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Helen Freeman.

Helen Freeman, former curator of education at the Woodland Park Zoo and founder of the International Snow Leopard Trust. (Snow Leopard Trust)

 

Helen Freeman, 1932-2007

A tribute to the Seattle zoo volunteer and education director who founded the Snow Leopard Trust.

There was a moment in 1972,
When two rare cats from a world away
Arrived at the Woodland Park Zoo
To be coo'd at, and photographed,
Before you went around the corner to see the tiger.

One person, meeting those cats for the first time,
Saw so much more than just new attractions.
That moment with Nicholas and Alexandra changed her life,
And for the next 35 years, through her actions
She changed the lives of snow leopards everywhere.

It's rare among us, passion for a cause
Coupled with the ability and desire
To pursue it, not for the applause
But simply because it's worth doing.
What one passionate person can do is a miracle.

Now and forever, others will do it for her,
Those good and caring people worldwide
She'd been gathering together for so long.
They'll cherish and protect the cats in her spirit
While the wife, mother, advocate and teacher, rests.

So the next time you go to the zoo, bless the beasts –
And bless Helen Freeman too.


Editor's note: Helen Freeman, daughter of Greek-American restaurateurs in Everett, founded the International Snow Leopard Trust in 1981 while serving as Curator of Education at the Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle. She died Sept. 20. A celebration of her life will take place Oct. 13 at the East Shore Unitarian Church in Bellevue.

Greg Palmer is a Seattle writer and television producer who has worked in media a long time. He's best know locally for his work as a features reporter, arts and entertainment critic, and humorist at KING-TV from 1977-1990. Since, Palmer has produced numerous public-television programs for PBS and KCTS-TV in Seattle, including Vaudeville: An American Masters Special and Death: The Trip of a Lifetime. You can reach him in care of editor@crosscut.com.


Comments:

Posted Mon, Oct 1, 8:40 a.m. inappropriate

Helen example will continue to inspire wildlife conservation: A heroine is gone and she will be missed, but not forgotten. Helen was a pioneer in community based conservation long before it was the conventional wisdom. She was the guiding light for early zoo conservation and was the inspiration for the current conservation grant programs at the Snow Leopard Trust and at the Woodland Park Zoo. She realized how essential it was to encourage local people to become involved in conserving their wildlife heritage. Collaboration was much more than a buzz word for her and she touched the lives of so many and always encouraged us, individually and collectively, to do more than we thought we could. Her long-term affair with snow leopards has come to an end, but it is not over.

Mike Waller

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