It was a trying time in Japan. Everyone was required to live and die for the country. You don't belong on the land if you are against the war. Asakusa and Ueno in northern Tokyo, which was bombed out, saw thousands perish in fire. 2/17
Japan was grieving. But there was another problem. If the zoo's predator’s broke free of their cages during bombing, they were deemed as dangerous. Ueno Zoo had three elephants back then. Two from India and one from Thailand. 3/17
Tragedies unfolded in wartime Ueno. The grownups had no time to grieve for the petty animals, but the children were in heavy hearts. One day the girl students of Negishi primary school wrote a very moving letter to India’s first Prime Minister, Nehru. 6/17
The letter reads - “At Tokyo zoo we can only see pigs and birds which give us no interest. It is a long cherished dream for Japanese children to see a large, charming elephant. Can you imagine how we want to see the animal?" 7/17
He received about 800 such letters. In order to get an elephant to the Ueno Zoo, Pandit Nehru directed the External Affairs Ministry to immediately meet with the princely states and organize funds and transportation. 8/17
However, kids in Berlin also reacted similarly. There was no elephant to see in the Berlin zoo, which was something the kids lamented heavily. They wrote letters to secure an elephant for Berlin once more. Once again, the letters got to Nehru. 11/17
“Dear Children, I am very glad to be sending you one of our elephants, as you wished. It is a good elephant, very well brought up, endowed with all the good virtues. Please do not treat it as a present from me, but as one from the children of India to the children of Japan” 14/17
“…Children resemble each other in many ways everywhere in the world. It is only when you begin to grow up that you get different opinions. Unhappily, when that happens, you often come into conflict” 15/17
“…We must put an end to these clashes between grown-ups. It is my hope that, when they are older, the children of India & Japan will not serve only their own countries, but also the cause of peace and co-operation in the whole of Asia and the world” 16/17
Sources: Starving the Elephants: The Slaughter of Animals in Wartime Tokyo’s Ueno Zoo
Koehl, Dan. Indira, Asian elephant (Elephas maximus) located at Ueno Zoo in Japan. Elephant Encyclopedia. elephant.se.
Lorenz Hagenbeck, Animals Are My Life,The Bodley Head.
JAPAN: The Charming Elephant. July 04, 1949 The Time. content.time.com
Indira presented to Jap Premier. Oct 1, 1949, Indian Express.
JAPAN: The Charming Elephant. July 04, 1949 The Time. content.time.com
Indira presented to Jap Premier. Oct 1, 1949, Indian Express.
Image attributes:
Berlin Zoo elephants before the war. historycollection.com
Asiatischer Elefant Shanti im Zoologischen Garten Berlin, Dum, CC BY-SA 4.0 from Wikimedia Commons.
Taito City Culture Guide Archives, culture.city.taito.lg.jp
Berlin Zoo elephants before the war. historycollection.com
Asiatischer Elefant Shanti im Zoologischen Garten Berlin, Dum, CC BY-SA 4.0 from Wikimedia Commons.
Taito City Culture Guide Archives, culture.city.taito.lg.jp
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