Essays and Musings on Animals and Society

Saturday, May 28, 2005

The Heart of a Chained Elephant 

This was originally reported by Jim France of the Pavillion Hotel Group in Bangkok, amid the chaos of the tsunami, and appears in the latest issue of "Trunklines," from The Elephant Sanctuary. It demonstrates elephants' compassion and intelligence:

"At a resort on Phuket, one of the most popular attractions was (is) elephant rides. As many as eight people on one elephant, first into the surrounding forest, then down to the beach, to lunch at a freshwater lagoon, then back to the hotel. The nine elephants were kept chained to in-ground posts, not because they needed to be, but because it made the mothers feel better because their children seemed safe from a tromping when feeding the beasts.

About twenty minutes before the first wave hit, the elephants became extremely agitated and unruly. Four had just returned from a trip, and their handlers had not yet chained them. They helped the other five tear free from their chains. They all climbed a hill and started bellowing. Then the waves hit.

After the waves subsided, the elephants charged down from the hill and started picking up children with their trunks and running them back up the hill. When all the children were taken care of, they started helping the adults.

They rescued forty-two people. Then they returned to the beach and carried up four dead bodies, one of a child. Not until the task was done would they allow their handlers to mount them. Then with handlers atop, they began moving wreckage."

Perhaps now they'll be freed from their chains.



Related stories about elephants:

Tyke's Last Performance

Chicago Zoo Under Fire Over Deaths
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