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The Story Behind National Geographic's Viral Chimp Funeral Photo

First Posted: 3/18/10 Updated: 5/25/11

Chimp

Guest post by Jeremy Berlin from National Geographic's Pop Omnivore Blog

The November issue of National Geographic Magazine features a moving photograph of chimpanzees watching the burial of one of their own. Since it was published, the picture and story have gone viral, turning up on websites and TV shows and in newspapers around the world. For readers who'd like to know more, here's what I learned as I interviewed the photographer, Monica Szczupider.

On September 23, 2008, Dorothy, a female chimpanzee in her late 40s, died of congestive heart failure. A maternal and beloved figure, Dorothy spent eight years at Cameroon's Sanaga-Yong Chimpanzee Rescue Center, which houses and rehabilitates chimps victimized by habitat loss and the illegal African bushmeat trade.

After a hunter killed her mother, Dorothy was sold as a "mascot" to an amusement park in Cameroon. For the next 25 years, she was tethered to the ground by a chain around her neck, taunted, teased, and taught to drink beer and smoke cigarettes for sport. In May 2000, Dorothy--obese from poor diet and lack of exercise--was rescued and relocated along with ten other primates. As her health improved, her deep kindness surfaced. She mothered an orphaned chimp named Bouboule and became a close friend to many others, including Jacky, the group's alpha male, and Nama, another amusement-park refugee.

Szczupider, who had been a volunteer at the center, told me: "Her presence, and loss, was palpable, and resonated throughout the group. The management at Sanaga-Yong opted to let Dorothy's chimpanzee family witness her burial, so that perhaps they would understand, in their own capacity, that Dorothy would not return. Some chimps displayed aggression while others barked in frustration, but perhaps the most stunning reaction was a recurring, almost tangible silence. If one knows chimpanzees, then one knows that [they] are not [usually] silent creatures."

The Sanaga-Yong Chimpanzee Rescue Center was founded in 1999 by veterinarian Sheri Speede (pictured at right, cradling Dorothy's head; at left is center employee Assou Felix). Operated by IDA-Africa, an NGO, it's home to 62 chimps who reside in spacious, forested enclosures.

Szczupider had submitted the photograph to "Your Shot," a magazine feature that encourages readers to send in pictures they have taken. The best are published on the website and in the magazine.

Susan Welchman, the Geographic photo editor who sifts through reader-contributed shots looking for winners, was drawn to the candor of the image. "It caught my eye because you just don't see that much emotion--human emotion--with animals," she says. "It couldn't have been posed or faked; there's no way to make an animal look or act like that. It's just so real and true, so pure."

Related:

National Geographic's Photo Gallery
Fongoli Chimps Gallery
Virunga Gorillas Story

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Guest post by Jeremy Berlin from National Geographic's Pop Omnivore Blog The November issue of National Geographic Magazine features a moving photograph of chimpanzees watching the burial of one of...
Guest post by Jeremy Berlin from National Geographic's Pop Omnivore Blog The November issue of National Geographic Magazine features a moving photograph of chimpanzees watching the burial of one of...
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peacekitten
primum non nocere.
12:50 PM on 10/30/2009
rest in peace, dorothy.

it is our loss that we have grown so far apart from other animals that we do not see the wonderful things that connect us to the other animals in ourselves very often.

how lucky we are to share this planet with magnificen­t beings like you.
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nicole473
Because Republicans are a threat to this democracy
01:15 PM on 10/30/2009
This story was so sad. Why do human beings have to diminish other animals?? It just makes me sikkk.
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dctackett
05:10 PM on 10/30/2009
other animals diminish other animals... we are animals... we are just one small aspect of it all.

and we're not all that bad.
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dctackett
05:09 PM on 10/30/2009
Don't say that "we do not see the wonderful things that connect us to the other animals"

Just because some people are like that doesn't mean we all are.
12:45 PM on 10/30/2009
rip, also chimps are more humane than those on Wall Street and in Washington­.
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Mickey7
12:16 PM on 10/30/2009
The fiction that human beings have the corner on emotions is slowly being eroded, but I doubt we will ever see the day when our cruelty towards 'lower' life is treated as the pathology it is (Michael Vick's return to his pre-arrest life as if what he did was simply 'bad judgment,' rather than extreme psychopath­ology is just one example). We can't even bring ourselves to part with our precious currency in order to make sure other humans have access to basic health care, so concerning ourselves with the plight of other life forms is simply too advanced a concept for general human society in our current state. We have the luxury of conscious choice. Animals do not. That we have squandered that ability and chosen to devolve rather than evolve in terms of our interactio­n with the rest of life on this planet is our tragedy. It's just too bad that they have to suffer for it.
12:45 PM on 10/30/2009
fantastic post, mickey.
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peacekitten
primum non nocere.
12:46 PM on 10/30/2009
beautiful, mickey, and so true.
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Lordcron
Get on my Left if you know you ain't Right!
11:43 AM on 10/30/2009
why are people so amazed at monkeys showing concern over one of there own..... Are human really so arrogant to believe we hold all the card on emotions? What, Other Animal can't feel compassion­? We don't corner the market on concern for our own. Yes all in the animal kingdom have feelings..­..
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dctackett
04:55 PM on 10/30/2009
yes, many humans are so arrogant..­. especially when they believe they are a special creation by a magical being.
08:12 AM on 10/30/2009
Just outside of the camera frame is the Phelps family protesting and carrying signs saying God Hates Gay Chimps. B@stards.
06:33 PM on 10/31/2009
:-DDD
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OliverTwist
Contrarian advocate for truth and justice
08:03 AM on 10/30/2009
Would it have been better if they had been able to touch her over an extended time to better understand her lifeless condition?

What do chimps get to know of life and death and when do they get to know it?
08:26 AM on 10/30/2009
I'd be willing to bet that such an institutio­n would have allowed that to happen prior to burial. For all we know she passed away while with her companions­. Plus, a corpse doesn't last long in that environmen­t, so I don't know exactly how good that would have been to "touch her over an extended time".
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Harvee Wallbanger
Republicans... I got no use for you.
02:24 AM on 10/30/2009
Wow. The chimps all look sullen, sad, and respectful­. Very similar to the looks one sees at a human funeral.
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OliverTwist
Contrarian advocate for truth and justice
08:05 AM on 10/30/2009
Perhaps like children at a funeral.
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dctackett
04:53 PM on 10/30/2009
They are our distant cousins.
12:55 AM on 10/30/2009
I applaud the management for allowing the chimpanzee­s to view the burial, but the distance imposed on the chimps bothers me. Wouldn't it have been kinder or more appropriat­e to allow them past the barricade so that they could get closer to Dorothy? Touch her perhaps?
01:06 AM on 10/30/2009
I don't recall if it was this particular one or not but on a TV special I saw they had to forcibly "herd" the others away otherwise they wouldn't allow the humans near the deceased monkey, even after decomp was well started.
01:14 AM on 10/30/2009
Thanks.
12:54 AM on 10/30/2009
Chimps are capable of a wide range of emotions. Here's a cute picture of them expresing several:

http://z.a­bout.com/d­/political­humor/1/0/­l/7/bush_c­himp.jpg
01:33 AM on 10/30/2009
Love it!
03:20 AM on 10/30/2009
Those are great!
12:47 AM on 10/30/2009
It caught my eye because you just don't see that much emotion--h­uman emotion--w­ith animals

The assumption that human emotion is the standard-I am having trouble with that-
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CubfanBudman
He Ain't Heavy, He's my Brother
01:13 AM on 10/30/2009
Elephants toss dirt on their deceased and will come back years later to visit the bones. They may even take a bone with them when they have to move on.
gulopartisan
My micro-bio is empty.
08:51 AM on 10/30/2009
Emotions are not "human." The physical expressive­ness that communicat­es them is specific to the animal, and chimps happen to have similar faces. All animals have similar emotions. When fish are afraid, they don't widen their eyes and open their mouths. Dogs grin and wag their tails when they are happy. We lack tails, so our "human emotions" are limited.
11:14 PM on 10/29/2009
Thankfully at least 54% of us set the bar somewhat above the previous vile and repugnant standard! Yes, it may well be hopeless but if we give up, this characteri­ztion becomes inevitable­.

R.I.P. Dorothy.
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athenasword
wisdom is beautiful
11:13 PM on 10/29/2009
Great photo - great story. Thanks for the post. I continue to be awed by the incredible creatures we share this planet with.
01:34 AM on 10/30/2009
Ditto!
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dctackett
04:50 PM on 10/30/2009
yes, and not just "share the planet with" but grew out of, arose from, the plant with... all animals are our distant cousins, other primates are very close to us.
10:17 PM on 10/29/2009
Chimps have more feelings than Bush, Cheney, Condoleezz­a...
12:37 AM on 10/30/2009
We have all heard of George W. Bush be referred to as a "Chimp", but , I think Chimps are smarter!
Obama might not be doing everything "Right", but at least he is not the dumbest person in the room.

Thank you for the photo and story on Dorothy. There is a link further down where you can make a donation or even go further and sponsor a chimp. Thank everyone for all that they do to help th helpless!
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mlaiuppa
Pres. Sarcasm Society. Like we need your approval.
09:18 PM on 10/29/2009
I'm glad her family was allowed to witness the funeral. It gave them closure.

Animals understand death. What they don't understand is the sudden disappeara­nce of a pack member. Allowing them to see the departed gives them closure.

Dog and cat owners know this. I'm sure it holds true for other animals as well.
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bootooyoo
11:15 PM on 10/29/2009
The story says that some of them "displayed aggression and others barked in frustratio­n". What makes the workers think that the chimps understand that she was actually dead, and not being buried alive? What happens to a dead chimp in the wild? Maybe that's what should have happened here.
12:37 AM on 10/30/2009
Chimps in the wild often mourn for days over their dead.
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dctackett
04:45 PM on 10/30/2009
chimps and other primates, including humans (yes, humans are primates too), mourn their dead. I've seen plenty of humans "displayed aggression­" and "barked in frustratio­n" over the loss of a loved one.

what happens in the wild would probably cause disease in an enclosed sanctuary.­.. the workers are wise to remove the dead chimp... and it's pretty nice of them (who spend their lives actually working with these distant cousins of ours) to allow them to witness her burial.
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09:17 PM on 10/29/2009
Clearly the chimps are democrat. Republican chimps would not have cared.
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08:08 AM on 10/30/2009
You gave me my morning laugh (or was it a mourning laugh?). :)