CHENNAI: Anjamma was sorting fish on the beach somewhere on the Tharangambadi coast when she saw a giant wave rise. She instantly dropped her catch of the day and began running towards her house where her mother was alone with her four children. "I was running and screaming at my mother to carry the children," says Anjamma. Then the wave was upon her. "I lost my consciousness and I remembered waking up near my neighbour's house. There was rubble on me."
Anjamma saw her neighbour's daughter's hands dangling near the rubble and she pulled her out; the girl was alive. Next, she limped toward the remains of her home. Only one of her four children was there. The rest of them had been washed away with her mother in the tsunami. "I only found my daughter Sowjanya lying there, unconscious, without clothes," says Anjamma. She found the body of her four-year-old daughter, Sandhya, on the street and those of her remaining two children, Sharmili and Akhilan, in the hospital.
The three children were buried in a mass burial ground in Tharangambadi in erstwhile Nagapattinam district, the worst-hit region in Tamil Nadu. A 9.1 magnitude submarine earthquake in the Indian Ocean zone triggered a massive tsunami that wrecked India's East coast.
It was December 26, 2004.
At least 10,749 people in India were killed, leaving several families homeless and some victims without a trace. According to the then Thanjavur district collector K Radhakrishnan, Tamil Nadu alone accounted for around 7,900 of the dead. And Anjamma's district was the worst hit: "6,065 were from Nagapattinam which accounted for 75% of the deaths in the state," says Radhakrishnan.
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Sonu Sood slashes Fateh ticket prices to ₹99 for opening day
In a generous move, actor Sonu Sood has announced that his film Fateh, releasing today, will be priced at a mere ₹99.
All eyes on Rohit, Bumrah and Shami in CT selection
Selectors are due to name India's squad for the Feb 22-March 9 ICC Champions Trophy on Saturday
Digital Arrest Scams: All You Need To Know
Every day, we hear about digital scams and fraudulent calls leading to significant financial losses, often targeting vulnerable individuals.
Friendship, coaching rivalry and cricket connections
Sitting in the stands of the Birsa Munda Hockey Stadium, Craig Fulton was observing the Indian players in a training session of Hockey India League (HIL) franchise Team Gonasika.
Sinner Begins Title Defence vs Jarry
Jannik Sinner begins his Australian Open title defence against Nicolas Jarry while women's champion Aryna Sabalenka takes on 2017 US Open winner Sloane Stephens after the draw for the year's first Grand Slam was made at Melbourne Park on Thursday.
Australia tour rubble shows domestic cricket deserves more respect
India suffered two shattering jolts – first New Zealand and now Australia – but in the gloom there is a silver lining, what teams call 'positives'.
Mercedes Bets on Smaller Cities Amid Youth Spending
Germany's Mercedes-Benz, fresh off a year of record sales in India, plans to add another 20 dealerships or service outlets in 2025—mainly in smaller cities where young, well-travelled business owners are indulging in luxury goods.
Rupee NDF volume hits record high on arbitrage activity
RBI interventions in the NDF market kept the local and NDF rates on par for much of 2024
Beyond Snack raises $8.3 mn in Series A funding round
Snacking brand Beyond Snack has raised $8.3 million in a Series A funding round led by 12 Flags Group, a consumer-focused fund set up by Rakesh Kapoor, the former global CEO of Reckitt Benckiser.
Small, mid-cap funds push MF inflows by 15% in Dec
Inflows into India's equity mutual funds rose about 15% month-on-month in December, with investors continuing their buying spree unaffected by the prospect of fewer U.S. rate cuts in 2025 and worries of likely moderation in earnings.