Melissa, NARN Northwest
Animal Rights Network
September 2017
Some of the best fun you can have is reading blog posts from the
Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, where the chimpanzees and
humans together create heartwarming, inspirational — and often educational —
photos and stories. Thank you to sanctuary co-director Diana Goodrich, who
recently wrote this post about chimpanzees and circuses, and generously gave
her permission for us to republish it here.
An eight-year-old chimpanzee named Chance has been in the news lately.
Chance is owned by the Rosaire family and has been used in entertainment for
his entire life. He has appeared in commercials, television shows and
movies, including The Wolf of Wall Street.
The reason Chance and the Rosaires have been in the news recently is due to
this footage that PETA obtained of Chance performing with a leash around his
neck.
Jody and Burrito
Thirty years ago, it wasn’t uncommon for chimpanzees to appear in
circuses and roadside zoo performances. In fact, Jamie, Burrito, and
possibly Jody were all used as performers before their years as biomedical
research subjects. They lived with trainers and were made to perform in
order to entertain people.
Thankfully, we have learned a lot about the nature of chimpanzees over the
years and, as a society, we’ve begun to question the appropriateness of
using intelligent, social animals in this way. More and more people agree
that whales belong in the ocean, not in small aquariums, that elephants
shouldn’t be used as props for people to sit on, and that chimpanzees should
not be raised by humans and taught to perform tricks just to amuse us.
The Rosaire family has been in the circus business for multiple generations,
so it’s understandable that they are stubbornly holding on to their way of
life and their views of exotic animals that many, if not most, people have
reconsidered.
They argue that they are providing sanctuary for the animals in their care,
and they even have legal nonprofit status and the word “sanctuary” in their
name Big Cat Habitat and Gulf Coast Sanctuary.
Certainly, anyone who is familiar with true sanctuaries would immediately
realize that putting a chimpanzee on a leash and having people pay to view
him perform an act is a circus, not a charitable sanctuary, and that those
entities have very different missions. But for those not as familiar, I’m
not surprised that the Rosaires have their defenders.
Jamie and Burrito
It may be true that the Rosaires feel love for the animals in their
care, but that doesn’t mean the animals are being afforded the life that
they should or could have in an accredited sanctuary.
For more information on the Rosaires, see this page, and for how to
distinguish between roadside zoos and sanctuaries, read this from CSNW and
this from the North American Primate Sanctuary Alliance and share with
others.
When you see chimpanzees on television, in movies, or pictured on greeting
cards, stop to consider what kind of a life that chimpanzee has. Exotic
animal circuses survive only because people continue to pay to see animal
performances. There are fewer and fewer chimpanzees being used in
entertainment because fewer and fewer people think that they should be used
in this way.
We hope the chimpanzees who remain in the entertainment business in the U.S.
will be able to experience a different way of life someday, like Jamie,
Burrito, and Jody, where the focus is on providing them with hundreds of
choices that allow them to be who they are as chimpanzees and where their
best interests are the top priority.
Jody, Jamie, Annie and Foxie
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