On a bustling spring day in 2009, just days before Easter, Berlin Zoo was filled with a lively crowd eager to see the zoo’s star residents a family of four polar bears.
The bears, known for their formidable strength, held the attention of visitors from the safety of the perimeter wall.
It was feeding time, a moment so intense that even the zookeepers wouldn’t dare enter the enclosure.
Families with children gathered around, excited to watch the Arctic animals, unaware that their outing was about to take a dramatic turn.
Suddenly, the buzz of excitement shifted to cries of horror as a loud splash echoed through the zoo. To everyone’s shock, a 32-year-old woman had jumped into the moat within the polar bear enclosure.
Swimming toward the bears, she ignored the perilous situation she had just entered.
She swam through the icy water towards the massive predators, who were perched on a rocky island at the center of the enclosure.
While most of the bears continued eating, one of them took notice of her and started moving closer. With powerful strides, the bear approached the intruder and, within moments, lunged in her direction.
Onlookers, including families with young children, looked on in terror, fearing they would witness a tragedy. The bear bit her neck, and the agony was visible on her face, sending shockwaves through the crowd.
As the bear maintained its grip, parents shielded their children, some even turning away, dreading the inevitable.
Desperately, the woman began to struggle toward the wall separating her from the viewing area.
Zookeepers quickly sprang into action, tossing life rings into the water and throwing meat to distract the bears.
Other staff members prodded the animals to distance them from the terrified woman.
The tense moments were captured on video, revealing the woman’s frantic attempts to grasp onto the life ring. Each time, she slipped back into the water, her life hanging by a thread as three bears closed in on her.
At one point, a bear dove under the water, seizing her by her lower body in an attempt to drag her back.
She fought to escape, narrowly avoiding repeated attacks as her cries filled the air.
In a final, desperate attempt, she clutched onto the life ring, and, through the zookeepers’ relentless efforts, she was finally pulled to safety.
Calm returned to the enclosure as the bears retreated, surrounded by the remnants of the chaotic incident.
The woman was rushed to a nearby hospital with wounds to her arms, hips, back, and legs. Zoo officials remarked she was “lucky to escape with her life,” a statement that echoed through the shocked community.
Zoo biologist Heiner Klos later told the German press, “Our alarm system worked. Otherwise, things would have ended badly for the bear.”
A police spokesperson added, “The woman jumped in there carelessly and must logically expect that adult polar bears do such things.”
Interestingly, this wasn’t the first time Berlin Zoo had dealt with such a breach in the enclosure.
In 2008, a man had climbed into the same paddock, trying to approach the famous baby polar bear, Knut, because he believed the animal was “lonely.”
Zookeepers quickly noticed the man and removed him before any harm could occur.
Despite repeated incidents, Berlin Zoo has resisted calls to increase the perimeter wall height, reasoning that anyone determined to jump in “will always find a way.”
Watch the video: