Learn about a rare ape -- the bonobo, and follow the adventures of an intrepid woman who overcame the near impossible in a struggle to save just a few ecological "Golden Grains"
Search This Blog
Monday, July 20, 2009
Art on the Edge
I did a little of this and a little of that to make ends meet in Kinshasa, Zaire (now the Democratic of the Congo). The top image, a pen and ink drawing for the Bleu/Blanc magazine, was for an article about the local flies and pet dogs. The canine grimaces in pain as the biting flies buzz around its bleeding ears. The text recommends a daytime shelter (because the flies avoid the dark) and consulting a vet for a repellent product.
The second image, taken from a pencil drawing, depicts the stripped hindquarters of the okapi, a giraffe for the Ituri region of the country. The okapi artwork was used for a school notebook that was distributed by the cellphone company called Telecel.
"After reading this book, when you hear about some far-flung conflict in a map-smudge corner of the world, you may ponder the fate of animals; in homes, in fields, in forests, and in cages. You may reflect, as well, on the fate of a people trapped in a quagmire of politics, poverty, and ignorance."
Click on Picture to Purchase Book
A Percentage of the Book Proceeds are Donated to the Lukuru Wildlife Research Project
I was an animal conservationist in Africa for 14 years. During a major uprising in Zaire, when bullets were flying, I did not flee. Instead, I spray-painted the word "AIDS", in blood, on the entrance of the compound where I had struggled for years to rescue orphaned bonobos -- a rare ape found only in that country.
I stayed on and five years later, I managed to get 6 bonobos to safety in a Dutch zoo, where several, and their offspring reside to this day.
I returned to the US in 1998 and wrote a book called Grains of Golden Sand.
Unlike other books of its genre, Grains of Golden Sand covers bonobo natural history while offering an insight into the culture and the constraints of doing conservation in Africa. It is also a woman's story of facing and overcoming incredible hardships that most can only imagine.
No comments:
Post a Comment