Apes and monkeys exhibition in the museum


Ring-tailed lemur and twin babies

Today, to the museum; where there is an exhibition about apes and monkeys (and about prosimians).

The exhibition centers on the social lives of the various primate species, including communication. It is especially aimed at children, and has many films, and games and other interactive features.

In Pictures: Ring-tailed lemurs sniff out best mates: here.

There were also other temporary exhibitions in the museum. The one on the red pacu caught in Leiden was still there, though moved to the other end of the bridge.

In the photo exhibition Earthsong, one photo was about the Veidivötn lakes in Iceland; where, long ago, I had seen common loons swimming.

Auschwitz survivor and anti fascist Leon Greenman, 1910-2008


Auschwitz survivor Leon Greenman

By Claire Dissington and Julie Waterson in Britain:

Leon Greenman 1910-2008

“Young and old alike must learn about the Holocaust as warning against the dangers of racism. There is no difference in colour or religion. If I had survived to betray the dead it would have been better not to survive. We must not forget. Please do not forget.”
Leon Greenman, Auschwitz survivor 98288

The movement against fascism has lost one of its most dedicated fighters with the death of Leon Greenman, aged 97.

After surviving five concentration camps, including Auschwitz, and enduring a forced march in which many others died, he pledged his life to educating others against the Holocaust.

Thousands have heard Leon’s moving story, with many becoming anti-fascist activists as a result.

Leon was born into a large working class family in the East End of London. His family moved to the Netherlands and he became a bookseller, married and lived in Rotterdam with his wife and son.

As the threat of war rose, Leon, a British citizen, had been contemplating a move back to London.

He changed his mind when in 1938 he heard prime minister Neville Chamberlain declare there would be “no war with Germany”.

Leon traced his distrust of politicians back to that statement. He would tell his audiences never to trust the government, urging them instead to create a movement that could prevent a repetition of the Holocaust.

When the Second World War came, it blew his life apart.The Nazis invaded the Netherlands and persecuted its Jewish population, eventually deporting them to the death camps.

Leon, his wife Else, and his two and a half year old son Barney were bundled onto cattle trucks and sent to Auschwitz. Leon last glimpsed his wife and child as they entered the camp – both perished in the gas chambers.

Leon believed education to be a powerful weapon against the Nazis and was awarded an OBE for his work in schools.

But he was also a firm believer in participating directly in the struggle against fascism.

He was an enthusiastic supporter of the Anti Nazi League and Unite Against Fascism and joined in many demonstrations.

He gained immense enjoyment from attending Love Music Hate Racism events, sharing the stage with singer Pete Doherty in Trafalgar Square in 2005. He loved young people and sparked off their energy.

Aged 82, Leon led the 60,000-strong Unity demonstration in 1993 that demanded the closure of the British National Party (BNP) headquarters in Welling, south east London.

As the police charged, he was bundled over a wall, narrowly escaping the truncheons. Months later, he led the victorious procession to a carnival to celebrate the defeat of the BNP’s first councillor in east London.

What a fighter Leon was. Of the 700 Dutch Jews who were transported from Westerbork, only Leon and one other ­survived.

In fact, many more Dutch Jews were transported from Westerbork. Maybe the 700 figure is about one transport.

His determination was matched only by his ­stubbornness.

On one occasion in 1994, the Anti Nazi League organised to stop a fascist “Blood and Honour” gig. It resulted in us being chased by the police and attacked by Nazi thugs.

Leon was put into a taxi and sent home for his safety. Five minutes later, we turned around and there he was – back at the front of the demonstration waving his walking stick.

That summed up Leon, a man with no regard for himself who would do anything to fight back against the Nazis.

He will be sorely missed – and we will never forget him.

See also here.

Jewish radicals of the East End in London: here.

Britain in the Second World War, 1939-1940: here.

Warsaw ghetto uprising: here.

New research about Dutch slave trade in Burma


This is a video about the Maluku islands, especially the Banda islands.

Often, people think about the Dutch 17th and 18th century slave trade that only the West Indies Company did that, to Suriname and the Antilles. However, also the Dutch East India Company (VOC) did it.

Recently, the web site of Leiden university published, about new research on this:

The dark side of the VOC mentality

The ‘East India Company mentality’ was held up as a positive example to Dutch people of today by Rightist Prime Minister Balkenende.

The kingdom of Arakan, in the border region between Bangladesh and Burma, was the biggest source of slaves of the VOC. The need for labour at the spice plantations on the Banda islands transformed the slave market from a supply-directed to a demand-directed market.

There was such a big need for (imported slave) labour in the Banda archipelago, as the original inhabitants had been massacred by the VOC for not agreeing to the economic conditions of the VOC in the nutmeg trade.

Rare birds in Kazakhstan


Dalmatian pelicans, Pelecanus crispus

From BirdLife:

Kazakhstan study helps to identify wealth of new IBAs

Identifying Important Bird Areas (IBAs), and ensuring their long-term protection, cannot be achieved without detailed information of the bird populations occurring within them. This was highlighted by a study published this month in BirdLife’s journal Bird Conservation International. The authors produced new data from Kazakhstan highlighting the importance of land surrounding the protected Korgalzhynskiy nature reserve. This new information has been used to include the wider area in a new inventory of IBAs in Central Asia, which identifies 124 IBAs covering more than 16,000,000 ha in Kazakhstan alone.

The study took place in and around the protected Korgalzhynskiy reserve. It is a vast area of mosaic wetland and grassland located in the Tengiz-Korgalzhyn region of Central Kazakhstan. The study discovered that more than 40% of the entire flyway populations of Endangered White-headed Duck Oxyura leucocephala and Vulnerable Dalmatian Pelican Pelecanus crispus occurred within this exceptional region for birds.

See also here.

The RSPB is supporting the initiative to help the saiga antelope and its Steppes habitat in Kazakhstan, which is home to a unique and rare species including the great bustard and the critically endangered social lapwing: here.

Monitoring of Important Bird Areas and protected areas in Africa: here.

Spring Alive sees early arrival of migratory birds to Europe: here.

Photo exhibition about Arctic and Antarctic


Wim van Passel, walrus in the ArcticFrom Naturalis museum in Leiden in the Netherlands:

New photo exhibition with landscape photos by Wim van Passel

Naturalis in Leiden presents, from 18 April on, a new photo exhibition: Langs de polen [Along the poles]. Panoramas of over three meter in length give impressions of the breathtaking scenery; smaller detailed photos show the beauty of, and the differences between, Arctic and Antarctic. The exhibition on the bridge [to the main museum building] will be until 9 November 2008.

International Polar Year in the Netherlands: here.

Polar bears: here.

Meteorites, Antarctica’s unique space rocks: here.

Arctic pollution’s surprising history: here.

Putty-nosed monkeys have a ‘language’


This video says about itself:

Putty-Nosed Monkey

23 March 2015

Odzala, Republic of the Congo

Another video which used to be on YouTube used to say about itself:

Orphaned putty nose monkeys at Cercopan‘s primate rehabilitation centre, Calabar, Nigeria.

From British daily The Independent:

‘Pyow-pyow’: how the putty-nosed monkey tells its friends there’s a leopard coming

By Steve Connor, Science Editor

Tuesday, 11 March 2008

A troop of monkeys in west Africa has been found to use different combinations of calls to convey different meanings in what is believed to be one of the first experimental demonstrations of rudimentary language ability in wild animals.

The putty-nosed monkeys living in Nigeria were already known to use different alarm calls to warn each other about the presence of predators, but now scientists have found that their linguistic ability goes a step further.

Male putty-nosed monkeys are able to combine different types of alarm calls to indicate their identity, what they have seen and whether they intend to flee – and all of this information is recognised by other members of the troop, a study has found.

Klaus Zuberbühler, of St Andrew’s University, said his research into wild putty-nosed monkeys demonstrated that their linguistic ability shows intriguing similarities with human speech, in that they can combine sounds to convey various meanings. “In linguistics, ‘morphemes’ are usually defined as the smallest meaningful units in the grammar of a language. Our research revealed some interesting parallels in the vocal behaviour of forest monkeys and this feature of human language,” he said.

The monkeys have two basic alarm calls – “hacks” and “pyows”, and they use them to warn each other about different predators – for example, a “pyow-pyow” signals a leopard. Dominant male monkeys are also able to combine “hacks” and “pyows” into a unique sequence that conveys important information, such as “I am about to travel, follow me”, according to Dr Zuberbühler, who, with his colleague Kate Arnold, carried out the study published in the journal Current Biology.

The species is also known as greater white-nosed monkey.

Also on Bioko: Fast Fact Attack: Endangered Species No. 82 – Pennant’s Red Colobus: here.

Massive domestic spying in the USA


USA: Keith Olbermann gives a special comment on President Bush’s promise to veto any extension of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act that does not grant telecommunications companies immunity: here.

By Bill Van Auken:

Massive NSA operation exposed as Congress prepares vote on domestic spying bill

11 March 2008

As the Democratic-led House of Representatives prepares to vote on legislation that essentially strips the American people of the constitutional protection from warrantless spying, the Wall Street Journal published an article Monday detailing the massive scale and intrusive character of the government’s illegal surveillance operations.

The Senate has already passed—with substantial bipartisan support—domestic spying legislation that rubberstamps the Bush administration’s demand for virtually unfettered wiretapping within the US. At the same time, the Senate bill provides retroactive immunity for telecommunications companies that violated their customers’ privacy rights by collaborating in the government’s illegal surveillance.

Update 15 March 2008: here.

A federal judge has rebuffed the Obama administration’s latest attempt to defend illegal Bush-era eavesdropping, ruling that a now defunct US Islamic charity, Al-Haramain, and two of its lawyers are entitled to money damages because government agents failed to obtain a warrant before tapping their phones: here.