Every once in a while a story comes by email and just needs to be shared.
Subject: Fw:
The Penguin and the Fisherman
Today s most heartwarming story is brought to you from a beach in Brazil.
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.'