A Gesture Beyond Words
When Indonesian photojournalist Anil Prabhakar ventured into the Bornean jungle, he hoped to see an orangutan in the wild. What he captured instead was a moment of unexpected compassion that would stay with him forever.
Prabhakar was accompanying the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation, which rescues and rehabilitates endangered orangutans affected by deforestation and poaching. While trekking through a shallow river in 2019, he saw a crew member wading into the muddy water. A venomous snake had been spotted — a danger to the orangutans — and the man was clearing it out.
As he struggled through the thick mud, an orangutan on the riverbank watched silently. Then, she moved closer, anchored herself with one hand, and extended the other toward the man — as if offering help.
Prabhakar instinctively captured the moment. Though the man declined her hand to avoid risking harm or breaking protocol, the gesture moved him deeply. The image — a wild animal showing empathy — became a symbol of hope and humanity.
“To me,” said Prabhakar, “she was trying to help.”
That simple reach reminded the world that empathy isn’t exclusive to humans. In a forest scarred by human actions, it was the orangutan who offered kindness first.