| BANBIRPUR,
India...
When
the man-eating wolf came to this tranquil village toward
dusk on an evening in mid-August, it was every child's
worst nightmare come true.
The
wolf pounced while Urmila Devi and three of her eight
children were in a grassy clearing at the edge of the
village, using the open ground for a toilet. The animal,
about 100 pounds of coiled sinew and muscle, seized
the smallest child, a 4-year- old boy named Anand Kumar,
and carried him by the neck into the luxuriant strands
of corn and elephant grass that stretch to a nearby
riverbank.
When
a police search party found the boy three days later,
half a mile away, all that remained was his head.
From
the claw and tooth marks, pathologists confirmed he
had been killed by a wolf - probably one of a pack
conservationists believe has been roaming this area,
driven to killing small children by hunger or by something
else that has upset the natural instinct of wolves
to avoid humans, like thrill-seeking villagers stealing
cubs from a lair.
The
scale of terror...
It
has been more than a century since India faced the
threat of man-eating wolves on anything like the scale
now terrorizing this region of the state of Uttar Pradesh.
Since the first killing five months ago, 33 children
have been carried off and killed by wolves, according
to police figures, and 20 others have been seriously
mauled, along this stretch of the Ganges River basin
350 miles from New Delhi.
A
hunt by thousands of villagers and police officers
has killed only 10 wolves so far.
With
new attacks each week, hysteria is sweeping the area
of the killings, a terrain of lush fields interlaced
with rivers and ravines that reaches about 60 miles
north to south and about 40 miles across. More than
9 million people live in the region in some of the
harshest poverty found in India.
Folklore
revisited...
A
frenzy of rumors has put the blame for the killings
not on wolves but on werewolves, the half-man, half-wolf
creatures that have stalked their way through folklore
for about as long as human societies have existed.
Other
rumors have put the blame for the killings on infiltrators
from Pakistan, who are said to have dressed up as wolves.
Pakistan is India's traditional enemy.
Men
stay awake all night, keeping vigil with antique rifles
and staves. Mothers keep children from the fields,
and infants are kept inside all day.
In
the dark interiors of stark brick homes made clammy
by the monsoons, fantastic stories are told, sweeping
aside all attempts by officials to convince villagers
that the killers have been wolves.
"It
came across the grass on all four paws, like this," said
Sita Devi, the 10-year-old sister of the boy killed
by a wolf in Banbirpur on Aug. 16, as she moved forward
in a crouch from a cluster of villagers gathered by
a well.
She
told her story with tears in her eyes, to anxious murmurs
from the crowd.
"As
it grabbed Anand, it rose onto two legs until it was
tall as a man," she said. "Then it threw
him over its shoulder. It was wearing a black coat,
and a helmet and goggles."
The
girl's grandfather, Ram Lakhan Panday, who drove a
truck in Calcutta for 50 years before retiring to his
native village, said: "AS long as officials pressure
us to say it was a wolf, we'll say it was a wolf.
"But
we have seen this thing with our own eyes. It is not
a wolf; it is a human being."
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