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You don’t have to be pulled out of a well by a plucky collie to know that there is such a thing as hero animals. But when you think of them, you probably picture disaster rescue dogs or a chimp sheriff … the usual stuff. What you don’t picture are lions, gorillas and even whales throwing themselves in harm’s way to save some helpless human. But you will now …
Photo Credits Wikipedia
When you think about which animal you least want to show up when you’re wounded and helpless, lions pretty much take the cake (and your face, and then some limbs, because they’re lions). They’re 300-pound, 6-foot-long cats that look at you as nothing more than a delicacy at a fancy lion restaurant they like to call Africa. But as we’ve noted before, lions also have a softer kitten center that leads them to care for some unlikely creatures.
Photo Credits wikipedia
In this instance, it’s a 12-year-old Kenyan girl who had been missing for a week. It turned out that she had been abducted by several men who were trying to force her to marry one of them (because who has time for romance?). But when the authorities finally found her, she was alone, her kidnappers having fled. Instead, she was surrounded by three lions that had scared away, and hopefully maimed, her captors.
Who knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men? Goddamn lions, that’s who.
The police said that the lions had been guarding her for about half a day when they got there, not only abstaining from munching on the little girl themselves, but also making sure that nothing else got close to her. When the police finally arrived, the lions departed, perhaps roaring “Everybody gets one” as they left.
Experts say that the lions might have been reacting to the girl’s tears as if they were the mews of a lion cub, but we all know the real reason: The little girl is a Beastmaster.
Binti Jua is an 8-year-old western lowland gorilla of the Brookfield Zoo in Chicago, Illinois.
In 1996 a 3-year-old child climbed a railing and fell 18 feet into the zoo’s gorilla exhibit. Binti who got to the unconscious boy before zoo officials responded and carried him to an area where the humans could attend to him.
While she waited for help, she rocked the boy back and forth, as if to comfort him. Her own 17-month-old baby, Koola, clutched her back throughout the incident.
(Source: myhero.com)
The reason you can keep a wild animal in a zoo without it constantly trying to jump out and murder visitors is that most animals are territorial. They are enclosed in a space that they can call their own, and as long as those borders are respected, they are happy to eat, frolic and mate for the entertainment of gawking onlookers.
But that territorial bubble was popped by a 3-year-old boy at the Brookfield Zoo in Illinois — he was right over the gorilla enclosure when he fell over the fence. The 18-foot drop left him unconscious and with a critical head injury. Since gorillas can be dangerously persnickety with their territory, the police were barred from immediate action — who wants to see a violent battle between a SWAT team and a huge herd of gorillas? Except everyone?
So, with a child in need and no help in sight, Binti Jua stepped in. And as much as that sounds like Indian Superman, it wasn’t. Binti just happened to be one of the zoo’s gorillas.
Photo Credit oakparkjournal.com
Although we guess breast-feeding sort of counts as a superpower.
Binti came to the boy’s aid by cradling him in her arms and then bringing him to the enclosure door, where paramedics could get to him. The police and staff were quick to note that without Binti’s assistance, the situation could have been much worse.
Oof Ajab Axi
“We’re all just lucky she didn’t Kong out.”
And in case you think we’re just misunderstanding the gorilla’s actions, it’s actually not an isolated incident. Back in the 1980s, another kid fell into a gorilla enclosure, at Jersey Zoo. That time, the gorilla was a male silverback who watched over the unconscious boy and led away the rest of his troop when paramedics arrived. One has to wonder if these gorillas are naturally empathetic to our young or if they just feel sorry for how stupid we apparently are.
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