
Photo credit: Cyril Christo and Marie Wilkinson
 
This week, National Geographic aired a documentary describing a plan to address elephant Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) in Mozambique. [1] The Gongorosa elephants are survivors of humanity’s Anschluss against nature, suffering with a mortality of 95%. Similar to Kenyan and South African elephants diagnosed with PTSD seven years earlier, these individuals live day by day in the grip of psychological trauma, in terror of the apex predator, Homo sapiens. [2]
In the documentary, ethologist Dr. Joyce Poole and her brother claim to help the besieged elephants. Instead, we witness scenes which, in the case of humans, would be akin to people in gun-laden trucks pursuing PTSD-stricken veterans subjected to recordings of babies and children screaming in terror. [3]
Scientist and film crew drive Range Rovers up to mothers and young elephants. When confronted with armed, camera laden vehicles, they pace and charge in mad, confused distress. [4] In one scene, “experts” play distress calls, supposedly recordings of a young elephant being attacked by lions, to watch how these "elephants on the edge" respond. [5] As elephants run frantically to aid their comrade, possibly risking their own precarious safety, Poole exclaims: “This is just incredible. Look at them, they’re running to help!” [4]
The elephants’ reticence to harm the intruders is attributed to Poole’s baby talk to matriarchal elephants raw with fear, “It’s okay, girl.” [4] This belies and demeans the profound sentience and sensibilities that elephants possess. It is their perspicacity and intrinsic benevolence that protects foolish humans.
 
 

Photo credit: Cyril Christo and Marie Wilkinson
 
Such human behavior is ethically bankrupt and scientifically uninformed to the degree that were it humans instead of elephants being subjected to these psychological assaults, professional, if not legal, censure would likely follow. Disturbingly, these types of activities are not isolated.
Earlier this month, journalists learned that the King of Spain, injured while trophy hunting African elephants, is president of a World Wildlife Fund (WWF) chapter, and, it was implied, a wealthy donor to the well-known conservation organization. [6] While the WWF showed discomfiture with this public revelation, a representative nonetheless maintained that “regulated hunting has to be tolerated.” [7]
 
 

Photo credit: Cyril Christo and Marie Wilkinson
 
 
Of all footprints
 That of the elephant is supreme.
Of all mindfulness meditations
That on death is supreme.
         — The Buddha
 
Literature Cited
[1] National Geographic. 2012. War elephants.
[2] Bradshaw, G.A , Schore, A.N., Brown, J Poole, J. & Moss, C.J. 2005.Elephant breakdown. Nature, 433, 807.
[3] Bradshaw, G.A. & E. Tick. 2012. Of paratroopers and pachyderms.The Huffington Post.
[4] ABC News. 2012. Elephants suffer from PTSD in Mozambique. ABC News.
[5] Bradshaw, G.A. 2009. Elephants on the edge: What animals teach us about humanity. New Haven: Yale University Press.
[6] DW.DE. 2012. WWF defends elephant hunts for conservation.
[7] WWF. 2012. World Wildlife Fund. 
[8] Discovery New. 2012. Nearly 450 Elephants Killed in Cameroon.Discovery News. 

http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/bear-in-mind/201204/friends-these