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Lone Droscher-Nielsen & Orangutan Island

lone1.jpgBy Eirik Knutzen
Copley News Service

Only a thin wall separates Lone Droscher-Nielsen from the 24 orphaned babies sleeping in her house every night. And she doesn’t sleep very well, as she is awakened many times during the night by terrified infants whimpering, crying and screaming for their mothers.

Often emaciated, sick and wounded, they are the children of “the people of the forest” - who share 97 percent of man’s DNA - left to die in the steaming tropical rain forest of Central Kalimantan (Indonesian Borneo) after watching their parents slashed to death with machetes or blown to bits by shotguns fired by illegal loggers.

Helpless, the tiny, traumatized creatures with long red hair and big pleading eyes cling to each other - or caring humans with warm hearts, soothing voices and gentle hands. And these are the relative handful of lucky tykes - all Pongo pygmaeus, aka orangutans - in the sanctuary of Droscher-Nielsen’s home at the Nyaru Menteng Rescue and Rehabilitation Center she founded in 1999.

“I sleep next door and hear the babies begging for milk when they wake up, but after 12 years of sleeping with them, I can’t do it anymore,” said the 43-year-old former SAS flight attendant from Aalborg, Denmark. “It may not add up to a lot of rest, but two baby sitters work through the night now to take care of every infant’s needs. But I’m there if any animal is sick.”

Working with the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation, Droscher-Nielsen now manages the largest primate project on the planet. With 631 orangutans fairly evenly divided between young orphans and wild adults currently in her care, her job is actually more like a 24-7 situation requiring a great deal of diplomacy, incredible administrative detail and ceaseless fundraising.

Money is always a serious issue as no orangutan is turned away regardless of physical condition in a feverish bid to stave off the orangutan’s almost inevitable extinction by 2020. No one knows how many orangutans are left in the wild of Southeast Asia (a vast majority reside in Indonesian Borneo and Sumatra), but an educated estimate ranges between 25,000 to 30,000. Unfortunately, some 5,000 orangutans are expected to die annually over the next few years, mostly due to corporate greed, habitat destruction, misguided ecologists and individuals capable of unspeakable animal cruelty.

Droscher-Nielsen and the supportive Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation now entails some 100 employees ranging from veterinarians and lab technicians to cooks and orangutan nannies.

Finding creative ways of obtaining new funding is not one of her strengths, according to Droscher-Nielsen, but as luck would have it, she works with a number of people who excel at raising money.

“Some of the girls here were inspired by feature films like ‘Lord of the Flies,’ but with a twist,” she explained, laughing.

“Instead of children ending up on an island to love and hate each other, we have 42 young adult orangutans introduced on a 100-acre island in the middle of Borneo. Human support is quickly withdrawn and they are forced to rely on each other to sharpen their survival skills for the next, and last, level: the return to their natural habitat some day.”

And, borrowing bits and pieces from the documentary “March of the Penguins” and the intimate, long-range examination of animal behavior in the Animal Planet documentary series “Meerkat Manor,” “Orangutan Island” was born.

The fun - and drama - starts when the mischievous band of red apes is dumped from the boat and learns to fend for themselves, recorded by an unobtrusive film crew.

“We hope viewers will fall in love with them all and in the process raise the awareness of the plight of the orangutans, who are in dire need of help,” said the self-taught Danish primate expert.

She wants everyone to see her personal favorites, the sweet and lovable Cha Cha, the sexy Jasmine, the feisty Daisy, the happy Bandit Boys, the randy Saturnus and the wily Hamlet - and how they cope.

“The primary reason the rehabilitated orangutans are with us today is the destruction of their habitat,” said Droscher-Nielsen.

In essence, enormous amounts of mature trees are felled by illegal loggers who sell the wood to Chinese and Indian factories making them into coffee tables for the European and American markets. The ancient trees that provided the great apes with food and shelter have been replaced by palm oil saplings providing biodiesel fuel that burns cleaner in cars and ingredients used in thousands of products from hand soap to cooking oil. Cleaner air and armpits mean another orangutan dies soon in Southeast Asia.

Droscher-Nielsen, the daughter of a carpenter and a homemaker, stumbled over her true calling when she arrived on vacation 14 years ago at a compound in Borneo’s Tanjung Puting National Park run by Canadian primate expert Dr. Birute Galdikes.

“I have always been lucky and wanted to give something back,” she explained. “When I saw the malnourished, intelligent, childlike orangutans with outstretched hands and pleading eyes, I had to save them. I had no choice.”

10 Responses to “Lone Droscher-Nielsen & Orangutan Island”

  1. guy Says:

    Lone Dröscher Nielsen

    Bonjour,
    j’ai vue une emmission sur toi.
    je suis Français j’ai 50 ans, si tuconnais le Français ou tu peux faire traduire.
    si oui laisse moi une adresse msn ou mail

    biz Guy

  2. arranz jean Says:

    CHÈRE LONE DROSCHER,
    POUVEZ VOUS ME DONNER VOTRE EMAIL?
    CORDIALEMENT.

    jeanarranz@hotmail.com

    -JEAN ARRANZ
    13 avenue de l’observatoire
    PARIS FRANCE

  3. michel pillet Says:

    Hi i’m french i would like to have the mail address of Lone Droscher Nielsen

  4. Tanguy Céline Says:

    hello, your are formidable !
    Merci beaucoup très amicalement Céline

  5. HUBERT TOURNUT jacqueline Says:

    Bonjour,
    Très sensible au devenir des grands singes, y compris et surtout les orangs outan, je suis adhérente à l’institut Jane Goodall. J’ai vu aujourd’hui un reportage très émouvant sur Lone Dröscher Nielsen, que je ne connaissais pas et je me demande comment je peux, moi qui habite en France, vous aider.
    Nous devons garder l’espoir de sauver tous ces êtres merveilleux..
    Très cordialement.
    Jacqueline

  6. Nathalie Mannarelli Says:

    Hi Lone,

    I also saw you on tv and I didn’t know about your rehabilitation center. I believe that you must be very tired fitting for so many years for those orangutans.
    Please let us know your e-mail adress i would love to be able to talk to you directly.
    respectfully
    nathalie

  7. Jenny Harris Says:

    Dear Lone,
    My name is Jenny Harris and I love orangutans to. I think what you are doing is great. I want to help orangutans to. I am doing my speech at school on orangutans. My mom says when I get big I can do anything. I would love to help you if you ever have anyone come help you please let me. I work very hard and I am very strong. It would have to be in the summer when I am out of school. I bet my mom would help to. Can I please have your mailing address so I can write you and your e-mail address.
    Love Jenny

  8. Jeannette C. Young Says:

    Dear Lone,
    I realize that time doesn’t allow you to respond to everyone. But I have followed you and your organization for the past year. There are so many organizations that seem to help in the plight of the orangutan, but your organization seems to inspire me. I am currently working as a school teacher in Las Vegas, Nevada USA, but have worked in the non-profit/fundraising arena for most of my adult life. I have contacted one other organization about helping fund raise, but there first words were? How much “wildlife” experience have you had? I am “NO” Steve Irwin, but I have a great love for what you are doing. I know that your organization has great needs, and I believe that somehow or someway I can help?? I have done my homework. I spent three months in a wheelchair healing from a crushed foot, and all I had was time reading, and reading, and researching on the Orangutan. I go back to school on 1/7 and I promised my class that we would adopt one or two of your babies. I do believe that I can do more? Orangutan Island is an awsome little show. They need to take a chance on it and give a hour time slot. Well, this is becoming a “War and Peace” novel!
    Lone, your doing what most women only dream of doing! I hope to meet you someday, but more importantly I hope I can find a way help those sweet, awsome faces.

    Warmest Regards,
    Jeannette C. Young M.Ed, M.A
    2117 Jadeleaf Ct.
    Las Vegas, Nevada 89134
    (702) 438-1848 or 497-6764
    tjtcac@cox.net

  9. Orangutan Heros - We Love You! « Orangutans! Says:

    [...] Learn more about this remarkable lady at Orangutan Outreach. [...]

  10. jessica Says:

    Dear Lone,
    Once I seen your show of Orangutan Island I fell in love. Not only for the remarkable, so human like Orangutans, but for the work that you do. You are a inspiration to me and many others. I truley hope there will be a second season of the show, which I am sure there will be….. But to you Miss.Lone, I love you for what you do and what you do is the the greatest thing ever.

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