Face to Face with Elephants
A Special Living One Series

This special Living One series celebrates Elephants as individuals with diverse, insightful speakers who describe a particular Elephant they have known and the psychological depths they witnessed and journeyed together.

Until individuals such as Len Howard, author of Birds as Individuals and Jane Goodall who was embarking on her revolutionary work with Chimpanzees in Gombe, Plants and Animals were largely regarded generically. Both women catalyzed a new paradigm by insisting that Animals were not anonymous members of a species, but individuals, each with his or her own wishes, fears, dreams, and needs. They knew Animals as psychological beings, not manipulable behavioral objects.

Gay Bradshaw further articulated this paradigm shift with a scientific, psychological, and philosophical framework in her Pulitzer nominated book, Elephants on the Edge. There, and in later work with Chimpanzees, Orcas, Wolves, and other Animals, she demonstrated that not only were Animals distinct thinking, feeling, and conscious individuals but vulnerable to Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).

In these unique Living One discussions, we plunge into human and Elephant psyches and the transformative journey they experienced when living and connecting beyond species bounds. Join us for this special and exciting gathering.

Webinar Schedule

Born and educated in the U.S.A., Cynthia Moss moved to Africa in 1968 and she has lived and worked for wildlife there ever since. Her involvement with elephants began in Lake Manyara National Park in Tanzania where she worked with Iain Douglas-Hamilton on his pioneering elephant study. In 1972, with Harvey Croze, she started the Amboseli Elephant Research Project (AERP) in Kenya, which she continues to direct. Her studies have concentrated on the distribution, demography, population dynamics, social organization and behavior of the Amboseli elephants. In 2001 she created the Amboseli Trust for Elephants in both Kenya and the USA. Her present activities include: overall direction of ATE which includes: research and monitoring; training elephant researchers from African elephant range states; outreach to the Maasai community in Amboseli; disseminating scientific results; networking with other elephant scientists and conservation in Africa and Asia; and promoting public awareness by writing popular articles and books and by making films about elephants. Moss is the author of four books: Portraits in the Wild (University of Chicago Press); Elephant Memories (University of Chicago Press); Echo of the Elephants (William Morrow); Little Big Ears (Simon & Schuster); and co-author with Laurence Pringle of Elephant Woman (Atheneum). She has written numerous popular and scientific articles and has made four award-winning TV documentaries about elephants.

G. A. Bradshaw is the founder and director of The Kerulos Center for Nonviolence (www.kerulos.org). She was the first scientist to diagnose Complex Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (C-PTSD) in free-living Elephants, and subsequently Orcas, Bears, Chimpanzees, and Pumas, which launched the field of trans-species psychology. She holds doctorate degrees in ecology and psychology, and a master’s in geophysics and was a Fellow at the National Science Foundation National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis. She is a certified mindfulness and meditation teacher. Her books include the Pulitzer-nominated Elephants on the Edge: What Animals Teach Us about Humanity;Carnivore Minds: Who These Fearsome Beings Really Are;Talking with Bears: Conversations with Charlie Russell and The Evolved Nest: Nature’s Way of Raising Families and Creating Connected Communities. She is the primary carer for rescued colonized Animals including disabled endangered Tortoises and Wildlife at Grace Village, Oregon, USA.
 
 
Dr. Sandra L. Bloom is a Board-Certified psychiatrist, graduate of Temple University School of Medicine and currently Associate Professor, Health Management and Policy at the Dornsife School of Public Health, Drexel University (www.sandrabloom.com). She is also the Founder of Creating Presence, an online organizational approach for creating trauma-informed systems.
In extending her work to include an online delivery program for Leaders, Clinicians, Direct Service Staff, and Indirect Service Staff called Creating Presence, Dr. Bloom hopes to make the innovative approach to service delivery known as “trauma-informed” and “trauma-responsive” more available and cost effective.
From 1980-2001, Dr. Bloom served as Founder and Executive Director of the Sanctuary programs, inpatient psychiatric programs for the treatment of trauma-related emotional disorders and during those years was also President of the Alliance for Creative Development, a multidisciplinary outpatient practice group. Dr. Bloom is recognized nationally and internationally as the founder of the Sanctuary Model. Between 2005 and 2016 over 350 social service, juvenile justice and mental health organizations were trained in the Sanctuary Model.
Dr. Bloom is a Past-President of the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies and author or co-author of a series of books on trauma-informed care: Creating Sanctuary: Toward the Evolution of Sane Societies published in 1997 with a second edition in 2013; Destroying Sanctuary: The Crisis in Human Delivery Service Systems published by Oxford University Press in 2010 and Restoring Sanctuary: A New Operating System for Trauma-Informed Systems of Care, published by Oxford University Press in 2013.
She is currently co-chairing a new national organization, CTIPP – The Campaign for Trauma-Informed Policy and Practice whose goal is to advocate for public policies and programs at the federal, state, local and tribal levels that incorporate up-to-date scientific findings regarding the relationship between trauma across the lifespan and many social and health problems. Since 2012, Dr. Bloom has also served as Co-chair for the Philadelphia ACEs Task Force. Sandy is also c-founder in collaboration with The Kerulos Center for Nonviolence of Creating Presence with Nature.

Deke Weaver’s multidisciplinary work has been presented in venues such as PBS, Sundance Film Festival, Channel 4/U.K., New York Video Festival at Lincoln Center, Chicago Humanities Festival, Berlin Video Festival, The Moth, 21c Museum Hotels, the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, livestock pavilions, backyard sheds, forests, prairies, night clubs and living rooms. A Guggenheim Fellow and Creative Capital grantee, Weaver is currently a professor at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign with appointments in the School of Art & Design, the Department of Theater, the Department of Dance, and faculty affiliation with the Initiative in Holocaust, Genocide, and Memory Studies. unreliablebestiary.org

For over thirty years, Michele Franko has worked in multiple Animal advocacy-related venues including Animal care, welfare and shelters, thoroughbred Horse racing and sport Horse breeding farms, veterinary assistance, and Wildlife rescue and rehabilitation. The past fifteen years, Michele has served as a carer for rescued Elephants in sanctuary. Her work and expertise have also brought her outside the U.S. to work with severely traumatized Elephants in India and South Africa. She approaches Elephant care and understanding through a trauma-informed lens focusing on individuality, well-being, understanding and self-discovery  to help facilitate their healing.

Prior to her work with Elephants, Michele served as a California State Humane Officer investigating criminal Animal cruelty which included active rescues of Animals in distress and crisis. Her responsibilities included monitoring and inspections of treatment of Animals in circuses and rodeos. Having studied psychology and criminal justice and served in the investigation and subsequent prosecution of many cases of violence against Animals, Michele began formal studies in trauma and trauma healing as work as an intern with The Kerulos Center for Nonviolence where she became a member of the Stewardship council in 2009.

Elke Riesterer was born in southern Germany, and immigrated to the US in 1983. She is a Certified Massage Therapist and registered Jin Shin Do Practitioner with the broad experience of having worked with humans and Animals for over 30 years. She has volunteered as an all-species Body Therapist at the Oakland, California, USA, Zoo since 1997 and uses a combination of body-centered therapies including her most favored modality the Tellington Touch (TTouch™). In general, her work centers around the complex well-being issues of Elephants worldwide with an emphasis on helping heal symptoms of PTSD. Besides Elephants, Elke works with Aldabra Tortoises, Monitor Lizards, Snakes and Giraffes, and Sea Life including Dolphins and Sea Lions. Elke has lectured and traveled extensively and in particular, visited Africa multiple times to provide healing touch for residents at the Elephant and Rhino Orphanage in Nairobi, Kenya, Lilayi Elephant Nursery in Lusaka, Zambia, and Asian Elephants in Thailand and India. In addition to many exotic species, Elke also enjoys working with Horses, Dogs and other home animals. Her work has appeared in numerous articles and radio and television programs. Elke is also the co-founder of World Elephant Alliance.

Therese Lilliesköld is an anthrozoologist, an author and currently a PhD-student. Her research is centrered around questions of knowledge; of more-than-human animals as knowledge-bearers and possible decision makers in societal planning as well as on human knowledge production behind decisions affecting other animals. Her previous work has been within animal protection with a wide range of topics; from the link between violence towards humans and other animals, to trauma and the emotional life of companion animals.

One of her books, When Elephants Dream, is published in Swedish but has recently been translated to English. It is a memoir about the time Therese spent as a caretaker of young, traumatized elephants in Thailand. The bond she developed with an elephant who died at a young age taught her about their capacities for strong emotions, grief as well as their spiritual abilities. Therese is an ambassadour for elephants for World Animal Protection Sweden.

David Ebert, a retired lawyer, founded Weeping Elephant Project in 2025 as a means of more fully devoting himself to reducing the suffering of elephants. WEP is a continuation and expansion of his work on behalf of captive elephants in the US over the past decade.

Weeping Elephant Project’s goals include educating the public to what they are not seeing when they attend circuses, visit zoos and participate in other events that display and degrade elephants. Through the Weeping Elephant Project’s podcast, David seeks to help elephant organizations and advocates reach a wider audience and serve as a resource for those interested in understanding more about the plight of captive elephants and the unseen awfulness to which they’re subjected. The podcast features interviews with the extraordinary advocates and organizations pursuing elephant protection to help raise their profile and bring more attention and funding to their remarkable work.

David is also the Co-Founder, President Emeritus, and a former board member of Animal Defense Partnership, which provides legal services exclusively to animal protection nonprofits, entirely without charge. ADP now represents 350+ clients working in the US as well as US-based organizations advocating for change in other parts of the world. In 2024, ADP provided $2.1 million in billable legal services to its clients, for free.

Ms. Suparna Baksi Ganguly, Hon. President and Co-Founder Trustee, Wildlife Rescue & Rehabilitation Center (WRRC) & Co-Founder Trustee, Compassion Unlimited Plus Action (CUPA)

Has been actively involved in Animal welfare for the past three and a half decades. She has published, authored and co-authored nearly 40 – 50 books and Reports on captive elephants’ management in India by drawing reference to their condition in various States in India. She has been a Member of the Task Force of Wild and Captive Elephants that was formed by the Ministry of Forests and Environment in the year 2010. She was also a Member of the Zoo Committee for the Appraisal of the Elephants in Zoos by the Central Zoo Authority of India, Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change. She was a co-opted member of the Animal Welfare Board of India from 2010-2013, and a Member of the Animal Welfare Board of Karnataka when it was started in the year 2003. In the year 2016, she was among the first recipients of the Nari Shakti Puraskar Award given by the then Hon’ble President of India, Sri. Pranab Mukherjee. In the same year, she received the Namma Bangalore Award in the Citizens category as well as the Pride of Karnataka Award in the field of Social Work. In the year 2017, she received the FICCI Woman Achievement Award for contribution to Animals and Environment.

In 2022, she initiated the first Elephant Care Facility for ailing elephants in a public-private partnership model in Karnataka. The facility houses many elephants from private ownerships which need expert veterinary support and upkeep. The facility is funded by philanthropists and private donors.

Her ongoing work with domestic and wild animals continues with CUPA and WRRC, which includes handling cruelty cases, legal interventions and collaborating with animal welfare groups in India and abroad.

Webinar Recordings

November 7, 2025

G. A. Bradshaw is the founder and director of The Kerulos Center for Nonviolence (www.kerulos.org). She was the first scientist to diagnose Complex Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (C-PTSD) in free-living Elephants, and subsequently Orcas, Bears, Chimpanzees, and Pumas, which launched the field of trans-species psychology. She holds doctorate degrees in ecology and psychology, and a master’s in geophysics and was a Fellow at the National Science Foundation National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis. She is a certified mindfulness and meditation teacher. Her books include the Pulitzer-nominated Elephants on the Edge: What Animals Teach Us about Humanity; Carnivore Minds: Who These Fearsome Beings Really Are; Talking with Bears: Conversations with Charlie Russell and The Evolved Nest: Nature’s Way of Raising Families and Creating Connected Communities. She is the primary carer for rescued colonized Animals including disabled endangered Tortoises and Wildlife at Grace Village, Oregon, USA.

Dr. Sandra L. Bloom is a Board-Certified psychiatrist, graduate of Temple University School of Medicine and currently Associate Professor, Health Management and Policy at theDornsife School of Public Health, Drexel University. For the past thirty years, Dr. Bloom has done pioneering work in the field of traumatic stress studies and is a past President of the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies. Dr. Bloom originated and has writtenthree books about the Sanctuary Model and in 2020 introduced a new, online organizational approach called Creating Presence (https://www.creatingpresence.net).

November 1, 2025

Born and educated in the U.S.A., Cynthia Moss moved to Africa in 1968 and she has lived and worked for wildlife there ever since. Her involvement with elephants began in Lake Manyara National Park in Tanzania where she worked with Iain Douglas-Hamilton on his pioneering elephant study. In 1972, with Harvey Croze, she started the Amboseli Elephant Research Project (AERP) in Kenya, which she continues to direct. Her studies have concentrated on the distribution, demography, population dynamics, social organization and behavior of the Amboseli elephants. In 2001 she created the Amboseli Trust for Elephants in both Kenya and the USA. Her present activities include: overall direction of ATE which includes: research and monitoring; training elephant researchers from African elephant range states; outreach to the Maasai community in Amboseli; disseminating scientific results; networking with other elephant scientists and conservation in Africa and Asia; and promoting public awareness by writing popular articles and books and by making films about elephants. Moss is the author of four books: Portraits in the Wild (University of Chicago Press); Elephant Memories (University of Chicago Press); Echo of the Elephants (William Morrow); Little Big Ears (Simon & Schuster); and co-author with Laurence Pringle of Elephant Woman (Atheneum). She has written numerous popular and scientific articles and has made four award-winning TV documentaries about elephants.

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