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The Phenomenon of Monkeys as 'Surrogate
Children'
My name is
Rose. I can't have any children due to the fact of having
cancer as a child. Now I'm all grown up and wanting a child
of my own! So recently one of my best friends purchased a
monkey and she dressed it up and took it over to my house.
I fell in love with it. It reminded me so much of a child.
Then about a week ago she moved out of state and took the
monkey with her. And I made up my mind then and there that
I wanted a baby monkey. I haven't got a lot of money so is
there anyway you can help me and let me pay for a monkey in
payments? I'll even pay double if I could possibly pay in
payments. I would do anything to have an adorable little monkey.
I would be a great owner. I love animals. Would you please
help me find a monkey to buy?
The text above was taken verbatim from a recent e-mail message.
Rose's "appeal", under a subject line proclaiming,
"I am willing to give a monkey a good home!", represents
a phenomenon which can appropriately be referred to as 'monkeys
intended to act as surrogate children.'
Though this phenomenon has not reached levels to warrant
inclusion in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders, regretfully, it is not uncommon for childless couples,
individuals or "empty-nesters" to seek acquisition
of a baby monkey to fill a psychological void in their lives.
The presence of a completely dependent baby monkey may be
intended by many of these individuals to ward off loneliness
and depression due to a lack of human contact; or it is often
the case that the baby monkeys are used as objects for projection
of nurturing instincts. Regardless of any intentions, and
despite the fact that baby monkeys' features bear a striking
resemblance to human primates, those who believe simian primates
are a suitable "substitute" for human children are
- at best -misguided.
Setup For Disaster
Kari Bagnall, founder of 'Jungle Friends Primate Sanctuary'
in Gainesville, Florida is all too familiar with the tragic
consequences (for all concerned primates) that can result
when a formerly dependent baby monkey reaches adolescence.
It should not be shocking to learn that monkeys grow up to
be just that - monkeys.
For this article, Kari relayed two stories illustrating real-life
tragic endings of 'failed surrogate childhood' for Buddie
and Tyler, capuchin monkeys who are now permanent residents
of Jungle Friends:
Buddie, our little diabetic capuchin monkey, was the surrogate
child of two gay women. Buddie was the baby they could never
have, they loved and adored her, taking her with them everywhere
they went, including trips to the mall to sit on Santa's lap.
Yes, they thought they had found the perfect solution, until...At
the early age of three, Buddie started attacking one of the
women so viciously she was no longer able to go near Buddie
without provoking an attack. She was also not able to go near
her significant other when Buddie was around. This was tolerated
for a while until it became apparent that neither woman was
safe -- they called it a "blood bath" the last time
Buddie had escaped her cage when they were trying to get her
back in.
Tyler was the surrogate child of Vinny and Russ. Russ described
Tyler's early life biography in his own words:,
"Tyler was purchased to be the child that my lover Vinny
and I could never have. Being unable to afford to go the adoption
route that some gay couples have had success with, we settled
on Tyler as the closest we could come to fulfilling our dream
of having a child together."
"Tyler was originally named Vinny Jr. At first he was
so much like an infant. He wore diapers, cried for a bottle
in the middle of the night, wore baby clothes, and even looked
like a baby to us despite the fur and tail. "
"Vinny Jr., who we originally thought would bring us
closer together, ultimately became a frequent topic of arguments
we would have. My ex blamed me for Vinny Jr. not being trainable
since he felt that I would spoil the monkey and undo all of
his efforts to train him. Needless to say Vinny Jr. bonded
to me and not his other daddy. He became brazen enough to
start attacking his other dad when he was about two years
old. The minute my ex would say the "NO" word or
try to get him to do something he did not want to do, Vinny
Jr. would draw some blood from him. Once our baby started
attacking him, my ex turned away from him completely and wanted
nothing to do with him."
"In the beginning Vinny Jr. would go everywhere with
us but after the rebellions started we would fight constantly
since Vinny would want to leave the kid home alone while we
went out and I would not hear of it. "
"When we first got our baby he seemed like the perfect
child. We used to boast over the fact that our child would
remain a child for life and never grow up and leave us, nor
cost us a fortune for a college education. Of course once
reality set in and our baby started to behave like the monkey
it is innate for him to be, all our dreams were shattered."
At the age of five Tyler had heard the word "No"
one time too many! After the police left, the mace cleared
the air and Russ was stitched up, it seemed apparent to Russ
that there was something wrong with this picture. Russ contacted
Jungle Friends and in the end I went to New York to prepare
Tyler for his journey to the sanctuary.
It is very unfortunate that Buddie and Tyler were robbed
of the opportunity to remain with their biological mothers,
and that their natural inclinations were stifled by attempts
to mold them in to human children. However, in many ways,
Buddie and Tyler are lucky for they happen to be part of a
small minority of cast-off 'failed substitute children' who
are placed in a permanent reputable sanctuary. At Jungle Friends
Primate Sanctuary, Buddie and Tyler are permitted to be monkeys;
they live in social groups with other monkeys. No longer are
they forced against their will to behave unnaturally, nor
are they in danger of being harmed as a result of retaliation
and punishment for resisting "discipline".
Others are not as lucky. For example, another capuchin monkey,
named Gus, suffered greatly at the hands of the "empty-nesters"
who attempted to subrogate his natural inclinations. The woman
who fancied herself as "Gus' Mom" posted the following
on a public internet discussion list:
I went in to change Gus and he attack me the worst he has
ever attacked me. Garry heard me screaming from outside and
came in just in time to see Gus flying towards me face, blood
was everywhere, my blood, He grabbed the baseball bat and
knocked him off me into a chair and grabbed him by the neck
as hard as he could and threw him back into his cage and rushed
me to the hospital. I had 31 bites and tears on both arms,
hands, legs and my left ankle was hurt the worst and one bite
to my left boob. He kept attacking relentlessly, screaming
and coming at me, nothing whatsoever to provoke him. I had
just finished changing his diaper, he wheeled around, grabbed
the leash off the cabinet door and flew into me screaming
and attacking. I'm hurt really bad this time, walking on crutches.
The authorities were called in, they know it is a monkey (Gus),
pictures have been made of me and the monkey, he has gone
into quarantine and after six months, he is going to be put
to sleep. They wanted to take his head immediately. God above
knows I tried with that monkey...I've given him every excuse
to compensate for the other attacks...he did not want to get
out of bed....he wasn't ready to be put back into his cage....he
was testing me, the "alpha" bit; however, today
there is no excuse for what he did other than he is mean and
viscious or a brain tumor? You would have had to seen him
to know what I am talking about, the facial expression, the
screaming, the relentless attacks, coming at me over and over
again.
Dr. Shirley McGreal, Chairwoman of the International Primate
Protection League, an organization that has been championing
the cause of primate protection worldwide since 1973, states,
"That any human, male or female, could imagine they could
provide the quality of care for a baby monkey that a monkey
mother does is insane delusional thinking. Yet many people
do imagine that any monkey raised by a human is lucky.
An ongoing case involved a Brooklyn family who actually consider
that they "adopted" their pet Diana monkey, whom
they purchased from a dealer when she was a baby. The animal's
origin is not clear. If she was caught in the wild, someone
had shot her mother to get her. No primate mom would ever
hand over her baby - in fact, when baby primates die, their
mothers often carry them around for days trying to restore
life to their bodies. And, when a mother primate dies, her
sub-adult offspring often lose the will to live and join her
in death. If the pet Diana was born in captivity, her mother
and other members of her group would have to be tranquillized
to kidnap her. The Brooklyn family who bought her dressed
her in diapers and human clothing. But, then the family got
a wave of media sympathy when New York State authorities tried
to move her to a sanctuary, the cage in the background was
visible on TV. That's where the monkey would spend her nights
- alone, and no wild baby monkey ever sleeps alone."
"Before she was two years old, this family took two
steps to having a designer pet - designed for docility - they
had her uterus and ovaries removed and had all her canine
teeth extracted. Anyone doing this to a pre-pubertal human
child would be in trouble." "Later on this family
will have trouble as their monkey matures. Even if the human
family provided appropriate food and medical care, it can't
provide for a monkey's sexual needs. That's when the biting
and destructiveness gets really serious and the monkey is
likely to be discarded, to a sanctuary if she's lucky, or
maybe to a lab or back into the
breeding/dealing cycle."
Even people who do not oppose monkeys (and apes) being held
in captivity by private individuals often realize that there
are grave consequences to the erred belief that monkeys can
be "trained" to behave like human children.
Upon being asked if he is familiar with situations in which
monkeys are acquired to act as surrogate children, Kevin Ivester,
a former board member of the Simian Society of America, commented,
"I know of numerous examples and also know that in most
cases disappointment will be the end result for the human
and displacement (following mutilation, both physically and
mentally) of the monkey, either to other homes, sanctuaries
or to the 'great beyond'."
A self-described 'private primate caretaker' in Maine, elaborated
further:
There are a number of women obtaining monkeys purely as child
substitutes. They dress them up in children's clothing and
feed them bottles way past the age of normal weaning. Some
primates accept the wearing of clothing; some do anything
and everything within their means to remove these articles
of clothing. The problems associated with clothing on primates
may range from; causing abnormally warm body temperatures
to promoting the idea to the casual viewer that monkeys are
just like human children. Bottle-feeding primates into adulthood
has may add to the possibility of causing of tooth decay,
obesity and the development of diabetes.
My personal opinion is this is a setup for failure in many
cases. There are some instances of success but this does not
seem to be the norm. Primates mature, just as we humans expect
to. Primates go through a similar adolescent stage, just as
humans. Primates in the private sector and in the wild go
through this stage in their maturation process. It is imperative
we allow them to develop as naturally as possible, when in
a captive situation, for their psychological well-being. Problems
often arise when the human attempts to insist the monkey or
ape remain an infant. The primate rebels, just as human teenagers
do, resulting in aggressive encoded behaviors by the primate.
Biting and scratching by the primate often occurs, unlike
a human teenager who is able to express themselves with defensive
words more often than physical attacks.
We expect our teens to behave in this fashion, though we
probably don't like it. My experience in reading email messages
is that many people regress into a stage of some type of denial
when it comes to their primates. They go to many extremes
to manipulate/discourage/prevent this normal maturation process
in their "primate child". Alteration of the primate
is often used as an attempt to avoid such behaviors. Sometimes
it seems to work often it does not. Removal of teeth, reproductive
organs and even fingernails are sometimes noted.
The negative results I've read about vary from person to
person, primate to primate. Some primates are condemned to
living the rest of their lives alone in a cage with little
or no personal contact with other living beings. Others are
"sent away" because of their "bad" behaviors.
Some primates may even be euthanized by the owner. Some primates
are required to be euthanized by public officials because
the primate bit someone These creatures are penalized and
lose their lives for acting in a normal manner according to
their species. This is tragic.
The people who consider their primates to be their children
may become emotionally distraught, to the point of diagnosed
depression, when tragedy strikes. Even those who realize the
primates are individuals, needing special consideration, experience
strong emotions when difficult situations must be dealt with.
The person who is bitten by their own monkey may experience
emotions ranging from disbelief to denial. "Why would
my baby bite me?" is frequently asked in an email. Failure
to realize biting/scratching is normal behavior in primates
is perplexing to me. Even in documentaries about primates
biting is shown to be natural behavior. Books about primates
discuss this issue as well.
On the other hand, there is a growing opposition to all trade
in nonhuman primates.
Hope Walker, Executive Director of The Primate Conservation
& Welfare Society based in Port Townsend, Washington,
offers the following information regarding the trade in monkeys
acquired to be "pets":
The trade in non-human primates is simply tragic. The tragedy
begins when a prosimian, monkey or ape is taken from the wild
--such as rhesus macaques, a species which is imported for
biomedical research and often dumped into the pet trade --
are then bred for the pet trade. Imagine the horror that these
beings suffer, being stolen from their troops, to spend years
languishing in a lab and then be sent to a "pet"
breeder who repeatedly steals their infants.
The infants are bottle fed and, if they survive, find themselves
on the open market, through live auctions and ads in trade
magazines, newspapers or the Internet. When purchased, often
for $6000 - $50,000 or more, they are shipped off to the new
owners, who usually have learned the little they know from
pro-pet primate organizations and the breeder that sold them
the animal in the first place. As the monkey or ape grows,
if it survives the trauma of losing its mother and the shipment,
it matures into a wild animal capable of great damage to person
and property, not to mention the very serious concerns regarding
zoonotic diseases such as Herpes B, which is fatal to humans
and which can lie undetected in Asian species of macaques
for years. When the "pet" begins to bite, scratch,
or otherwise attack, the owner either mutilates the poor being
by removing its uterus, teeth and/or finger nails, or dumps
it on a sanctuary.
Unfortunately the sanctuary "solution" is about
to run out for these owners -- the few legitimate sanctuaries
for non-human primates in the United States are either almost
at capacity or at capacity and we believe something must be
done. Our organization is taking a two-pronged approach to
the problem -- education and sanctuary. We have developed
an information kit, with fact sheets and a mini-poster, in
order to educate the public, and we are actively working to
raise funds in order to build a primate sanctuary, whose function
will be to offer permanent, species specific sanctuary to
ex-pet and biomedical non-human primates.
All things considered, it is usually a 'Lose-Lose-Lose-Win'
situation when individuals acquire monkeys to be "pets".
The monkey's biological mother loses when her baby is torn
from her breast to be sold as a "pet". The surrogate
parent often loses when the monkey matures and becomes unmanageable.
The monkey herself/himself usually loses by having her/his
instincts stifled; by not receiving proper care; when inappropriate
harsh discipline is administered in attempts to control the
monkey; and through surgical mutilation, such as tooth removal.
The only "winner" in this scenario is the dealer
or breeder who profited from selling the baby monkey.
Like all wild animals, monkeys should be living in their
natural habitats, not in situations where humans attempt to
force domestication on them.
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