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On-Line News

Photo of Dorothy's Funeral Goes Viral
Oct 27, 2009

In April, 2008, Sanaga-Yong Chimpanzee Rescue Center lost one of its patriarchs, beloved Dorothy.  She was adopted mother to Bouboule, who has grown from a scared, lost orphan into a large, confident young adult who is in line to succeed current alpha male Jacky.  Dorothy left behind her adopted son, her best friend Nama, her loving adopted family, and her devoted human caregivers.  She is sorely missed by all. (In Memory of Dorothy)

At the time of Dorothy's death, Monica Szczupider was volunteering at Sanaga-Yong Center and took some moving photographs of Dorothy's funeral.  Recently one was published in National Geogrpahic.

The photograph has received worldwide attention and Monica has been contacted from media around the world for use of the photo.  Below is one story which ran in The Telegraph, a UK publication.  IDA-Africa is grateful to Monica for sharing her photograph and the story of this amazing family with the world.

"Chimpanzees' grief caught on camera in Cameroon"
A group of chimpanzees have been photographed seemingly grieving for the
death of one of their own in Cameroon. 
 
Telegraph.co.uk
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/wildlife/6444909/Chimpanzees-grief-caught-on-camera-in-Cameroon.html

By Chris Irvine
Published: 10:51AM GMT 27 Oct 2009


Grief-stricken chimpanzees mourning the death of a fellow ape
Photo: MONICA SZCZUPIDER ~ IDA-Africa Volunteer


More than a dozen chimps stand in silence watching from behind their wire enclosure as Dorothy, a chimp in her late 40s who died of heart failure, is wheeled past them.

The chimps are from the Sanaga-Yong Chimpanzee Rescue Center in Cameroon. Locals from the village work as "care-givers" for the orphaned animals whose mothers were all killed for the illegal bushmeat trade.

 
photo was taken by Monica Szczupider, who was working at the centre.

Speaking about Dorothy, Miss Szczupider, 30, said the chimp was a "prominent figure" within a group of about 25 chimps.

"Chimps are not silent. They are gregarious, loud, vocal creatures, usually with relatively short attention spans", she said.

"But they could not take their eyes off Dorothy, and their silence, more than anything, spoke volumes."

The scene, which can be seen in November's issue of National Geographic, is reminiscent of the gorilla Gana, who grieved of the loss of her baby in her compound at Muenster zoo in northern Germany. Gana fiercely held on to the corpse of her three-month-old baby Claudio until zoo keepers were eventually able to retrieve his body.

Scientists have previously discounted opinions of those who claim animals feel emotions as overly anthropomorphic. But a number of have also recognised that we must be anthropomorphic when discussing animal emotions.

Dr Marc Bekoff, of the University of Colorado, previously wrote for The Telegraph: "That animals and humans share many traits including emotions is merely an extension of Charles Darwin's accepted ideas about evolutionary continuity, that the differences between species are differences in degree rather than differences in kind. The seemingly natural human urge to impart emotions on to animals, far from obscuring the "true" nature of animals, may actually reflect a very accurate way of knowing."

He has previously published observations of a magpie 'funeral' where a group of four magpies took it turns to approach the corpse of a dead bird, before two flew off to return with a piece of grass and lay it down beside the body. He also claims to have seen emotions in elephants.

 

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