ONCE UPON A TIME ....
There lived a chimp who learned to sign

Next of Kin

I remember reading about a female chimpanzee being raised by scientists in some warm southern state. Her name was Washoe but I forgot her until I read a novel about research being done on great apes in institutions around the world. Washoe and 2 other chimpanzees reside in a classroom/living room within a college campus. I visited them as part of a field trip through the annual conference - EEAW (Environmental Education Association of Washington) - state that is.

Recall this chimpanzee raised as a family member by scientists who taught her to communicate in American sign language. It rocked the world to think that a lower animal could understand and respond with signs to humans. Many did not believe it and some still do not.

Washoe lives with her adopted son, Dar, and Tatu, a male who became her protector. They are all in their late thirties, having been captives since a few months old. Another female died months ago from an infection. She was removed to a hospital when she held her stomach and signed "hurt" but the infection was too far advanced to be treated.

When Washoe became too large and strong to live and play with for human safety, she was caged and studied further. Other chimps were introduced to her - some of which she accepted, some refused. Humans cannot live with adult chimpanzees in captivity without physical danger. Jane Goodall taught scientists many things about those animals, one of which was that humans could exist beside the chimpanzees in their world.

Chimpanzees are used mercilessly in entertainment. The young are cute and forced to perform in circuses and on stage always imitating some human action. When they grow too large to be controlled they are "released" to research institutions and infected with disease or used in decompression studies or other things unimaginable. Safe houses are established to protect these animals if they are lucky enough to get into one.

We share more characteristics with chimpanzees than any other species but we are as different from them as horses are to dogs. Perhaps we are learning just how much we are a part of this world and how closely we belong to it.

I am ambivalent about being an animal rights activist. But the economic system that encourages people to abuse anything and everything for money does not make life better for anyone, especially the abuser.

Naomi Sherer