July 22, 2010

Gombe 50th Celebration

So I realize that I haven't posted anything about the actual work that I've been doing. As much as you all love to hear about my troublesome commutes and eating too much chapati, being updated on my job is probably more important. Oooo an owl just landed on the roof of the house. Anyways, This past month I've been spending most of my time organizing a weekend of events for the Gombe 50th. What is Gombe 50th you ask? Well I've cheated and copied the answer below from the JGI website; but in short, Dr. Jane Goodall came to Tanzania on July 1st for a month long tour around Tanzania to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the start of her research in Gombe National Park and to promote her Roots & Shoots program. This is where I come in. Being the International Volunteer for the Roots & Shoots program, myself along with my fellow R&S members were in charge of organizing an event in Moshi. Since I haven't uploaded my pictures yet I will end it here and make a separate post about the Moshi event after I upload them. Sorry, that is kind of a tease for those anxious to hear about Jane's visit but trust me, picture are definitely needed for that post!



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A Global Celebration of Jane Goodall’s
Pioneering Chimpanzee Research and
Inspiring Vision for Our Future

2010 marks a monumental milestone for the Jane Goodall Institute and Jane Goodall. Fifty years ago, Goodall, who is today a world-renowned primatologist, conservationist and UN Messenger of Peace, first set foot on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, in what is now Tanzania’s Gombe National Park. The chimpanzee behavioral research she pioneered there has produced a wealth of scientific discovery, and her vision has expanded into a global mission to empower people to make a difference for all living things.

When 26-year-old Jane Goodall arrived in Gombe on July 14, 1960, she had been instructed by famed anthropologist and paleontologist Dr. Louis Leakey to observe the behavior of the resident chimpanzees in order to better understand humans. Her early findings—that chimpanzees make and use tools, eat meat and engage in war-like activity—profoundly altered our understanding of what it means to be human.

The culmination of the first 20 years of the Gombe research, Dr. Goodall’s book titledThe Chimpanzees of Gombe: Patterns of Behavior, is recognized as a milestone in the understanding of wild chimpanzee behavior. As a result of her original studies, researchers in many other institutions continue to carry out path-breaking analyses related to chimpanzee behavior and make new discoveries in this field.

"So much more"
Today, the Gombe research is one of the longest running studies of animals in the wild, providing extensive insights into our closest relatives’ emotions, behaviors and social structures. But Gombe represents so much more. The ongoing research and the extensive conservation work carried on there by the Institute are helping answer such compelling questions as how certain diseases are spread, how to stop forest destruction, which contributes to climate change, and how to improve the plight of women in developing countries.

The impact of the Gombe research spans the globe and covers a wide range of scientific disciplines, including human evolution, ethology, anthropology, behavioral psychology, sociology, conservation, disease transmission (including HIV-AIDS), aging and geospatial mapping.

Dr. Goodall and the Gombe research have also inspired a generation of scientists around the world, many of them women, to work not just in chimpanzee behavior but more broadly in conservation and other related fields. In the United States alone, students trained at Gombe now occupy academic positions across the country in major universities, including Harvard University, University of Minnesota, University of Southern California, University of California at Berkeley, and Duke University.

Since 1960, Gombe has been the source of:

  • More than 200 scientific papers
  • 35 Ph.D. theses
  • More than 30 books (including the best-sellers by Dr. Goodall In the Shadow of Man in 1971, Through a Window in 1990, Reason for Hope in 1999, and a number of books for children)
  • Nine films (including those produced by the National Geographic Society and Animal Planet, and an IMAX film with Science North in 2002)
  • Hundreds of popular articles, secondary writings, radio and television interviews, and
  • Hundreds of lecture tours and conferences

Growing Institute
The data amassed at Gombe has informed JGI’s species and habitat conservation programs. The Institute’s community-driven conservation initiatives provide local communities the tools needed to address their basic needs and become economically stable, while managing their natural resources for the long term. JGI’s integrated approach supports projects focusing on everything from water/sanitation issues and health care to sustainable livelihoods and education—and links them to conservation objectives.

More recently, Gombe has become an example of how cutting-edge technology can enhance conservation. As part of its conservation action planning process, JGI uses state-of-the-art high-resolution satellite imagery and Geographic Information Systems to map chimpanzee habitats and plan land use with local communities, including designating deforested areas for regeneration.

Finally, Gombe is where Jane Goodall’s Roots & Shoots, JGI’s global environmental and humanitarian youth program, flourished. Now in more than 120 countries worldwide, the program inspires youth of all ages to make positive change happen for people, animals and the environment we all share. Fifty years later, Gombe is truly impacting the next generation

July 12, 2010

Just another day

How I spent my birthday:


1. Missed my daladala and had to run like a mad woman flagging it down across the whole town (lest I wait another hour and a half for the next one). Let's just say I caused quite the scene.


2. Fell into a river.


3. Got told by three people I was getting fat...


Thank you very much. I think you can all agree with me in that the last of these was by far the most disconcerting. In their defense, they meant it as a compliment but I certainly did not take it as one. In Tanzania, being fat is a good thing and a sign of one's status in society. That's me, climbing the ladder of society one chapati at a time. Here, the larger you are the more money you have and thus the more food you can buy. I don't think there is anyone more respected than a large african mama. Quite the opposite of our lettuce-crunching-organic-everything society back in the States. This is roughly how the conversation went down.


Aneth: "How are you liking Tanzania? You are looking fat."

Me: "What?!? Did you just say I'm fat?!"

Aneth: "Yes you are looking fatter, I think this means you are getting used to TZ and feeling more comfortable. When you have less worries you get fat."

Me: "What?!? Do I really look THAT much fatter?"


I desperately turn to Godson and Mr. Sekievu hoping one of them will come to my rescue..


Godson: "Yes you do."

Sekievu: "YES it's the cheeks you can see it in your face"


It's not my fault everything here is fried! Do you think this stopped me from buying a large piece of chocolate cake today? It most certainly did not. I will eat my slice of birthday cake with pride!