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Reality bites

nda/jen/dpa/apApril 10, 2009

A woman who jumped into the polar bear enclosure at the Berlin Zoo on Friday and was mauled by a bear -- which was not the famous Knut -- is currently recovering in the hospital.

https://p.dw.com/p/HUUy
Knut, who did not attack the woman, play fights with a zoo keeper at Berlin Zoo
Polar bears have been known to be less than cuddlyImage: AP

When Germany started to go polar bear crazy back in 2006 with the birth of global superstar Knut, there were no warnings of the dangers of promoting a wild animal as a loveable, cuddly companion.

With every polar bear birth – from Flocke to Wilbaer – the possible psychological effects of the relentless merchandising campaigns and the highly lucrative "aah" factor went unaddressed.

Amid all the hype and hysteria, no-one spoke up to remind the enraptured public that these animals were supreme predators who, given time, would be more inclined to bite than to lick the hands that fed.

Eradicating the boundaries of common sense -- which kept polar bears firmly in the part of the brain marked 'potential killers' away from the part inhabited by Steiff toys and kittens -- may be to blame for the behavior of a German woman who leapt into the polar bear enclosure at Berlin Zoo on Friday.

Police say the 32-year-old woman jumped into the enclosure and was bitten several times on her arms and legs by one of the four older polar bears in the enclosure and not by the famous Knut.

Heiner Kloes, a zoo spokesman, told the DPA press agency that keepers pushed the bear away and pulled the woman out from the enclosure, which is surrounded by a fence, a line of prickly hedges and a wall, a comprehensive sign that getting in with the bears was not encouraged and one which suggests that the woman was very determined.

The woman was taken to a hospital for treatment. Her condition was not immediately known. Police did not say why she jumped in with the bear.

The bear responsible for the attack will not face any consequences.

"The woman has proved herself to be careless by jumping into the enclosure," a police spokesperson told the Associated Press. "Logic tells us that polar bears will do this type of thing in this situation."