Elephants Save Tourists
By
Mark Bendeich
Reuters
Khao
Lak, Thailand
3
January /2005
Agitated elephants felt the
tsunami coming, and their sensitivity saved about a dozen foreign
tourists from the fate of thousands killed by the giant waves.
"I was surprised because the
elephants had never cried before," mahout Dang Salangam said on
Sunday on Khao Lak beach at the eight-elephant business offering
rides to tourists.
The elephants started trumpeting
-- in a way Dang, 36, and his wife Kulada, 24, said could only be
described as crying -- at first light, about the time an earthquake
measured at a magnitude of 9.0 cracked open the sea bed off
Indonesia's Sumatra island.
The elephants soon calmed down.
But they started wailing again about an hour later and this time
they could not be comforted despite their mahouts' attempts at
reassurance.
"The elephants didn't believe the
mahouts. They just kept running for the hill," said Wit Aniwat, 24,
who takes the money from tourists and helps them on to the back of
elephants from a sturdy wooden platform.
Those with tourists aboard headed
for the jungle-clad hill behind the resort beach where at least
3,800 people, more than half of them foreigners, would soon be
killed. The elephants that were not working broke their hefty
chains.
"Then we saw the big wave coming
and we started running," Wit said.
Around a dozen tourists were also
running toward the hill from the Khao Lak Merlin Resort, one of a
line of hotels strung along the 10 km (6-mile) beach especially
popular with Scandinavians and Germans.
"The mahouts managed to turn the
elephants to lift the tourists onto their backs," Kulada said.
She used her hands to describe
how the huge beasts used their trunks to pluck the foreigners from
the ground and deposit them on their backs.
The elephants charged up the hill
through the jungle, then stopped.
The tsunami drove up to 1 km
(1,000 yards) inshore from the gently sloping beach which had been
so safe for children it made Khao Lak an ideal place for a family
holiday. But it stopped short of where the elephants stood.
On Sunday, the elephants were
back at work giving rides to the tourists on whom the area depends.
German Ewald Heeg, who said he
came from a small town near Frankfurt, said his charter company had
offered his family -- wife, two daughters and one of their
boyfriends -- the chance to go straight home, but he had turned it
down.
"Our family is OK so we stay here
to make our holiday," he said. "Today, we make a safari. We go by
elephants at first, then we make a boat trip."