It's the story of a South American Magellanic penguin who swims 5,000 miles each year to be reunited with the man who saved his life.
Retired bricklayer and part time fisherman Joao Pereira de Souza, 71, who lives in an island village just outside Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, found the tiny penguin, covered in oil and close to death, lying on rocks on his local beach in 2011.
Joao cleaned the oil off the penguin's feathers and fed him a daily diet of fish to build his strength. He named him Dindim.
After a week, he tried to release the penguin back into the sea. But, the bird wouldn't leave. 'He stayed with me for 11 months and then, just after he changed his coat with new feathers, he disappeared,' Joao recalls.
And, just a few months later, Dindim was back. He spotted the fisherman on the beach one day and followed him home.
For the past five years, Dindim has spent eight months of the year with Joao and is believed to spend the rest of the time breeding off the coast of Argentina and Chile.
It's thought he swims up to 5,000 miles each year to be reunited with the man who saved his life.
'I love the penguin like it's my own child and I believe the penguin loves me,' Joao told Globo TV. 'No one else is allowed to touch him. He pecks them if they do. He lays on my lap, lets me give him showers, allows me to feed him sardines and to pick him up.
'Everyone said he wouldn't return but he has been coming back to visit me for the past four years. He arrives in June and leaves to go home in February and every year he becomes more affectionate as he appears even happier to see me.'
Biologist Professor Krajewski, who interviewed the fisherman for Globo TV, told The Independent: 'I have never seen anything like this before. I think the penguin believes Joao is part of his family and probably a penguin as well.
'When he sees him he wags his tail like a dog and honks with delight.
And, just like that, the world seems a kinder place again.
Reader Comments
Hello everybody~
I am a small farmer. We have about 65 cultivated acres, which is, quite small. I have about 20 milk cows, which is again, quite small. We have other animals, we are diversified, the same way that nature is diversified. Unfortunately, we are very poor and receive little support. This, 'support', is in fact, getting less and less as bureaucracy and technocracy increase and then increase again and then again.
Everyone must obey the technocracy and the highly stylized technopolitan and cosmopolitan existence that the elites are imposing upon the earth and its inhabitants.
At one time, we were 'certified organic' (we did this to try to get more support) and for a time marketed our milk through Organic Valley, a large government sponsored organic processor of animals, farms and farmers. One of the things Organic Valley wanted to do and subsequently did, is to number everyone of our cows and put them in their 'data base' and make them subject to bureaucratic and technocratic centralized decision making. Organic Valley wanted to tell me which cows I must slaughter and destroy and when I must do this, or face the invariably 'negative (upon us, ie., harmful sanctions) consequences' of their choosing. This, in fact, they did. And, did this, repeatedly. They did this, in order that they make themselves more profitable and more business like at our farm's increased burden and loss of our own personal choice or what you might call our free will.
My own belief is that animals and people both benefit from interactions and choices (with each other) based on free will and what you might even term or label, 'love and deep respect for one another'. This is how we have always farmed.
However, Organic Valley did not see it that way. Subsequently, Organic Valley robbed us of untold and unrealized happiness as they attempted and succeeded in manifesting further bureaucratic and technocratic control over life and in particular, over our farm. I resented this. We were brutalized in any number of ways, just as all other people and animals attempting to love and console one another are brutalized when they resist the advances of bureaucracy and technocracy and centralized government control.
You may write them at: Organic Valley, One Organic Way, La Farge. Wisconsin, USA.
sincerely,
nedlud
Have a very similar one too. 18 cows, 70 acres. England.Family farm since year dot.
The last cow and her calf went to market last summer. Chickens went just before them.70 sheep went in the autumn.
All fields fallow and empty apart from the verminous foxes and diseased badgers which run riot now.Not allowed to eradicate them. Due to coalition of deeply confused and ignorant PC bleeding hearts and urbanised technocrats.
70 good acres provided a good living for thousands of people over a thousand years.
Now wasteland.
All completely due to these technocrats that work on behalf of global corps, which include the 'organic' consters.
this sweet and wonderful story has improved my day considerably, it's antoher example that we live on a beatiful planet, alongside wonderful beings(most of them), but now our home and our loved ones are in danger because of a small minority of heartless beings, so this kind of stories are a remainder and a motivation factor for myself to keep going, to not loose faith and to Do something as little as i can, becuase our planet and all who share it(most of them) are Worth it.
I really like such stories as a break from inhumanity.