Debrashi stands with her two cats in front of a relief camp in Portmot, 15 miles south of Port Blair, the main city of India's remote Andaman and Nicobar archipelago, January 2, 2005. Wild animals seem to have escaped the Indian Ocean tsunami, adding weight to notions they possess a 'sixth sense' for disasters, experts said Thursday. Photo by Jayanta Shaw/Reuters
Annal Mary kisses her 20-day-old baby Suppiah Tulasi, who survived the weekend tsunamis at her restaurant in Penang resort island, northwestern Malaysia, in this Dec. 29, 2004 photo. When the waves hit, Tulasi's parents were flushed out of the restaurant they owned on the beach of the northwestern resort. Tulasi, not yet a month old, had been taking a nap when the calamity struck. She was found hours later floating on a mattress inside the restaurant
Sangeeta, a mother of three boys, looks down on her eldest son, Dinakaran, seated, and the dog that saved his life, Selvakumar Sunday, Jan. 2, 2005. Sangeeta could only carry two of her boys and had to leave Dinakaran to fend for himself when a tsunami crashed into their village on Dec. 26, 2004. Selvakumar pulled Dinakaran out of the family hut and nipped and nudged him up a hill to safety.
What a beautiful child!