The Project

 

Creation of three poems for World Gorilla Day on September 24, 2021 and in support of The Cross River Gorilla Project (CRGP), a UK-based charity set up to support the conservation efforts of the critically endangered Cross River Gorilla and to provide support to the local rainforest communities.

Today there are only 300 estimated Cross River Gorillas left. They are one of the most critically endangered animals on the planet.  

Reading of one of Anthony’s poem at the CRPG’s virtual conference on the Cross River Gorilla on 24th of March 2022. The conference included a select panel of prestigious speakers, followed by a sequence of short stories. The first subject was the role the Cross River Gorilla plays in the ecosystem, then in the second part the subject up for discussion was how you change the international value of the Cross River Gorilla and the evolution and importance of community impact on nature valuation. 

‘Five Shooter - Gorilla: Opposable Thumb’

Part 1. Ancestor: Handed Down

Once there was a coming together

Inauspicious, completely natural

A merging of genes to create a new life

The father was an Ape ancestor

The mother too, but more

A mutation made her the mother

Of a new line, unremarkable at first

More than two million years ago, Homo

Until the arrival, the Eve of Modern Humans

The mitochondrial mother of all, traceable

Take an evolutionary leap forward

Here today, looking back

A Gorilla once crossed a river

Unremarkable, completely natural

But we won’t let it come our way

Back in time we too crossed that river

Many in fact, some left mother Africa

Never relaxed, until far we spread

And made this world our own

The Cross River Gorilla may yet fall

Victim of our victory over all

Think, that could have been us

If another species won the race

We owe it to them and all

Not to do the irreversible

(Any more!)

Evolutionary biology made us revolutionary

Because of, among other things

An opposable Thumb

Part 2. Gorilla - Opposable Thumb

How do you choose a Gorilla

To represent the Thumb, opposable

Maker of the Primate hand, manual

Made us what we are, tool makers, creators

Each Gorilla species is endangered

Eastern Lowland, Western Lowland

Mountain, those in the mist

All would be missed if we let go

If we don’t talk to the hand

So we will go with Cross River

A region, a home for this species

Gorilla gorilla dielhi, never say die

Most at risk, extend our hand

Of protection, get a grip 

Our closest relatives, hold on

Lebialem Highlanders, Cameroon 

Nigeria shares their home too

At home in this hotspot, biodiverse

Future not assured, neither safety

Without our hand, intervening 

To ensure they are left alone

To be Cross River Gorillas, keep crossing

Another Gorilla in the mist, sun montane

Cloud Forests, mysterious and wondrous

Enshrouded, let them remain obscured

Just by the clouds, hidden from danger

While they make their nests, bed on the ground

Females and young may prefer the trees

And to be near Silverback protection

Family group bodyguard, very handy

Recognised as a subspecies in ‘57

Thought to have gone extinct by ‘70

Thankfully some were still around

Enter NGOs, had to step in, and later

The Cross River Gorilla Project was born 

Standing with them, the 300 that remain

Fragmenting, their only domain

Human communities across the border

Engaged in education and conservation

The only bulwark for the last stand

Learning to share their forest patchwork

Part 3. Descendants: Hand Hold

Like the Gorilla, our last digit symbol

The Primate hand, enabled by the Thumb

Grasped the evolutionary advantage

The Gorilla for hand to mouth, climbing

Rudimentary tool making, grooming

(Though held back by knuckle walking)

For us to pick up a camera or a gun

A weapon or a book, a connected device

Operate machines, pull handles

Paint, sculpt, write, create, calculate

Sign our language, and sign language

Even offensive gestures, or respect

Wave in friendship or clench a fist to fight

Set a snare for bushmeat, or a camera trap

To let us know the Gorillas are still there

Our hand is a creator and destroyer

Sometimes extend it, sometimes hold it back

All because we have an opposable thumb

But our hand is not only human, it’s primate

We inherited it, like the Cross River Gorilla

Took it far and wide, used it to change the world

Not all, or even mostly, for the better

Yet we have a name to be wise

And a hand to enable wisdom and kindness

To build and restore according to conscience

Remember the importance of the Thumb

So we can talk to the hand

Get a grip on what’s important

Go back and cross that river again

Metaphorically 

With the Gorillas

#fellowsentients

Hand in hand

 

The Thumb holds it all together

The hand holds the fate of all

By Anthony E. Lovell

Poem Reading

Poem reading by Anthony E. Lovell inspired by the critically endangered Cross River Gorilla (only 300 remain in the wild). The reading took place on March 24, 2022 as part of a virtual conference organised by The Cross River Gorilla Project in London: Gorillas in Crisis, Conversations on Conservation.

 
Previous
Previous

Project One

Next
Next

Project Three