People of the Forest
In the Indonesian language, the word orangutan means "people of the forest," and that is truly what they are. They look incredibly humanoid sitting in the trees, and many of their behaviors remind me a lot of things humans do. But we also saw another people of the forest while we traveled in Borneo—humans living in small villages along the forested riverbank, living much like they have for hundreds of years. But as modernity brought scooters, electricity, and medicine to these villages, it also brought the need for money, the cause of so many problem s in our modern world. Unfortunately, many of the villagers' opportunities to make money are in direct conflict with the wellbeing of the orangutans. D ue to human impact, orangutans have become threatened by habitat loss. They've been forced into a fraction of their former range, and now wild orangutans can only be found among the dispersed rainforests on the islands of Borneo and Sumatra. We visited Tanjung Puting Nati...