In various countries stricken by the 2004 Asian and
East African Tsunami, animals demonstrated their innate intelligence
and love for humans by rescuing many people who would otherwise have
perished in the disaster.
For
example, at a beach resort in Phuket, Thailand, an area especially hard
hit by the Tsumani, an elephant saved several children on a beach when
the tidal wave struck. The animal had been brought to entertain children,
but when nature unleashed its wrath, the elephant's keeper hoisted many
youngsters up onto its back, and then walked them off to safety. (Please
refer to:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1310876/posts
)
In another case, an Indonesian woman in tsunami-ravaged
Aceh Province saved her own life and those of her neighbor's children
as a giant snake guided her through the flood waters. Riza, a clothes
seller from the provincial capital of Banda Aceh, said she initially
watched helplessly as the tsunami destroyed her home. Then as she was
carried out of her house she was dragged toward her badly injured neighbor,
who was struggling to hold on to her nine-year-old twins. "Please
save my twins. Just let me go, as long as they're safe," Riza recalled
the mother saying. Riza then placed the children on her back, and as
she fought through the torrent saw a snake the size of a telephone pole
gliding with the water current toward a bank. "Strangely I felt
no fear," Riza said, adding that she followed the snake to safety.
"Thank God, with the power I had left, I managed to go to higher
ground." (Please refer to: http://www.command-post.org/nk/2_archives/018357.html
)
In
an even more dramatic instance from Pondicherry in southeastern India,
a family dog saved the life of a seven-year-old boy as the tsunami swept
over their village. As the rest of his family scrambled to escape the
incoming wave, the boy did not follow but instead ran to the safest
place he knew—a concrete hut just 40 yards from shore. With sea
water lapping at the family's heels as they rushed up a hill to safety,
their scruffy yellow dog Selvakumar ducked into the hut after the boy.
Nipping and nudging, the dog urged the child up the hill. "That
dog grabbed me by the collar of my shirt and dragged me out," the
child said. The boy's mother wept with joy when she saw her son walking
toward her with Selvakumar at his side. "That dog is my God,"
she exclaimed. (Please visit: http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2005/01/02/world/main664271.shtml
)
Such episodes of animal bravery, love and awareness
reinforce the fact that our fellow creatures are full of God's divine
energy and capable of great compassion just as we humans are.