An eight-year-old boy, Tinotenda Pudu, has been found alive after surviving five harrowing days in Zimbabwe’s Matusadona Game Park, an area teeming with lions, elephants, and other wildlife.
According to Mashonaland West MP Mutsa Murombedzi, Tinotenda wandered 23 kilometers (14 miles) from home into the vast and dangerous wilderness.
He spent his days sleeping on rocky perches, surrounded by the roars of lions and the heavy footsteps of passing elephants, sustaining himself on wild fruits and water from makeshift wells he dug in dry riverbeds using a stick—a survival skill commonly taught in the drought-prone region.
The local Nyaminyami community organized a search party, beating drums daily in hopes of guiding him back. However, it was park rangers who ultimately rescued him. On the fifth day, Tinotenda heard a ranger’s vehicle and dashed towards it, narrowly missing it as it passed.
Fortunately, the rangers noticed fresh footprints and followed them until they located the boy.
MP Murombedzi described the rescue as a final stroke of luck, calling Tinotenda’s survival “a story of extraordinary resilience and bravery.”
Matusadona Game Park, spanning over 1,470 sq km (570 sq miles), is home to approximately 40 lions, along with zebras, hippos, elephants, and antelope.
Social media has been flooded with admiration for the young survivor. One user remarked, “This is beyond human comprehension,” while another added, “He’s going to have one hell of a story to tell when he gets back to school.”