"The Virunga National Park said in a statement Tuesday that Ndakasi died on Sept. 26 after battling a prolonged illness and “took her final breath in the loving arms of her caretaker and lifelong friend, Andre Bauma.” The statement is accompanied by a photo of Bauma, who befriended the gorilla when she was just 2 months old, holding Ndakasi shortly before her death at the park’s Senkwekwe Center, where she had lived for about 12 years.Bauma, who was not made available for an interview, said in a statement that it was “a privilege to support and care for such a loving creature.”“It was Ndakasi’s sweet nature and intelligence that helped me to understand the connection between humans and Great Apes and why we should do everything in our power to protect them,” he said. “I am proud to have called Ndakasi my friend.”..Her life started with tragedy. In April 2007, rangers at the Congolese park found a 2-month-old Ndakasi “clinging to the lifeless body of her mother, gunned down by armed militia hours earlier,” park officials said in a statement. Her mother’s death was part of a series of massacres of gorilla families in the region that led the park to strengthen the protection of its mountain gorillas, they added.Understanding how dangerous it would be to leave the mountain gorilla by herself, vulnerable to people with guns and human encroachment, rangers brought Ndakasi to the park’s rescue center. It’s there that she met Bauma.“All night long, Andre held the baby close to him,” the park said in a statement."
And as a reminder, this gif of a silverback attempting to console a small child who had fallen into a gorilla enclosure.
Just a bit of nitpicking: as a young female, she was not a silverback, a caracteristic of adult, even mature males.
ReplyDeleteTYWKIWDBI encourages and delights in nitpicking. And you are of course totally correct. Title amended. Thank you, Abie.
DeleteAndre Bauma deserves a medal and a letter of commemoration.
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