In August 2020 a wild boar and her two cubs gained international fame for a few weeks. “Elsa” the mother pig stole a bag containing a laptop at a prominent nudist beach in Berlin’s Grunewald Forest. A photo taken of an elderly nudist chasing the animals was featured in BBC [1], the Guardian [2], New York Post[3] and El Observador [4]. After the newly appointed head of the forestry office told newspapers [5,6] that the animal would be “removed as a matter of priority” a number of different animal rights activism groups [7] and petitions [8] formed to save Elsa. A protest demonstration took place in front of the forestry office with a dozen participants [9,10].
Elsa at Teufelsee - August 2020
I went to see Elsa myself in August 2020, when she stole my backpack as well. Luckily, I didn’t have to chase her, as people helped me to retrieve my belongings. The wild animal was less “wild” than I expected. She had no instinct to flee – what is usually expected of wildlife. Instead, she seemed to know that no one would hurt her and she would get food either way: From trash or forgotten food, stolen from people’s bags, or even fed by humans to lure them closer or to drive them away. Is this the human-wildlife-relationship we want? We are responsible the habituation of this wild boar.
Me in action: Interviewing lake visitors about Elsa
While there are roughly 2.000 wild boars shot in Berlin each year [11], the question arises why specifically one wild boar – one that endangers humans, pets, and their belongings – should be spared? An explanation could be that compared to the other 600.000-800.000 wild boars shot every year in Germany [11], this specific one was given a name and persona: Elsa, the mother, the provider to her cubs, the “cheeky but peaceful sow of Teufelssee” [8]. This boar became more personalized, and citizens, especially those living in cities, came face to face with wildlife and were confronted with the fact that wild boars are hunted. Her fame was short-lived. The interest declined. No more articles, no more protests. Currently, there are no wild boars at Teufelssee. Most likely, we will never know what happened to Elsa and her cubs. However, you can now buy her and her chaser as figures for model train worlds – maybe that’s her legacy [12].
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