Kari, the elephant, was five months
old when he was given to me to take care of.
I was nine years old and I could reach his back if
I stood on tiptoe. He seemed to remain that high
for nearly two years. Perhaps we grew together;
that is probably why I never found out just how tall
he was. He lived in a pavilion, under a thatched
roof which rested on thick tree stumps so that it could
not fall in when Kari bumped against the poles as he
moved about.
One of the first things Kari did was
to save the life of a boy. Kari did not eat much
but he nevertheless needed forty pounds of twigs a
day to chew and play with. Every day I used to
take him to the river in the morning for his bath.
He would lie down on the sand bank while I rubbed
him with the clean sand of the river for an hour.
After that he would lie in the water for a long time.
On coming out his skin would be shining like ebony,
and he would squeal with pleasure as I rubbed water
down his back. Then I would take him by the ear,
because that is the easiest way to lead an elephant,
and leave him on the edge of the jungle while I went
into the forest to get some luscious twigs for his
dinner. One has to have a very sharp hatchet
to cut down these twigs; it takes half an hour to
sharpen the hatchet because if a twig is mutilated
an elephant will not touch it.
When one goes into the jungle, one
must remember that there are laws one cannot break.
Do you know that anyone who is afraid or who hates
one of the animals of the jungle gives out an odor
which attracts tigers and wolves? Every day that
I was afraid to go into the jungle, I did not dare
to stay on the ground for fear lest the tigers would
smell my presence and attack me. I climbed a
tree instead, because when one is in a tree the odor
of one’s body does not go into the forest, and
the animals cannot tell whether one is afraid or not.
It was not an easy job, as you see,
to get twigs and saplings for Kari. I had to
climb all kinds of trees to get the most delicate
and tender twigs. As he was very fond of the young
branches of the banyan tree which grows like a cathedral
of leaves and branches, I was gathering some, one
spring day in March, when I suddenly heard Kari calling
to me in the distance. As he was still very young,
the call was more like that of a baby than an elephant.
I thought somebody was hurting him, so I came down
from my tree and ran very fast to the edge of the
forest where I had left him, but he was not there.
I looked all over, but I could not
find him. I went near the edge of the water,
and I saw a black something struggling above its surface.
Then it rose higher and it was the trunk of my elephant.
I thought he was drowning. I was helpless because
I could not jump into the water and save his four
hundred pounds since he was much higher than I. But
I saw his back rise above the water and the moment
he caught my eye, he began to trumpet and struggle
up to the shore. Then, still trumpeting, he pushed
me into the water and as I fell into the stream I saw
a boy lying flat on the bottom of the river.
He had not altogether touched bottom but was somewhat
afloat. I came to the surface of the water to
take my breath and there Kari was standing, his feet
planted into the sand bank and his trunk stretched
out like a hand waiting for mine. I dove down
again and pulled the body of the drowning boy to the
surface, but not being a good swimmer, I could not
swim ashore and the slow current was already dragging
me down. I clutched at reeds on the shore but
they broke and the weight of the boy was tiring out
one hand while the other was already weak from excessive
swimming and clutching at the reeds. Seeing us
drift by in the current, Kari who was usually so slow
and ponderous, suddenly darted down like a hawk and
came halfway into the water where I saw him stretch
out his trunk again. I raised up my hand to catch
it and it slipped. I found myself going under
the water again, but this time I found that the water
was not very deep so I sank to the bottom of the river
and doubled my feet under me and then suddenly kicked
the river bed and so shot upwards like an arrow, in
spite of the fact that I was holding the drowning
boy with my hand. As my body rose above the water,
I felt a lasso around my neck. This frightened
me; I thought some water animal was going to swallow
me. I heard the squealing of Kari, and I knew
it was his trunk about my neck. He pulled us
both ashore.
As the boy lay stretched on the ground
I recognized the cowherd. He had gone to bathe
in the river, had slipped too far out, and not knowing
how to swim had almost been drowned. I put him
flat on his face on the sand and the elephant put
his trunk about his waist and lifted it gently up
and down, and then up again. After doing this
three or four times, the water began to come out of
the boy’s mouth and, not knowing what else to
do because his body was cold, I slapped him very hard
all over. After that I propped him up against
the elephant’s leg. Then the boy slowly
came to.
In the meantime all his cows had wandered
away in different directions. As I thought some
had gone into the jungle, where I was afraid they
might be eaten up by tigers, I sent Kari to bring
them back to the river bank. But Kari got lost
himself; so when the cowherd had recovered entirely,
I went to look for his cows and my lost elephant.
Where do you think I found him? He had gone right
into the forest where I had left the saplings and the
twigs and had buried his trunk into the heap and was
eating the best of them, without any concern for the
cows, the cowherd or myself.
But I could not punish him that day
because he had done his duty by saving the life of
the boy.
Kari was like a baby. He had
to be trained to be good and if you did not tell him
when he was naughty, he was up to more mischief than
ever.
For instance, one day somebody gave
him some bananas to eat. Very soon he developed
a great love for ripe bananas. We used to keep
large plates of fruit on a table near a window in
the dining-room. One day all the bananas on that
table disappeared and my family blamed the servants
for eating all the fruit in the house. A few days
later the fruit disappeared again; this time the blame
was put on me, and I knew I had not done it.
It made me very angry with my parents and the servants,
for I was sure they had taken all the fruit. The
next time the fruit disappeared, I found a banana
all smashed up in Kari’s pavilion. This
surprised me very much, for I had never seen fruit
there, and as you know, he had always lived on twigs.
Next day while I was sitting in the
dining-room wondering whether I should take some fruit
from the table without my parents’ permission,
a long, black thing, very much like a snake suddenly
came through the window and disappeared with all the
bananas. I was very much frightened because I
had never seen snakes eat bananas and I thought it
must be a terrible snake that would sneak in and take
fruit. I crept out of the room and with great
fear in my heart ran out of the house, feeling sure
that the snake would come back into the house, eat
all the fruit and kill all of us.
As I went out, I saw Kari’s
back disappearing in the direction of the pavilion
and I was so frightened that I wanted his company to
cheer me up. I ran after him into the pavilion
and I found him there eating bananas. I stood
still in astonishment; the bananas were lying strewn
all around him. He stretched out his trunk and
reached for one far away from where he was standing.
That instant the trunk looked like a black snake,
and I realized that Kari was the thief. I went
to him, pulled him out by the ear and joyously showed
my parents that it was Kari and not I that had eaten
all the fruit these many weeks. Then I scolded
him, for elephants understand words as well as children,
and I said to him, “Next time I see you stealing
fruit, you will be whipped.” He knew that
we were all angry with him, even the servants.
His pride was so injured that he never stole another
thing from the dining-room. And from then on,
if anybody gave him any fruit, he always squealed
as if to thank them.
An elephant is willing to be punished
for having done wrong, but if you punish him without
any reason, he will remember it and pay you back in
your own coin.
Once I had taken him to bathe in the
river; this was summer vacation and several boys came
with me to help. Kari lay on the bank and we
rubbed him all over with sand. Then he went into
the water and most of us began to play. As Kari
came up from the water, one of the boys, named Sudu,
was standing on the bank. For no reason at all
he hit the elephant three or four times with his whip.
Kari squealed and ran away. I brought him home.
The next summer Kari had grown so
big and fat that I could not reach his back even when
I stood on tiptoe. We used to take him out wherever
we went, sometimes one riding on his back, sometimes
all walking along with him. We gave him luscious
twigs if he behaved well and sometimes delicious fruit.
Once in a great while as a special treat we would
massage his chest with straw and he would squeal with
joy and lie on his back as best he could with his
fat legs, staring at the sun.
One day Sudu was standing on the river
bank where I had just taken the elephant to give him
his bath. That day Kari had been very good, so
we prepared a straw massage for him. As it was
very hot, however, we plunged into the river ourselves
before giving him his bath, leaving Sudu and the elephant
on the bank. Without warning, Kari rushed at
him like a mad bull, threw his trunk about Sudu’s
neck, flung him into the water, and held him there
for a long, long time. When Sudu was finally pulled
out of the water and stretched on the ground, he was
nearly senseless.
When Sudu asked me whether I would
punish Kari for having disgraced him in public like
that, I answered that the elephant was not rude.
When Sudu asked me why, I said, “Don’t
you remember about a year ago you whipped him for
no reason at all, almost on the exact spot where he
has just punished you?” Sudu felt so ashamed
of himself that he got angry with all of us and went
home alone. But by the next day, we had made
it all up and the elephant had forgiven him.
As a proof of friendship, when we went to the jungle
on a picnic, Kari carried Sudu on his back. Since
that day Sudu has never hurt a living creature.
An elephant must be taught when to
sit down, when to walk, when to go fast, and when
to go slow. You teach him these things as you
teach a child. If you say “Dhat” and
pull him by the ear, he will gradually learn to sit
down. Similarly, if you say “Mali”
and pull his trunk forward, he will gradually learn
that that is the signal to walk.
Kari learned “Mali” after
three lessons, but it took him three weeks to learn
“Dhat.” He was no good at sitting
down. And do you know why an elephant should
be taught to sit down? Because he grows taller
and taller than you who take care of him, so that
when he is two or three years old, you can only reach
his back with a ladder. It is, therefore, better
to teach him to sit down by saying “Dhat”
so that you can climb upon his back, for who would
want to carry a ladder around all the time?
The most difficult thing to teach
an elephant is the master call. He generally
takes five years to learn it properly. The master
call is a strange hissing, howling sound, as if a snake
and a tiger were fighting each other, and you have
to make that kind of noise in his ear. And do
you know what you expect an elephant to do when you
give him the master call? If you are lost in the
jungle and there is no way out, and everything is black
except the stars above, you dare not stay very long
anywhere. The only thing to do then is to give
the master call and at once the elephant pulls down
the tree in front of him with his trunk. This
frightens all the animals away. As the tree comes
crashing down, monkeys wake from their sleep and run
from branch to branch you can see them
in the moonlight and you can almost see
the stags running in all directions below. You
can hear the growl of the tiger in the distance.
Even he is frightened. Then the elephant pulls
down the next tree and the next, and the next.
Soon you will find that he has made a road right through
the jungle straight to your house.