The Last Horned Giants
And the silent cries of the Earth’s endangered souls

In the quiet corners of our world, where the forest meets the mist and the ocean touches forgotten shores, live creatures whose names may one day be spoken only in memory. These are not just animals — they are living echoes of an older, wilder Earth. Among them, the rhinoceros stands as a solemn guardian, but it is not alone in its fading.

The Javan Rhino, with its armor-like skin and single elegant horn, moves silently through the remaining rainforest of Ujung Kulon. Only about 76 of them remain. Once widespread, they are now restricted to a sliver of land in Indonesia — one natural disaster away from being lost forever. They ask for so little — a home, a forest, and a chance to exist. But even that is a luxury now.

Close behind is the Sumatran Orangutan, whose eyes reflect centuries of wisdom and sorrow. Clinging to the treetops in the dwindling forests of Sumatra, it watches the chainsaws below with quiet fear. Habitat destruction, poaching, and the palm oil industry are pushing this gentle, intelligent species toward extinction. They build their homes in the trees — cradles of leaves and branches — only to see them vanish one by one.

Farther north, in the icy waters of the Arctic, the Polar Bear paces the melting ice. It is the king of the frozen world, but its kingdom is shrinking. Global warming is robbing it of the sea ice it needs to hunt and survive. With every passing year, it must swim farther, starve longer, and struggle harder. Its white coat blends with the snow, but it cannot hide from climate change.
On the African plains, the Black Rhino walks with wary grace. Its horn, a symbol of nature’s elegance, is also its curse. Poachers, driven by greed and fueled by myths, kill these creatures for profit. Their eyes, so ancient and alert, search for peace in a land that’s growing too dangerous. Fewer than 6,000 remain, and each one is a fragile hope held together by courage and conservation.
In the dense forests of China, the South China Tiger, once a powerful predator, is now considered functionally extinct in the wild. It was once called the "king of the forest." Now, it survives only in captivity, its roars silenced in the wild. A symbol of power has become a whisper — a reminder of what inaction can cost.
All of these animals, from the forest to the ice, from the mountains to the sea, are not simply endangered. They are symbols of what we are losing — beauty, diversity, and the balance of life itself.
They are not just part of nature; they are nature.
Each time we cut down a forest, pollute a river, or turn away from their suffering, we steal a little more from the world we will one day leave to our children.
But there is still time.
There are hands planting trees. There are voices calling for protection. There are people standing between poachers and the hunted, between profit and preservation. Conservationists, rangers, scientists, and everyday hearts are working to ensure these creatures don’t vanish without a fight.
Please, take care of the animals.
Not as ornaments. Not as possessions. But as fellow beings who share this Earth with us.
Their lives are poetry, movement, and memory.
To protect them is to protect our own soul.
Let us listen while they still whisper.
Let us act while we still can.
Let the wild remain wild — not in museums, but in the living world, breathing and free.
Please, take care of the animals.
About the Creator
Leesh lala
A mind full of dreams, a heart wired for wonder. I craft stories, chase beauty in chaos, and leave sparks of meaning behind. Built to rise, made to inspire.




Comments (3)
It's heartbreaking to read about these endangered animals. The Javan Rhino's situation is especially dire, with so few left. It makes me wonder what more we can do to protect them. We've got to act fast to save their habitats. The Sumatran Orangutan facing threats from deforestation and the palm oil industry is also a huge concern. How can we convince more people to stop supporting products that harm their homes? And the Polar Bear losing its ice due to global warming... it's a wake-up call. What steps can we take as a society to really make a difference and give these animals a fighting chance?
good work
Excellent!!