Lifestyles Report …Justice for Harambe

A June 20, 2015 photo provided by the Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden shows Harambe, a western lowland gorilla, who was fatally shot Saturday, May 28, 2016, to protect a 3-year-old boy who had entered its exhibit. (Jeff McCurry/Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden via The Cincinatti Enquirer via AP)
A June 20, 2015 photo provided by the Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden shows Harambe, a western lowland gorilla, who was fatally shot Saturday, May 28, 2016, to protect a 3-year-old boy who had entered its exhibit. (Jeff McCurry/Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden via The Cincinatti Enquirer via AP)

I can only imagine how that mother felt. I’m sure she was asking herself how did my son get away from me and into the paws of the gorilla. That is what I keep asking as well. How was it so easy for the child to get into the gorilla’s space? Doesn’t the zoo test every angle to make sure that the gorillas cannot get out and humans cannot get in?
There is a large portion of the population that wants justice for the animal and they want the mother charged. These animals are not human they are wild animals and they look at humans as food. Does anyone remember the story about the lady who kept a large chimpanzee as a pet for years? She even served wine to the chimp. One day a friend who had come to the house frequently came over and the chimp was loose the chimp attacked her and torn off her face.
Here is another story a little closer to home.  Remember the mother who reportedly daggled her little boy over the painted dog cage at the Pittsburgh Zoo so he could get a better look. The mother lost her grip and the boy fell into the cage and was eaten by the painted dogs.
A lot of people think the Cincinnati Zoo issue is racial because the family is Black but they wanted to charge the mother in the Pittsburgh story as well and she was White. What they didn’t do in the Pittsburgh case was dig into the background of the father who was not there when the incident happened just as the father in Cincinnati was not there. The zookeepers did the right thing. They saved the child.
(Email the columnist at debbienorrell@aol.com)
 
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