A HERMIT who turned his back on the modern world 25 years ago doesn’t want to return to society even after losing all his fingers to frostbite.
Reclusive Leonid, 60, from Russia‘s frozen Siberia decided to lead an unusual lifestyle after going through a painful divorce.
Leonid has lead a hermit lifestyle for 25 years following a painful divorceBorn to Help/CEN
Born to Help/CENThe man gathers his food, hunts and even chops wood himself[/caption]
Born to Help/CENBut it has been a struggle after he lost all of his fingers to a frostbite[/caption]
Born to Help/CENHis humble cabin has only a blanket, wood-burning hearth and cans used for cooking[/caption]
Now he lives alone in a ramshackle log cabin with just his hunting dog for company.
Leonid lives off the berries and mushrooms he picks and any game he can kill, and even chops wood himself to keep warm.
But it is a constant struggle with just his thumbs and the stumps of his fingers to hold the axe.
The astonishing video footage shows bearded, fur-wearing Leonid greeting care worker Yulia Tikhonova, the head of the volunteer group Born to Help.
As Yulia calls out to him, Leonid emerges from the broken front door of his snow-covered cabin wrapped in quilted coats and with a Cossack-style hat on his head.
As the pair talk, Leonid smiles as he holds up his hands to show the camera his finger stumps.
Inside his hidden home there is a simple wood-burning hearth, a blanket to sleep on and cans used for cooking food.
His cabin is some 2.8 miles away from the village of Desyatnikovskoye, in Buryatia, in the Russian Far East.
Yulia explained: “He says that he won’t go to people. He says it’s good here too.
“For 25 years now he has been living like this in his dugout, 4.5 kilometres from the village of Desyatnikovskoye.
“Sometimes he comes to us to sell berries or game, and to his aunt’s to go to the bathhouse to wash.
“But this is rare, after all, the road is long, and not at all well-maintained.”
Leonid explained his simple lifestyle saying: “The forest is my home, and I am the master of it.”
Sometimes he sells his game to the village for a few rubles that he uses to buy essentials from the shop.
But last winter, Leonid got frostbite and lost all his fingers and villagers turned to the Born To Help charity.
Yulia said: “In the summer, residents turned to our foundation, told us about Leonid and added that he needed help.
“They were worried that he would not be able to cope with everyday issues on his own because all the fingers on both hands were amputated, only the big ones remained – one knuckle at a time.
“As it turned out, he had frostbite last winter, and they persuaded him to go to the hospital. The doctors decided to amputate.
“But Leonid did not undergo further treatment, but ran away from the doctors back to his dugout.”
Gradually the charity has been gaining his trust, with Leonid admitting that it is difficult even to chop wood with no fingers.
Yulia said after the encounter: “Today he greeted us like family. We sat for a long time discussing what Leonid needed.
“He talked a lot about his life in the forest, about hunting and even boasted about his game trophies!”
She said that he had managed to snare a hare weighing 5 kilogrammes.
She added: “Tomorrow we will come again, we will take warm clothes, felt boots, and goodies.”
Leonid does not want to relocate, although he says he dreams of building a proper log cabin and improving the road to the local village.
Similarly, a Scottish hermit who has lived without electricity and running water for almost 40 years insists it’s a “nice life”.
And a Colombian football fan gave up his interest and hasn’t watched a game in 30 years after he started a new life as a hermit following a call from God.
Born to Help/CENLeonid dreams of building a proper log cabin one day[/caption]
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