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A cluster of personal columns and readers’ letters published in late January and early February 2026 recount multiple episodes in which birds and other wildlife appeared to comfort people after the loss of loved ones.
Amy-Jane Beer’s Country Diary (The Guardian, Jan. 27) describing bird ‘visitations’ after her sister’s death prompted dozens of responses: readers in England described robins perching on graves or entering homes, foxes pausing at doorways, nightingales and starlings arriving at poignant moments.
Separately, a Feb. 4 Euro Weekly News essay by Santiago Carneri recalled his sister’s death from childhood neuroblastoma and linked avian visitations with memory and mourning on World Cancer Day, while highlighting concerns about pediatric cancer research in Spain.
The pieces emphasise recurring motifs — robins, starlings and foxes — and the consolation people take from interpreting wildlife encounters as symbolic gestures during bereavement.
Several contributors noted the timing of songs or animal appearances at funerals and anniversaries, reinforcing the cultural resonance of nature as a source of solace.
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Euro Weekly News – leading English language newspaper in SpainMy sister, cancer, and the birds that still answer me





















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