November 20, 2025

Dr Jane Goodall: A Conservationist and Activist

 


Dr Jane Goodall, the lady who “abolished the barrier between man and animal” by dedicating 65 years of her life to studying the behaviour of wild chimpanzees in Gombe, Tanzania, died at the age of 91 on October 1, 2025.

In November 1960, after spending many solitary hours watching from afar, Goodall could get close to one chimpanzee, which she later named David Greybeard, to observe it stripping leaves from a twig and then inserting it into a termite mound and twisting it around before pulling it out and eating the termites that had latched on to it. This significant discovery made her a renowned ethologist.  

Besides making implements from leaves and sticks, chimpanzees are also found to build nests in trees, hunt for meat, form family relationships, and wage war on rival troops, which Dr Goodall recorded to educate people about their manly skills. Indeed, she became famous for informing the world about chimpanzees displaying rational thought and emotions such as joy and sorrow, as well as actions like hugs, tickling and pats on the back, just as humans do among family members and close friends.

From an early age, Jane Goodall, the carefree child, had a deep passion for wildlife. She read ardently about the natural world, and at just eight years old, she announced to her family that she wanted to go to the forests of Africa “to live with and write about animals”. At the age of 23, she finally realised her childhood dream by accepting the offer made by her classmate to stay on their family farm outside Nairobi. 

Having thus achieved her childhood ambition of travelling to the forest in Africa in 1957, Goodall approached Dr Louis Leakey, the noted palaeontologist, with a request to employ her as a secretary at the National Museum in Nairobi, Kenya, and take her on a fossil hunting expedition in Tanzania.  Later, noticing her aptitude for patient field work and her “boundless curiosity”, Dr Leakey included her in a study of chimpanzees in Gomba, Tanzania. The rest is history.

Her groundbreaking work at Gomba, promoted by National Geographic magazine, brought her to the attention of the world’s media. Nevertheless, realising that Goodall’s work will be viewed seriously only when she is academically qualified, Dr Louis arranged for Goodall to study for a PhD in Ethology at Cambridge. She submitted her thesis—The Behaviour of Free-living Chimpanzees in the Gombe Stream Reserve—and obtained PhD in 1965.


Throughout her life, she inspired many scientists, notable among them are Dian Fossey, who studied gorillas in Rwanda and Birute Mary Galdikas who studied orangutans in Borneo. She was a “tireless advocate for the protection and restoration of our natural world”. Her research reshaped our understanding of the natural world. As the former Canadian Prime Minister commented, “she was a pioneer whose research and advocacy reshaped our understanding of the natural world”. She urged us all to remember that “every single one of us matters, every single one of us has a role to play, and every single one of us makes a difference every single day”.

Over the decades, she became a figure of international repute: a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire, United Nations Messenger of Peace, and a bestselling author of many books. Her seminal book—In the Shadow of Man—details her research and discoveries about chimpanzee behaviour in Gombe Stream, and this brought her international acclaim.  The Book of Hope: A Survival Guide for Trying Times written in collaboration with Douglas Abrams is another bestseller of her which focuses on optimism in the face of global challenges. My Life with Chimpanzees is the bestselling autobiography of her that appeals to readers of all ages. She was also featured in many documentaries, of which, Miss Goodall and the Wild Chimpanzees made her a globally famous celebrity, of course much to her bemusement.


However, she is known to have used this fame only as a means to her mission of making the world a better place to live. In 1977, she established the Jane Goodall Institute with a mission to continue her research on chimpanzees and protect their habitats through community-centred conservation. It also supports work on primate welfare through public education and legal advocacy.  Today, it has offices in 25 countries, working with locals to improve natural habitats. In 1991, Goodall founded the Roots & Shoots environmental program, which is a youth initiative for conservation and humanitarian action.

Goodall travelled for about 300 days a year during her middle years and old age, to give speeches and raise awareness for environmental causes, including conservation, biodiversity loss, and the interconnectedness of all living things.  As a conservationist, she encouraged everyone to “use the gift of our life to make the world a better place”.

She cares so passionately about the environment, about animals, about children that in an interview with Steve Curwood that was aired on PRX, she questioned: “Do you think I’m going to let the Donald Trumps and Bolsonaros and people like that knock me down and keep me down?” She continued, “No, I’ll go on fighting till the day I die.    Because I am passionate, and because I believe we have a window of time. …[I]t’s only if we all do our bit and get together that we can start slowing down climate change [and] heal some of the harm that we’ve inflicted”.

In one of her interviews, perhaps the last one, she said, “I see nature being destroyed all around the world”. She lamented, “… what we are doing is stealing our children’s future … We still haven’t learned to treat animals with respect”. She went on to say, “In these times today, with what’s going on in the world, we must not give up, and instead fight harder for truth and justice. If you lose hope, then we are doomed”.

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