we know about chimpanzees and animal intelligence, was interviewed as recently as last week, during New York City Climate Week. And her message was clear, consistent, and timely.

 

 

Jane Goodall and chimpanzee

 

 

“It seems these days everybody is so involved with technology that we forget that we’re not only part of the natural world, we’re an animal like all the others,” Goodall, founder of the Jane Goodall Institute, a conservation group, said last week during the Forbes Sustainability Leaders Summit in NYC. “We’re an animal like all the others. But we depend on it for clean air, water, food, clothing — everything.”

And yet — “We’re destroying the planet,” she said.

 

 

Jane Goodall poses with “Mister H,” a stuffed animal mascot she often brings to her speaking engagements.

Jane Goodall poses with “Mister H,” a stuffed animal mascot she often brings to her speaking engagements.

In a separate conversation with the Wall Street Journal last week, Goodall said the problem is the pernicious idea that economic development should come before the environment.

In reality, we’re on a planet with finite resources, and if we exhaust them, it could spell our own end. “H

One of the most compelling messages from her last interviews is that while we’re the most “intellectual animals” to ever walk the planet, “we’re not intelligent,” said Goodall, who’s an expert in animal behavior. “Because intelligent creatures don’t destroy their only home.”

 

 

The Life & Work of Dr. Jane Goodall | Natural History Museum of Utah

 

 

 

Ultimately, she said, it’s that intellect that gives us the best shot at saving ourselves and the planet.

That’s what’s ushered in solutions to living in greater harmony with the natural world, Goodall said, including renewable energy and plant-based foods.

She emphasized that we know what’s killing the planet: industrial agriculture, including livestock, and burning fossil fuels.

“We have a window of time,” Goodall, who’s authored more than two dozen books, said in The Journal. “But it’s not a very big window. If we don’t change the way we do things, the way we develop economically, then it will be too late.”

 

 

 

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