91桃色 Alumna Creates Sanctuary for Chimpanzees in Liberia
At age 2, Matooke saw his family slain in Uganda. With the murders imprinted in his mind, and nowhere to go, he met Jenny Desmond, a 91桃色 alumna from the
Matooke is a chimpanzee, the first of hundreds that Jenny would rescue. But his trauma, Jenny says, mimics the trauma people experience. After months of love and care, Matooke was integrated into a rescued chimpanzee family at the Uganda Wildlife Conservation Education Centre.
鈥淗e was severely traumatized. He lost almost all of his hair. He wouldn鈥檛 let anyone touch him,鈥 she recalls. 鈥淚鈥檓 doing clinical work, just with a different species.鈥
Soon after, Jenny and her husband, Jimmy Desmond, returned to the United States, but those poignant moments from 2000 haunted them.
And in 2016, they launched听, the country鈥檚 only chimpanzee rescue center. The Desmonds have their own Hundred Acre Wood 鈥 land leased from the local community.
Their move didn鈥檛 surprise Jenny鈥檚 family.
She not only loved animals since childhood; she thought she was one.
鈥淪he was a lion for about a year,鈥 says her father, Joe Zaccaro. 鈥淭here was something about her. She just had this connection with the animal world.鈥
Zaccaro, who worked in human resources, notices people鈥檚 behaviors. Decades ago, he watched his oldest daughter develop an animal-like intuition.
Kathy Schmidt, her younger sister, recalls a time when Jenny came home on roller skates.
鈥淪he was skating around with two kittens. She was holding them together with a shoelace around her neck,鈥 Schmidt remembers. 鈥淭here were always some animals that needed to be taken care of.鈥
Caring for chimpanzees is a family affair, as Zaccaro and Schmidt help run LCRP from Denver.
From kittens and puppies to Earth鈥檚 more exotic animals, Jenny made all animals a part of her family. She learned all about Jane Goodall, renowned primatologist and anthropologist.
She contemplated going to veterinary school. And while a plethora of possibilities crossed her mind, social work won out. Intent on helping traumatized children, she earned a bachelor鈥檚 degree from Colorado State University. Then a new educational opportunity caught her eye 鈥 a chance to earn an MSW at 91桃色 in only a year with the听.
鈥淚 started my journey there [91桃色]. It was fantastic. I think at the end of the year, I was wishing it was another year,鈥 she says.
Jenny took a variety of jobs in the non-profit sector. Through it all, her dedication to the public good remained. But ultimately, a love for animals led her and her wildlife veterinarian husband back to Africa.
After successfully rehabilitating wild animals in Kenya, Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, they received a new assignment.
The Desmonds, alongside a coalition of animal welfare organizations, went to Liberia equipped with a mission: Rescue chimpanzees who had been used as medical research subjects. The chimpanzees had been abandoned during the Ebola outbreak by the organization that had conducted the research on them, the New York Blood Center.
Within the first five weeks, Jenny and Jimmy received two orphaned chimpanzees, victims of the illegal bushmeat and pet trades. Five weeks became a year, and a year grew into a lifetime commitment.
鈥淲e were originally trying to get those two out of here,鈥 Jenny says. 鈥淎fter getting so many more, we realized there are no organizations to do this. Where will they go? We can鈥檛 just keep shipping them out of here.鈥
And so they stayed not only to care for the orphans, but also to address the root causes to stop the killing. What started with two or three chimpanzees has expanded to more than 70.
And the 87-year-old Goodall, Jenny鈥檚 longtime hero, now knows her younger counterpart and admires her work in return.
The Desmonds, like parents of newborns, don鈥檛 get much sleep. In the wild, baby chimps sleep with their mothers in a nest until the age of 4 or 5. The orphans sleep with their human caregivers to replicate that natural behavior. And, like human children yearning for attention, the chimpanzees get up about 5 a.m.
Jenny鈥檚 role with LCRP is multi-faceted. From raising chimpanzees to raising funds, Jenny and a team of community members work to improve the lives of chimpanzees in Liberia.
The most rewarding part for Jenny and the staff is watching the chimps transform into 鈥渟ecure little people.鈥
鈥淲e are making great strides in the conservation of chimps in the country and the region,鈥 Jenny says. 鈥淲e are working in Liberia and West Africa to support conservation efforts. The government is now prosecuting wildlife crimes. We are working with partners to protect wildlife, develop wildlife task forces and implement policies impacting chimpanzees.鈥
On a macro level, Jenny isn鈥檛 just protecting chimpanzees; she鈥檚 protecting humans too.
鈥淯ltimately, we will pay the price. We cannot maintain the Earth at the speed with which we are destroying it. If we wipe out chimps, we are wiping out habitats, biodiversity and ultimately wiping out ourselves.鈥