
Wildlife Revolution is a charity guided by animal welfare values, dedicated to the preservation of species and nature, and driven by the Wild Tales project.
about
Wildlife Revolution was created to address a clear need: local children rarely have access to engaging tools that help them understand wildlife conservation, while the incredible work of NGOs and sanctuaries often goes unnoticed.
Wildlife Revolution aims to bridge this gap by turning real-life conservation efforts into tangible educational resources that inform, inspire, and connect young people with the natural world.
The first step in this mission is the creation of the project Wild Tales: illustrated books produced in partnership with dedicated sanctuaries. These books brings the work of conservation heroes to life for children, making the realities of wildlife protection both accessible and engaging.
Alongside the first book (2026), Wildlife Revolution also develops educational content for schools and classrooms, providing materials that complement the stories and further raise awareness about conservation challenges and successes.
At its core, Wildlife Revolution is about connection: connecting children to wildlife, highlighting the incredible work of NGOs and sanctuaries, and inspiring a new generation to care for the natural world.
The Team
At just 3 years old, Fauve, the only child of a Belgian family, cried in front of WWF commercials about the poaching of elephants on the brink of extinction.She wanted to live in Africa and have her own elephant farm so that everyone could have one at home! ^^ 🐘🐘🐘
Over time, her project evolved, but Africa and elephants remained constant in her life. Diverted from her goals many times by her family, she went on to study communication and graphic design.
A few years later, on a whim, she left alone for one month, without telling anyone, to volunteer at an orphaned elephant sanctuary in South Africa. Upon her return, volunteering opportunities quickly followed around the world, as did her training… Alongside a day job, she studied tracking and trailing with FGASA, Mammals and Reptiles Survey techniques at Oxford University, veterinary nursing in Paris, wildlife relocation techniques with the Vet Go Wild program, and more before taking part in the relocation of 10 elephants in Zimbabwe as a vet nurse.
And through her travels, she made some unsettling observations.
First, Westerners know very little about the realities on the ground. The work of NGOs and sanctuaries is rarely shared in mainstream media.
Second, protecting wildlife is the primary mission of NGOs and sanctuaries, and while they do their best to engage children, to her knowledge, no one has yet connected village children directly with the work being done to protect the animals around them.
After resigning from her job and with a South African visa in hand, Fauve moved abroad to be at the heart of the action, returned to drawing, and launched her first "Wild Tales" partnership through a charity she called Wildlife Revolution.
Want to join this incredible adventure? Send us a message! Any help is welcome!


