Marina
Chapman’s life story is one that is so extreme, so inconceivable, that many
find it difficult to believe.
Kidnapped
from her family at a young age, abandoned in the perilous Colombian jungle,
befriended by a troop of reticent primates, and now, decades later,
revealed in a best-selling memoir – Marina’s story stands as a
radical case of adaptation and survival.
In fact,
Marina says she was first reluctant to share her experience with
the world because of its extremity, but her daughter, Vanessa James, would not
allow the story to fade into oblivion. With persistent coaxing, Marina,
along with her daughter Vanessa and writer Lynne Barrett-Lee, worked
diligently to piece together a foggy memoir that, once completed, would
ignite public controversy and shock readers worldwide.
The Day Everything Changed
Shortly
before her fifth birthday, Marina recalls playing in her family’s vegetable
garden, which, to her now evanescing memory, was likely in Venezuela
or Colombia. She says she became aware of two adults behind her, and before she
knew it she was taken away, with sounds of crying children being her last
memory before she blacked out.
The next
thing she knew she was being driven deep into the Colombian rainforest, where
she was then dumped and abandoned. It soon became clear to Marina that no one
was coming for her, and that finding some sort of sanctuary was absolutely
crucial to her survival.
After
countless hours of weeping and wandering the treacherous jungle terrain, Marina
stumbled upon a group of small monkeys. She explains how she became completely
infatuated by their antics, even feeling envious of their tight-knit bond.
However, it was clear the monkeys had no interest in the stray human.
At one
point, Marina recalls the moment when things changed between her and the group
of primates. After falling severely ill from tamarind food poisoning, Marina
says that one of the elderly monkeys, which she now calls “grandpa,” guided her
to muddy water. Marina drank the water, vomited, and eventually recovered.
From this
moment onwards, Marina says she felt welcomed by the monkeys, and began
observing their instinctual behaviour in order to gain some sort of survival
skills. How to climb trees, what was safe to eat, how to clean
herself, all of these habits she picked up on quickly.
Thankfully,
she soon discovered that if she stood underneath monkeys carrying armfuls of
bananas, they would inevitably drop a couple, and if she was quick enough she
could grab them for herself. Marina inescapingly found
herself assimilating into life in the wild, and as the years went on, who
she was before all of this was steadily becoming a distant memory.
A New Family
Marina
explains that if it weren’t for the monkeys, which were thought to be
capuchins, she most likely wouldn’t have survived. Capuchins are known to be
well-cultured towards humans, so it makes sense that they would eventually
accept Marina into their territory.
But was
Marina actually “raised” by these monkeys? Not entirely, she explains.
“They
were just tolerating at first. They don’t really love you. One day one of the
younger ones landed on my shoulders, and if you’ve never been hugged in your
life, and this animal climbs over your shoulders and puts their hands on your
face, I tell you it’s the nicest touch,” Marina told the Guardian.
The media
wanted to paint a different picture of her story, however, which Marina
explains is why many find it difficult to believe. The subtitle of her
book boasts, “The Incredible True Story Of A Child Raised By Monkeys,” something she now
says is not quite right. Even at five years old she was much bigger than
the monkeys. She scavenged food from them, but they didn’t provide for her. But
what they did do was invite her into their extended family, something to which
Marina feels she is ever indebted.
Life In The Jungle
Days in
the jungle were spent thinking about food, Marina says – what to eat, where to
find it, and how to get it.
Other
than that, she says her favourite pastime was sitting in the trees being
groomed by the monkeys. “It gives you goosebumps when they go through your
hair and eat the things they find in it. They do it so gently. It feels like a
good head massage.”
But even
with her acclimatization to the jungle life, Marina yearned for human contact.
Hunters, armed with machetes and guns, started occasionally passing close by,
the sight of which would frighten Marina at first. But then one day, she
decided to approach them.
Naked and
walking on all fours, Marina cried for the men to help her. But what happened
next was far from salvation.
No Place To Call Home
While
then men did bring Marina back to civilzation, it was a far cry from a pleasant
new beginning.
Marina
was sold into a brothel, where she was regularly beaten and forced to do
chores, although she denies any involvement in prostitution. Eventually, Marina
gathered courage and made her escape into the streets of Cúcuta, where she
bonded with other homeless children.
During
this time she survived like all the homeless children survived, through fraud
and theft. One trick, she explains, was to creep up on young women wearing
short skirts, pull down their underwear, then run off with their bags, which
they would usually drop in shock.
Eventually,
a friend told Marina she could get off the streets by working for food and
lodgings as a domestic. Marina found a family who agreed to take her on
and who then renamed her Rosalba. But as it turned out, living with the family
proved miserable. They were notorious criminals, she explains, who treated
her horribly.
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