These 7 Feral Children Were Cruelly Abandoned, But Their Story Doesn't End There
Domesticated animals can teach young children a lot about life. (Pets are not very good at reading, though.) Under strange circumstances, the same kinds of animals can teach children how to survive. Children who were raised by animals are called "feral children."The following children found themselves in a bad situation, abandoned by their parents or coming from a neglectful home. They encountered wild animals in their time of need. Instead of being these animals' victims, the children become their friends and part of the pack.
1. Natasha Mikhailova.
In 2009, 5-year-old Natasha Mikhailova was  discovered inside a locked apartment in the Siberian city of Chita. The  young Mikhailova was filthy and greeted the visitors by barking and  walking on all fours. Mikhailova was essentially abandoned by her father  and grandparents inside a locked apartment with only cats and dogs.  When she was finally rescued from the apartment, she communicated only  in barks and ate food with her tongue. Researchers hope that she can  eventually be rehabilitated and live a normal life in society.
2. Vanya Yudin.
			Mandatory		
In 2008, 7-year-old Vanya Yudin was found by  Russian social workers in a room full of birds. Apparently, his mother  had confined him there and raised him like a pet bird. The room was a  mess of bird food and bird droppings when the social workers arrived.  Yudin had never spoken to another human being during his life. He  communicated by chirping and flapping his arms. Social workers removed  Yudin from the home and he was sent to a rehabilitation facility.
3. Bello.
			Mandatory		
Bello, also known as the Nigerian chimp boy,  was found in 1996 living with a chimpanzee family in Northern Nigerian.  Bello was just 2 years old when he was found with the chimps.  Researchers suspect that Bello was abandoned in the forest by his family  because of his mental and physical disabilities. Bello didn't walk  properly according to those who found him. He used his legs, but let his  arms drag around like an ape. Eventually, Bello was placed in an  orphanage. He was unable to communicate effectively with other humans  years later and still behaved like a chimp in many ways.
4. Oxana Malaya.
			Ebaum's World		
Oxana Malaya was abandoned by her parents at  the age of three. Left starving and freezing, the young Malaya found a  home of sorts in a local dog kennel. She lived with dogs there for five  years until a neighbor discovered her. Malaya barked at authorities when  they arrived to rescue her. Most of her mannerisms had become entirely  dog-like. She has since been mostly rehabilitated and lives a quiet  life.
5. Daniel.
			Ebaum's World		
Daniel is perhaps better known as "The Andes  Goat Boy." In 1990, a group of hikers found the 12-year-old living among  a herd of goats in the mountains of Peru. Daniel survived by drinking  goat's milk and eating whatever he could scavenge for 8 years, usually  roots and berries. Daniel also walked on all fours, which hardened his  feet and hands into something resembling hooves. A team of researches  from the U.S. named him Daniel. They concluded that he had no human  language skills, but could communicate with the goats in his herd.
6. John Ssebunya.
			Mandatory		
At 4 years old, John Ssebunya was a witness  to his father's brutal murder of his mother. The traumatized Ssebunya  fled his village in Uganda for the jungle, where he was accepted by and  cared for by a pack of vervet monkeys. Ssebunya lived the life of a  monkey for three years. Ssebunya was discovered in 1991 and rescued, but  not without a fight from his adoptive monkey family. Ssebunya would  later recount to his rescuers that after a few days in the jungle, he  was approached by a group of five monkeys. They taught him how to search  for food and climb trees.
7. Ivan Mishukov.
			Mandatory		
Ivan Mishukov ran away from his abusive home  at only 4 years old. He scavenged and begged for food on the streets. He  shared some of this food with a pack of stray dogs. In exchange, the  dogs protected Mishukov and kept him from freezing to death. Observers  who witnessed Mishukov with the dogs say that he appeared to be the pack  leader. Police captured a barking, snarling Mishukov and brought him to  a rehabilitation center two years later. Today, Mishukov leads a  completely normal life, which is remarkable given his circumstances.
We can at least be grateful that these children survived some pretty terrible circumstances. They did what was necessary to survive, but it almost cost them their humanity. Luckily, most of these children have been able to make a full recovery. Here's to hoping that the rest of them aren't far behind.


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