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    10 Feral Human Children Raised by Animals

    Posted: 13 Jul 2010 07:19 AM PDT

    A feral child is a human child who has lived isolated from human contact from a very young age,

    and has no (or little) experience of human care, loving or social behavior, and, crucially, of human

    language.Some feral children have been confined by people (usually their own parents); in some

    cases this child abandonment was due to the parents rejection of a childs severe intellectual or

    physical impairment. Feral children may have experienced severe child abuse or trauma before

    being abandoned or running away. Others are alleged to have been brought up by animals; some

    are said to have lived in the wild on their own. Just over one hundred incidents have been

    reported in total, here we enumerate 10 of them who got famous in their own times.

    10. Dina Sanichar, the Indian Wolf Boy

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    Date found: 1867

    Age when found: 6

    Location: Sekandra, India

    Years in the wild: 6

    Animals: wolves

    Dina Sanichar, one of the boys who lived at the Sekandra orphanage, is usually assumed to have

    been mentally sub-normal. He was removed from a wolves cave in 1867 when he was about six

    years old. Dina Sanichar was discovered when hunters in the jungles of Bulandshahr were

    astonished to see a boy follow a wolf into her den, running on all fours. They smoked out the wolf

    and her companion and shot the wolf.

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    He initially exhibited all the habits of a wild animal, tearing off clothes and eating food from the

    ground. He was eventually weaned off raw meat onto cooked, but never did learn to speak. He

    apparently became addicted to tobacco. Dina Sanichar died in 1895.

    9. Kamala and Amala, the Wolf Girls of

    Midnapore

    Date found: 1920

    Age when found: 8 (Kamala), 1.5 (Amala)

    Location: Midnapore, India

    Years in the wild: 8, 1

    Animals: wolves

    Perhaps one of the best-known and controversial stories of feral children is that of Amala and

    Kamala. Kamala and Amala are two of the most interesting cases of feral children. The wolf girls

    were about 18 months (Amala) and eight years old (Kamala) when they were found together in awolves den. However, it is believed that they were not sisters, but were abandoned or taken by

    wolves some years apart.

    In that year, Reverend Joseph Singh, a missionary in charge of an orphanage in Northern India,

    heard of two ghostly spirit figures seen accompanying a band of wolves near Midnapore in the

    Bengal jungle. The local villagers were fearful of these apparitions but local custom forbid them to

    do any harm to the wolves. Intrigued, Singh built a hide in a tree top over-looking the lair of the

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    wolf pack, an old ten-foot high termite mound that had become hollowed out with time. As the

    moon rose, Singh saw the wolves come out one by one. Then sticking their heads out briefly to

    sniff the night air before bounding forwards into the clearing came two hunched and horrible

    figures. As Singh described the ghosts in his diary, they were: Hideous lookinghand, foot and

    body like a human being; but the head was a big ball of something covering the shoulders and the

    upper portion of the bustTheir eyes were bright and piercing, unlike human eyesBoth of themran on all fours.

    The girls seemed to have no trace of humanness in the way they acted and thought. It was as if

    they had the minds of wolves. They tore off any clothes put on them and would only eat raw meat.

    They slept curled up together in a tight ball and growled and twitched in their sleep. They only

    came awake after the moon rose and howled to be let free again. They had spent so long on all

    fours that their tendons and joints had shortened to the point where it was impossible for them to

    straighten their legs and even attempt to walk upright. They never smiled or showed any interest

    in human company. The only emotion that crossed their faces was fear. Even their senses had

    become wolf-like. Singh claimed their eyes were supernaturally sharp at night and would glow in

    the dark like a cats. They could smell a lump of meat right across the orphanages three acre yard.

    Their hearing was also sharp except, like Victor, the voice of humans seemed strangely

    inaudible to their ears.

    A poor but relatively well educated man, Singh did his best to rehabilitate his charges. Influenced

    by the horticultural model of child development, he theorised that the wolf habits acquired by

    Kamala and Amala had somehow blocked the free expression of their innate human

    characteristics. Singh felt it was his job (not least, for religious reasons) to wean the girls from

    their lupine ways and so allow their buried humanity to emerge. Unhappily, before his experiment

    had progressed far, the younger girl, Amala, sickened and died. This proved a great set-back to

    Kamala, who had only just started to lose her fear of other humans and her orphanage

    surroundings. Kamala went into a prolonged mourning and for a while, Singh feared for her life

    as well. But eventually Kamala recovered and Singh started a patient programme ofrehabilitation.

    8. Daniel, The Andes Goat Boy

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    Date found: 1946

    Age when found: around 10

    Location: Syrian desert

    Years in the wild: 9

    Animals: gazelles

    A boy aged around 10 was found in the midst of a herd of gazelles in the Syrian desert, and was

    only caught with the help of an Iraqi army jeep, because he could run at speeds of up to 50 kph.

    Although terribly thin, he was said to have been extremely fit and strong, with muscles of steel.

    He was captured and bound hand and foot.

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    Armen says the Syrian Gazelle-Boy was still alive in 1955, when he (the boy) made an attempt to

    escape from whichever unpleasant state institution he was incarcerated in. I wont offend your

    sensibilities by telling you what they did to him to stop him escaping again.

    TheLife Magazine story of 9 September 1946 agrees pretty much with the other reports. It states

    that the previous month, a group of hunters found a boy running wild with a herd of gazelles inthe Syrian steppes. About 10 14 years old at the time of discovery, he was believed to have been

    abandoned as a baby. He was taken to an asylum for the insane.Sunday Express, puts the same

    story but says boys speed of 50 mph, not 50 kph.

    6. Bello, the Nigerian Chimp Boy

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    Date found: 1996Age when found: 2

    Location: Nigeria

    Years in the wild: 1

    Animals: chimps

    Bello, the Nigerian Chimp Boy was found in 1996, at the age of about two. Both mentally and

    physically disabled, he had probably been abandoned by his parents at the age of about six

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    months, a common practice with disabled children among the Fulani, a nomadic people who

    range great distances over the west African Sahel region.

    Believed to have been adopted and raised by chimpanzees, Bello was found with a chimpanzee

    family in the Falgore forest, 150 km south of Kano in northern Nigeria. When the story reached

    the news agencies some six years later in 2002, Bello had been living at the Tudun Maliki Torreyhome in Kano.

    When first discovered, Bello walked like a chimpanzee, using his legs but dragging his arms on

    the ground. He would leap about at night in the dormitory, disturbing the other children,

    smashing and throwing things. Six years later Bello was much calmer, but would still leap around

    in a chimpanzee-like fashion, make chimpanzee-like noises, and clap his cupped hands over his

    head repeatedly. Bello died in 2005.

    5. John Ssebunya, the Ugandan Monkey Boy

    Date found: 1991

    Age when found: 6

    Location: Uganda

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    Years in the wild: 3

    Animals: monkeys

    John Ssebunya was born in the mid 1980s, but ran away from home (probably aged around three)

    after seeing his mother murdered by his own father. It is generally accepted that John Ssebunya

    was cared for at least to some extent by green African (vervet) monkeys while in the jungle. Johnwas found by a tribeswoman or girl (called Millie) in 1991, hiding in a tree. She returned with

    menfolk from the village and, as is so often the case, not only did John resist capture but also his

    adoptive family came to his defence, throwing sticks at the villagers.

    Initial reports suggest John Ssebunyas entire body was covered with hair called hypertrichosis.

    When he defecated, he excreted worms over half a metre long. Once captured and cleaned up

    he was covered in scars and wounds, with knees scarred from crawling he was identified as

    John Ssebunya. He was given by Millie to the care of Paul and Molly Wasswa, who run a

    charitable foundation for orphans. He couldnt talk or cry initially, but has subsequently learned

    to speak. This suggests that he may have learned some speech before his stay in the wild.

    John now not only talks but also sings, and tours with the Pearl of Africa childrens choir. John

    was the subject of the BBC documentaryLiving Proof, screened on 13 October 1999.

    4. Traian Caldarar, the Romanian Dog Boy

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    Date found: 2002

    Age when found: 7

    Location: Brasov, Romnia

    Years in the wild: 3

    Animals: dogs

    Traian Caldarar is a Romanian boy who apparently lived wild, separated from his family, for three

    years. He is believed to have left the family home because of domestic violence. His mother, Lina

    Caldarar, said that she loved her son but had a violent partner, who was always beating her. When

    she lost Traian, she was distraught, and hoped he had perhaps been adopted by another family.

    She said: When I fled, I lost contact with Traian, although I tried to get him back. He [the boy's

    father] didnt allow me to take my child, even though I tried to. He said the child belonged to

    him.

    Although aged seven when he was found, Traian Caldarar was only the size of a three-year-old,

    could not speak, and was naked and living in a cardboard box covered with a polythene sheet. He

    suffered from severe rickets, had infected injuries and his circulation was poor, possibly because

    of frostbite. Doctors believe it would have been impossible for Traian to survive on his own and

    speculated that he received assistance from the many stray dogs in the Transylvanian countryside.

    He was found near the body of a dog that he had apparently been eating.

    Traian Caldarar was found after the car of a shepherd, Manolescu Ioan, broke down. Mr Ioan had

    to walk from his pastures and came across child who he reported to police, who later captured the

    boy. Traian walked with the bandy gait of a chimpanzee and tried to sleep under his bed rather

    than on it. Dr Mircea Florea said: He was found in an animal position and his movements are

    animalistic. The facts show that he was not brought up in a social environment. He becomes very

    agitated when he does not have food. He is looking for something to eat all the time. He sleeps

    after he eats.

    3. Rochom Pngieng, Cambodian Jungle Girl

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    Date found: 2007

    Age when found: 29

    Location: Cambodian Jungle

    Years in the wild: 19Animals: various animals

    The so-called Cambodian Jungle girl is a Cambodian woman who emerged from the jungle in

    Ratanakiri province, Cambodia on January 13, 2007. A family in a nearby village claimed that the

    woman was their daughter Rochom Pngieng(born 1979) age 29 or 30 who had disappeared 18 or

    19 years previously; the story was covered in most media as one of a feral child who lived in the

    jungle for most of her life.

    She came to international attention after emerging filthy, naked and scared from the dense jungle

    of Ratanakiri province in remote northeastern Cambodia on January 13, 2007. After a villager

    noticed food missing from a lunch box, he staked out the area, spotted the woman, gathered some

    friends and caught her.

    She was recognised by her father, policeman Ksor Lu long, because of a scar on her back. He said

    Rochom Pngieng was lost in the Cambodian jungle at the age of eight when herding buffalo with

    her six-year-old sister (who also disappeared). One week after being discovered, she experienced

    difficulties adjusting to civilized life. Local police reported that she was only able to say three

    words: father, mother and stomachache. A Spanish psychologist who visited the girl

    reported that she made some words and smiled in response to a game involving toy animals and

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    a mirror but did not speak any recognizable language. When she was thirsty or hungry, she

    pointed at her mouth. She preferred to crawl rather than walk upright. The family watched

    Rochom Pngieng around the clock to make sure she did not run off back to the jungle, as she

    tried to do several times. Her mother constantly had to pull back on the clothes when she tried to

    take them off. A visiting Guardian reporter described the family as genuinely caring for her and

    the woman as listless and sad but restless at night. In May 2010, Rochom Pngieng has fled backto the jungle. Despite the searching they have not managed to recover her.

    2. The Russian Bird Boy

    Date found: 2008

    Age when found: 7

    Location: Volgograd, Russia

    Years in the wild: 7

    Animals: birds

    In 2008, Russian care workers rescued a seven-year-old bird-boy who could communicate only

    by chirping after his mother raised him in a virtual aviary, it has been reported. Authorities said

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    the neglected child was found living in a tiny two-room apartment surrounded by cages

    containing dozens of birds, bird feed and droppings.

    The so-called bird-boy did not understand any human language and communicates instead by

    chirping and flapping his arms, Russian newspaper Pravda reported. Social worker Galina

    Volskaya, who was involved is rescuing the child from his home in Kirovsky, Volgograd, said hewas treated like another pet by his 31-year-old mother who never spoke to him. Miss Volskaya

    said: When you start talking to him, he chirps.

    Russian authorities say the child was not physically harmed but is suffering from Mowgli

    syndrome, named after the Jungle Book character raised by wild animals, and cannot engage in

    any normal human communication.

    Pravda reported: (his mother) had her own domestic birds and fed wild ones. (She) neither beat

    him nor left him without food. She just never talked to him. It was all the birds that

    communicated with the boy and taught him birds language. He just chirps and when realising

    that he is not understood, and starts to wave hands in the way birds winnow wings. The boys

    mother signed an abdication form to release the child into care after he was discovered. He was

    temporarily transferred to an asylum, but later soon was sent to the centre of psychological care,

    according to reports.

    1. Oxana Malaya, The Ukrainian Dog Girl

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    Date found: 1991

    Age when found: 8

    Location: Blagoveshchenka, Ukraine

    Years in the wild: 5

    Animals: dogs

    Not really either a feral child or a confined child, but rather a neglected one, Oxana Malaya spent

    much of her childhood between the ages of 3 and 8 living in a kennel in the back garden of the

    family home in Novaya Blagoveschenka, Ukraine, although she did spend some time in the house

    with her alcholic and neglectful parents.

    Oxanas alcoholic parents were unable to care for her, and at three years of age she was exiled

    from her home. They lived in an impoverished area where there were wild dogs roaming the

    streets. She took refuge in a shed inhabited by these dogs behind her house. She was cared for by

    them and learned their behaviors and mannerisms. The bonding with the pack of dogs was so

    strong that the authorities who came to rescue her were driven away in the first attempt by the

    dogs. Her actions and sounds mimicked those of her carers. She growled, barked, walked on all

    fours and crouched like a wild dog, sniffed at her food before she ate it, and was found to have

    acquired extremely acute senses of hearing, smell and sight. She only knew how to say yes and

    no when she was rescued.

    When she was discovered, Oxana found it difficult to acquire normal human social and emotional

    skills. She had been deprived of intellectual and social stimulation, and her only emotional

    support had come from the dogs she lived with. Oxanas lack of exposure to language in a social

    context made it very difficult for her to improve her language skills. When first found in 1991 she

    could hardly speak.

    As of 2010 at the age of 26, Oxana resides at a home for the mentally handicapped, where she

    helps look after the cows in the clinics farm. She has expressed that she is happiest when amongdogs.