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A touching story of people and animals.
1, the story of eel

A housewife plans to fry several eels at a time as a dish for dinner. She put all the bought Monopterus albus into the water and sprinkled it with salt (it can make the fish spit out the dirty things in their stomachs, and the fish will twitch after being soaked in salty and fresh water, and will constantly spit out the contents in their stomachs).

After a while, the fish almost vomited all the dirty things in his stomach. Began to fry one by one in the oil pan, and the fried eels always struggled in the oil pan until they died. When a big eel was blown up, it didn't struggle all the time like other eels, but stood up with its head down and its tail up.

The housewife was stunned by what she saw. She fished out the big eel, cut open its belly and found that there was still a small eel alive and kicking.

Postscript: For the big eel, that little eel is not necessarily its child. It still swallowed it painfully in salt water, and it tried its best to protect the eel in a high-temperature oil pan of several hundred degrees, which is the true love between animals.

2. The story of the scorpion

There are many insects in an insect laboratory, and a pair of scorpions are kept in an experimental dish.

One day, the female scorpion died inexplicably. The experimenter took out the female scorpion as a specimen.

From then on, the male scorpion began to hunger strike and was listless all day. Finally, two weeks later, I stuck the thorn into the cartilage and committed suicide.

Postscript: The male scorpion has a strong affection for the female scorpion. According to textual research, the male scorpion fasted because he was too fat at first, and his stinger could not reach the cartilage. The purpose of its hunger strike is to lose weight and then commit suicide.

The puppy saved the 7-year-old owner.

In a seaside village in Tamil Nadu, one of the hardest hit areas by the tsunami, a dog named Saipan Kumar saved his little owner Dinakaran.

When the tsunami came, Dinakalan's mother, Sanjita, could only hold the hands of her two young sons and run as high as she could, hoping that Dinakalan, the oldest child, aged 7, would follow her out of danger. But Dinakalan didn't keep up with his mother, but ran to a hut only about 40 meters from the coast, which he thought was the safest place.

At a critical juncture, "Cerban Kumar" resolutely turned around and chased the young master. It bit the little master's clothes all the way, or arched the little master with its nose, dragging him back to a safe place nearby. Dinakalan, who was finally saved, said gratefully, "Saipan Kumar bit my shirt collar and dragged me back."

4. Elephants help with disaster relief

In the hardest hit areas in southern Thailand, elephants have become the first choice for rescuers. At present, 24 elephants have been transported to southern Thailand to participate in post-disaster rescue and reconstruction. The owner of the elephant said that in these rubble-strewn disaster areas, "elephants are much more efficient than four-wheeled trucks and hoes, and only elephants can undertake this work."

A local government official in southern Thailand said that elephants are carrying away tons of garbage, which provides convenience for rescuers working in extremely difficult conditions.

5. Lions save lives

A miracle happened in Ethiopia a few days ago: three lions rescued a 12-year-old girl from a group of kidnappers and waited beside her until the police arrived. The "king of beasts" who has always been bloodthirsty is so brave that many stories have been circulated in the local area.

According to the Associated Press reported on June 2 1, Ethiopian police found a little girl who had been missing for seven days on June 9. Incredibly, there are three lions standing next to the little girl.

This can scare the police into a cold sweat. Although these lions are far from male and female, they obviously have no "intention" to the little girl, but a "protector" attitude.

These lions seem to recognize the identity of the police. When the police approached the little girl, the three lions silently turned around and walked towards the forest. Police officer Vedayo recalled: "They left her behind, just like leaving us a gift." The police then arrested four kidnappers.

In early June, they kidnapped the little girl on the road and forced her to accept the marriage. For the next seven days, they beat her until the little girl's "lion savior" suddenly appeared. These kidnappers recalled with lingering fear that three angry lions suddenly rushed out, scaring them to leave the little girl and run for their lives.

These lions did not continue to chase, but stayed with the frightened and devastated little girl and silently guarded her until the police appeared.

Police officer Vedayo said: "Without these lions, the situation would be even worse ... Everyone thought it was a miracle. Usually, lions always attack people. "