 
  from:
http://delightmakers.com/news-bleat/wild-elephants-gather-inexplicably-m...
Wild Elephants gather inexplicably, mourn death of “Elephant Whisperer”
Author and legendary conservationist Lawrence Anthony died March 7. His family tells of a solemn procession on March 10 that defies human explanation.

For 12 hours, two herds of wild South African elephants slowly made their way through the Zululand bush until they reached the house of late author Lawrence Anthony, the conservationist who saved their lives.The formerly violent, rogue elephants, destined to be shot a few years ago as pests, were rescued and rehabilitated by Anthony, who had grown up in the bush and was known as the “Elephant Whisperer.”
For two days the herds loitered at Anthony’s rural compound on the vast Thula Thula game reserve in the South African KwaZulu – to say good-bye to the man they loved. But how did they know he had died March 7? Known for his unique ability to calm traumatized elephants, Anthony had become a legend. He is the author of three books, Babylon Ark, detailing his efforts to rescue the animals at Baghdad Zoo during the Iraqi war, the forthcoming The Last Rhinos, and his bestselling The Elephant Whisperer.
There are two elephant herds at Thula Thula. According to his son  Dylan, both arrived at the Anthony family compound shortly after  Anthony’s death.“They had not visited the house for a year and a half  and it must have taken them about 12 hours to make the journey,” Dylan  is quoted in various local news accounts. “The first herd arrived on  Sunday and the second herd, a day later. They all hung around for about  two days before making their way back into the bush.”Elephants have long  been known to mourn their dead. In India, baby elephants often are  raised with a boy who will be their lifelong “mahout.” The pair develop  legendary bonds – and it is not
 uncommon for one to waste away without a will to live after the death of the other.

 A line of elephants approaching the Anthony house (Photo courtesy of the  Anthony family)But these are wild elephants in the 21st century, not  some Rudyard Kipling novel.The first herd to arrive at Thula Thula  several years ago were violent. They hated humans. Anthony found himself  fighting a desperate battle for their survival and their trust, which  he detailed in The Elephant Whisperer:“It was 4:45 a.m. and I was  standing in front of Nana, an enraged wild elephant, pleading with her  in desperation. Both our lives depended on it. The only thing separating  us was an 8,000-volt electric fence that she was preparing to flatten  and make her escape.“Nana, the matriarch of her herd, tensed her  enormous frame and flared her ears.“’Don’t do it, Nana,’ I said, as  calmly as I could. She stood there, motionless but tense. The rest of  the herd froze.“’This is your home now,’ I continued. ‘Please don’t do  it, girl.’I felt her eyes boring into me.

Anthony, Nana and calf (Photo courtesy of the Anthony  family)“’They’ll kill you all if you break out. This is your home now.  You have no need to run any more.’“Suddenly, the absurdity of the  situation struck me,” Anthony writes. “Here I was in pitch darkness,  talking to a wild female elephant with a baby, the most dangerous  possible combination, as if we were having a friendly chat. But I meant  every word. ‘You will all die if you go. Stay here. I will be here with  you and it’s a good place.’“She took another step forward. I could see  her tense up again, preparing to snap the electric wire and be out, the  rest of the herd smashing after her in a flash.“I was in their path, and  would only have seconds to scramble out of their way and climb the  nearest tree. I wondered if I would be fast enough to avoid being  trampled. Possibly not.“Then something happened between Nana and me,  some tiny spark of recognition, flaring for the briefest of moments.  Then it was gone. Nana turned and melted into the bush. The rest of the  herd followed. I couldn’t explain what had happened between us, but it  gave me the
 first glimmer of hope since the elephants had first thundered into my life.”
Elephants gathering at the Anthony home (Photo courtesy of the Anthony family)It had all started several weeks earlier with a phone call from an elephant welfare organization. Would Anthony be interested in adopting a problem herd of wild elephants? They lived on a game reserve 600 miles away and were “troublesome,” recalled Anthony.“They had a tendency to break out of reserves and the owners wanted to get rid of them fast. If we didn’t take them, they would be shot.“The woman explained, ‘The matriarch is an amazing escape artist and has worked out how to break through electric fences. She just twists the wire around her tusks until it snaps, or takes the pain and smashes through.’“’Why me?’ I asked.“’I’ve heard you have a way with animals. You’re right for them. Or maybe they’re right for you.’”What followed was heart-breaking. One of the females and her baby were shot and killed in the round-up, trying to evade capture.

The French version of “The Elephant Whisperer”“When they arrived, they were thumping the inside of the trailer like a gigantic drum. We sedated them with a pole-sized syringe, and once they had calmed down, the door slid open and the matriarch emerged, followed by her baby bull, three females and an 11-year-old bull.”Last off was the 15-year-old son of the dead mother. “He stared at us,” writes Anthony, “flared his ears and with a trumpet of rage, charged, pulling up just short of the fence in front of us.“His mother and baby sister had been shot before his eyes, and here he was, just a teenager, defending his herd. David, my head ranger, named him Mnumzane, which in Zulu means ‘Sir.’ We christened the matriarch Nana, and the second female-in-command, the most feisty, Frankie, after my wife.“We had erected a giant enclosure within the reserve to keep them safe until they became calm enough to move out into the reserve proper.“Nana gathered her clan, loped up to the fence and stretched out her trunk, touching the electric wires. The 8,000-volt charge sent a jolt shuddering through her bulk. She backed off. Then, with her family in tow, she strode the entire perimeter of the enclosure, pointing her trunk at the wire to check for vibrations from the electric current.
“As I went to bed that night, I noticed the elephants lining up along  the fence, facing out towards their former home. It looked ominous. I  was woken several hours later by one of the reserve’s rangers, shouting,  ‘The elephants have gone! They’ve broken out!’ The two adult elephants  had worked as a team to fell a tree, smashing it onto the electric fence  and then charging out of the enclosure.
 “I scrambled together a search party and we raced to the border of the  game reserve, but we were too late. The fence was down and the animals  had broken out.
 “They had somehow found the generator that powered the electric fence  around the reserve. After trampling it like a tin can, they had pulled  the concrete-embedded fence posts out of the ground like matchsticks,  and headed north.”
 The reserve staff chased them – but had competition.
 “We met a group of locals carrying large caliber rifles, who claimed the  elephants were ‘fair game’ now. On our radios we heard the wildlife  authorities were issuing elephant rifles to staff. It was now a simple  race against time.”
 Anthony managed to get the herd back onto Thula Thula property, but problems had just begun:
“Their bid for freedom had, if anything, increased their resentment  at being kept in captivity. Nana watched my every move, hostility  seeping from every pore, her family behind her. There was no doubt that  sooner or later they were going to make another break for freedom.
 “Then, in a flash, came the answer. I would live with the herd. To save  their lives, I would stay with them, feed them, talk to them. But, most  importantly, be with them day and night. We all had to get to know each  other.”
 It worked, as the book describes in detail, notes the London Daily Mail newspaper.
 Anthony was later offered another troubled elephant – one that was all  alone because the rest of her herd had been shot or sold, and which  feared humans. He had to start the process all over again.
 And as his reputation spread, more “troublesome” elephants were brought to Thula Thula.

So, how after Anthony’s death, did the reserve’s elephants — grazing miles away in distant parts of the park — know?
 “A good man died suddenly,” says Rabbi Leila Gal Berner, Ph.D., “and  from miles and miles away, two herds of elephants, sensing that they had  lost a beloved human friend, moved in a solemn, almost ‘funereal’  procession to make a call on the bereaved family at the deceased man’s  home.”
“If there ever were a time, when we can truly sense the wondrous ‘interconnectedness of all beings,’ it is when we reflect on the elephants of Thula Thula. A man’s heart’s stops, and hundreds of elephants’ hearts are grieving. This man’s oh-so-abundantly loving heart offered healing to these elephants, and now, they came to pay loving homage to their friend.”
To Hear More CLICK HERE
This story has touched so many of us so very deeply that we have decided to put a call out to all those who would like to salute this amazing man, Lawrence Anthony. We thought that we might make a beautiful tribute to him and invite you all to be part of it. If you would like to upload your favourite elephant related photograph, poem, song, video or a few words of your own. Please fill in the form below. We will create a project page with all of your contributions and then turn them into a beautiful collection in his honour to give to the family.
The Elephant Whisperer

Thank you John, what a beautiful story.
We are all so connected. And mostly, pretty ignorant of the fact!
I hope you read this heartwarming story, Fred. It could be a good one for the PEERS sites.
that the elephants are the equivalent of the whales, (in their importance,and relation to the earth),but of course,,on land. Has anyone ever seen any details on this. I would love to read it....
Great story, evidence of their awareness, and to the statement above...
was listening to another great Nassim Haramein interview yesterday and he never fails to blow me away with his enlightened physics, and how it relates to universal truths about just how connected everything really is at all scales.
Conscious life forms with no desire for the art of deception and compromise would naturally exhibit the awareness and understanding that these elephants reveal. We humans tend to exhibit a pension for willful confusion, and then even more confusion layered on when we decide that we are being confused by some external force or stimuli.
Elephants don't waste there time on such nonsense - I doubt it would even occur to them. But it would be even more amazing if we were to discover that it actually does occur to them (to be needlessly & willfully confused for sake of ego drama), and they take a pass on the notion. This would make them somewhat more evolved than us. I find that very amusing and strangely satisfying.
Anyway, take a listen to how Nassim relates physics and mathematics to why there is this inexplicable interconnectedness that is the heart and soul of the extremely energetic vacuum space from which all physical manifestations spring from while retaining their inherent connectedness to all things. It is literally and fundamentally inescapable and unavoidable (unless one willfully enters into the illusive world of self-inflicted conflict, delusion and confusion)...
N Haramein "Fundamental change in current understandings of Physics and Consciousness"?! - YouTube
Visioning an elephant,stopping for a moment, and pondering whether to "engage", or "move on" ,,then of course,snorting, flopping his ears, and "moving on", is a beautiful thought ! Just like the symbolic "sacred trees" that the folks in Avatar would "go online " with, the phants , i am sure, are always online!!!....T