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January 3, 2005
Girl saved tourists thanks to school lesson
Topics: Southeast Asia Earthquake and TsunamiI've been writing about the deaths, dislocation and torment of so many people for days; most of them were children. So when I spotted this article at Petrified Truth I jumped at the chance to help get the word out on this - a ten-year-old girl saved a hundred other tourists from what she had only recently learned about tsunamis. Nothing like good news and miracles at a time when everything else you are hearing is related to death, pain and suffering. I'll add this post to the "miracle baby" story that I posted on several days ago as being the two brightest rays of sun in an otherwise sea of tsunami-related cloudy skies of dispair.
-Reuters (Yahoo news) via Petrified Truth:
(Click image to enlarge - A view of the quake-triggered tidal waves hitting Kammale temple in Phuket, about 862 km (536 miles) south of Bangkok on December 26, 2004. A 10-year-old British girl saved 100 other tourists from the Asian tsunami having warned them a giant mass of water was on its way after learning about the phenomenon weeks earlier at school.
LONDON (Reuters) -
A 10-year-old British girl saved 100 other tourists from the Asian tsunami having warned them a giant mass of water
was on its way after learning about the phenomenon weeks earlier at school.
"I was on the beach and the water started to go funny," Tilly Smith told the Sun at the weekend from Phuket, Thailand.
"There were bubbles and the tide went out all of a sudden. I recognised what was happening and had a feeling there was going to be a tsunami. I told mummy."
While other holidaymakers stood and stared as the disappearing waters left boats and fish stranded on the sands, Tilly recognised the danger signs because she had done a school project on giant waves caused by underwater earthquakes.
Quick action by Tilly's mother and Thai hotel staff meant Maikhao beach was quickly cleared, just minutes before a huge wave crashed ashore. The beach was one of the few on the Thai island of Phuket where no-one was killed.
Her teacher, Andrew Kearney, paid tribute to his quick-thinking student.
"Tilly is a very bright, level-headed girl ... it is an incredible coincidence that our class were learning about this type of tsunami just two weeks before Christmas," he told the newspaper.
On Sunday, the Foreign Office said 40 Britons were confirmed dead from the December 26 tsunami which claimed some 130,000 victims. The toll is expected to rise.
And rising it is, just 49 minutes ago Reuters reported:
BANDA ACEH, Indonesia (Reuters) - The United Nations (news - web sites) put the latest death toll in Asia's tsunami at around 150,000 and warned it could still soar as relief workers were confronted by huge devastated areas without roads, bridges and airstrips.
Back to that sea of tsunami-related cloudy skies of dispair.
The Education Wonks also posted on this story.
Update: Tsunami Roy has been added to the list of bright rays of sunshine in that sea of tsunami-related cloudy skies of dispair!
Posted by Hyscience at January 3, 2005 7:30 PM
Articles Related to Southeast Asia Earthquake and Tsunami:
- Tsunami survivors reject new homes - Feb 09, 2005
- Tsunami toll tops 295,000 - Feb 07, 2005
- Earthquake (does not) result in Tsunami alert (updated) - Feb 05, 2005
- Lesson from forefathers helped spare Island at quake epicentre - Jan 30, 2005
- Aceh's tsunami relief effort 'in chaos' - Jan 27, 2005
- Tsunami Impact: In relief camps dignity sells for a pittance - Jan 24, 2005
- Lone tsunami survivor found on island - Jan 23, 2005
- Tsunami survivors 'eating leaves' - Jan 20, 2005
- Tsunami decimates Aceh's child population - Jan 20, 2005
- Miracle of little girl plucked from debris - Jan 18, 2005

















