Gorilla Journal 28, June 2004
20th Anniversary of the Berggorilla & Regenwald Direkthilfe
e. V.
In 1983, Paul-Hermann Bürgel, a great animal lover, spent his holidays
on one of his world trips. This time he crossed Africa from north to south.
He met a colleague of Dian Fossey's in Rwanda who told him about
the problems of gorilla conservation. At that time, the survival of the
mountain gorillas had not yet been ensured and only a few organizations
were working on behalf of these animals. P.-H. Bürgel promised to
help once he was back in Germany.
Then, however, he encountered problems. Bernhard Grzimek, the director
of the Frankfurt Zoological Society, was willing to listen to him,
but then told him about all the projects that his organization was already
running. He did not commit himself to anything: "We'll have
to see," he said. That is when P.-H. Bürgel decided to become
actively involved himself. He was an opponent of typical "societies"
and only wanted to form an action group. But when it turned out to be
impossible to generate support in Germany - financial or otherwise - for
an action group, he found that he had to establish a society after all.
P.-H. Bürgel talked to his friends, they talked to their friends,
and so on. Finally, seven people met in Voerde, a small town on the Lower
Rhine, in Hartmut Golomb's sitting room on June 2, 1984. For lunch
we had curried sausages and French fries, beer and wine. This was the
meeting where the Berggorilla Patenschaft ("mountain gorilla
sponsorship society") was founded by Paul-Hermann Bürgel, Manfred
Hartwig, Rolf Brunner, Hartmut Golomb, Gabriela Ernst, Adelheid Kuningas
and Claudia Wallraven.
The society's headquarters were to be located in the castle in Burgpreppach
in Upper Franconia, where P.-H. Bürgel lived, and he was elected
chairman. We started to make our way through the obligatory paperwork:
we had to see a notary, open bank accounts, etc.
WWF Belgium was well represented in Rwanda and we made contact with the
Mountain Gorilla Project/Projet Gorille de Montagne. We also established
first contacts with GTZ who had already started to work in the Kahuzi-Biega
National Park.
Targeting Germany, we promoted the conservation of the mountain gorillas
and tried to spread information about these animals and the threats facing
them. The film Gorillas in the Mist helped, of course. We collected donations,
bought the first used equipment from army surplus stores and transported
the equipment to WWF in Brussels ourselves. It was still a very small-scale
operation.
After P.-H. Bürgel had withdrawn from the society, the headquarters
were moved to Mülheim and the name was changed to Berggorilla
& Regenwald Direkthilfe (Mountain Gorilla and Rainforest Direct
Aid). The change in name was necessary because of the international scope
of the society's work: "Patenschaft" does not translate
easily into English or French. Apart from that, the name is intended to
indicate that gorilla conservation is impossible without the conservation
of the gorillas' habitat and that the society wants to help directly without
the handicap of a large administrative apparatus.
Rolf Brunner
Rolf Brunner is one of the founding members
of Berggorilla & Regenwald Direkthilfe and has been responsible for
the organization's finances from the beginning. He is the chief accountant
for a medium-sized firm.
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