2001-07-22

Claim:   A village in India learned the hard way not to interfere with the
course of pachyderm True Love.

Status:   True.

Origins:   The following tale found its way into quite a few newspapers in
early 1994:



An Indian man was trampled to death trying to break up a love affair between
a tame elephant and her wild 3,600 kilogram suitor from the jungles of south
Bihar.

The irresistible force of love between elephants is something the villagers
of Gumla, in northern India, wish they had avoided. It is rare for wild
elephants to develop crushes on domesticated pachyderms.

But when a bull elephant happened to spy an attractive she-elephant named
Madhubala, it was, well, love at first sight.

Even though Madhubala was chained to a tree, the bull elephant refused to
leave her. At first the villagers tried to lure away the heavyweight
stranger with a banana bribe. It was not food the elephant had on his mind.

Angry and scared, villagers and police began tossing firecrackers and
flaming sticks at the wild male. As the furious elephant charged back to the
jungle, he crushed a forest ranger, killing him.

The bull elephant's retreat was only tactical. The lovesick male sneaked
back later that night and freed Madhubala by smashing her chains. The two
lovers eloped.

Madhubala's keeper, Mahedi Hussain, tracked her down in the jungle after a
week and brought her back to the village. The she-elephant, alas, remained
lovelorn. She even turned up her trunk at a bunch of bananas, her favorite
food. Finally, her plaintive trumpet calls were answered.

The avenging lover swept down on the village last Friday like an army tank,
flattening huts and scattering people into the forest. As the United News of
India reported: The elephant ''returned to Gumla in a rage, demolishing
walls and anything that stood between him and Madhubala. The act, many said,
would have done credit to any film hero who had been denied his love.''

With Madhubala loose again, the reunited elephant pair slipped off into the
dense trees. This time, the elephant-keeper is in no hurry to bring her --
and her trouble-making boyfriend -- back again.

Barbara "Madhubala is now living out her elephantasy" Mikkelson

Last updated:   30 July 1999




John

Keiner ist hoffnungsloser versklavt als derjenige, der irrt�mlich glaubt
frei zu sein.

There are none more hopelessly enslaved then those who falsely believe they
are free!

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)




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