Gorillas head to the City: Natural History Museum, part 1
Category: Art of Conservation (AoC) | Date: Jul 28 2008 | By: Julie
Do kids from the city like mountain gorillas?
Have they visited the park where golden monkeys live?
Do they ever see forest elephants in their back yard?
A few months ago, I received an email from Sophia Milosevic Bijleveld - she and her husband live in Kigali, Rwanda’s captial city which is approximately a 2 hour drive from where I live in the Northern Province and Parc National des Volcans where the mountain gorillas live. I was thrilled to learn more about her work at the Kandt House Museum of Natural History in Kigali and pleased that she was interested in learning more about our project.
Click here to see a photo of Richard Kandt’s house that is now the Natural History Museum and more information provided by the Institute of National Museums of Rwanda.
Conversations with Sophia were refreshing and we started planning for art from Art of Conservation students in the north to be brought down to the city for an exhibition. Sophia received final approval from the director of the Institute of National Museums, Professor KANIMBA and a date was set.
Team AoC loaded the trucks with art - art made from students from the classes we just finished - and once we arrived in Kigali we got busy hanging the work at the museum.

Sophia contacted schools in Kigali and arranged for field trips to the museum. Here, Valerie and Sophia with a group of school children discussing the lesson Nzeli and the Flying Dart: Dr. Lucy Tells a Story.

Fahad, at the far right, speaks with students visiting the museum from APACOPE (Association des Parents pour la Contribution a la Promotion de l’Education).

Above, Eric and students look at watercolors - Animals of the Virunga Forest: gorilla, golden monkey, forest elephant, and forest buffalo.
Sophia, Valerie, Eric and Fahad received many interesting questions from the children.
Here are a few:
1. Do gorillas eat bananas?
2. How do gorillas form their families?
3. How do they get to know each other?
4. Do they breast-feed?
5. Does HIV/AIDS come from gorillas?
6. Do gorillas have boundaries? Aren’t there gorillas in Congo and Uganda?
7. People say we come from gorillas? Why do gorillas still exist?
8. Between humans and gorillas, who appeared on the planet before the other?
9. What would happen if these animals no longer existed?
Some of the kids laughed when they learned that some of the drawings were made by adults and insisted they could draw better. Well, with the interactive sheets below, students soon had a chance to try for themselves.

After viewing and discussing the art, students drew gorillas, answered questions in their own words about conservation, and drew a sad and happy expression. Interactive sheet #1 in English and Kinyarwanda.

Here, we draw the body of a forest buffalo. Interactive sheet #2 in French.
Thank you Sophia, for giving us the opportunity to help bridge a gap between city streets and forests where the last remaining mountain gorillas inhabit.
Coming up next, more scenes from the Kigali.
Julie
Tags: Art of Conservation (AoC), Gorilla Doctors @ WildlifeDirect, Parc National des Volcans (PNV), Team AoC (Team Art of Conservation)
6 Responses to “Gorillas head to the City: Natural History Museum, part 1”
Paula, on 28 Jul 2008
Fantastic! I’m so sorry that Dino and I missed you last month when I was in Rwanda. I wish we could get you to replicate over here too! Perhaps do a traveling exhibit to the Nairobi Museum?
artforgorillas, on 28 Jul 2008
HI Paula,
I can hardly wait until I meet up with you, whether it be Rwanda or Nairobi! Please keep me posted if there is an opportunity for us to share work from Rwandan students with people in Kenya. We would be there in a split second.
Julie
Pam/Shell Beach, CA, on 28 Jul 2008
Nice post. I’d like a copy of the interactive sheets for my own students. Can you provide a link? Thanks.
Art for Gorillas, Julie, on 28 Jul 2008
Hi Pam,
I’ll get the interactive sheets to you soon.
Take care, Julie
sandra Haji-Ahmed, on 29 Jul 2008
i would love to be in touch with Sophia. Today is my daughter narura’s birthday and she loved animals. I believe Sophia knew Narura.
artforgorillas, on 30 Jul 2008
Dear Sandra, I’ll forward your comment to Sophia today. Happy birthday to your daughter!!! Julie
Trackback URI | Comments RSS
Leave a Reply