MEULABOH, Indonesia – There was something about the schoolgirl's face — her broad forehead, a familiar bump on the bridge of her nose.
Zainuddin went back home and pulled out an old photo of his niece. His heart racing, the 50-year-old called his sister. "I found your daughter," he told her.
From that happenstance encounter six months ago, 14-year-old Raudhatul Jannah would be reunited with her family here in West Aceh, nearly a decade after she and her older brother were swept from their parents' grasp by the great tsunami and given up as lost to the sea.
Jannah's is one of the happier stories of the children whose lives were upended the morning of Dec. 26, 2004, when a monster earthquake shook the Indian Ocean floor, triggering giant waves that surged more than 2½ miles inland on Indonesia's Sumatra island.
All told, more than 230,000 people in Indonesia, Thailand, Sri Lanka, India and several other countries perished that day, half of them under age 18, according to some estimates.
In hardest-hit Aceh province in Indonesia, most of the thousands of children who were reunited with their parents found them in the first few chaotic weeks, when relief agencies poured in and helped desperate families find missing children with photos posted in refugee camps and other places.
Ten years later, hundreds of schools have been rebuilt, thousands of teachers hired — and a post-tsunami baby boom promises to fill the new classrooms for years to come.
Even so, few can say that life has returned to normal for the tsunami children.
In Aceh, the government estimates that as many as 33,000 children lost one or both parents. Many of them are still struggling to adjust. For a decade, they have lived in homes without a mother, father or sibling, or in families created by remarriages. Some lost their families altogether and were forced to live for at least a time on the streets or find refuge with benevolent strangers.
No one can forget the disaster for very long because of subsequent earthquakes here. Some children are seized with fear even when it rains.
"I never go back to the beach," says Iqbal, who like many Indonesians goes by a single name. For the lanky young man, now 18 and with a thin mustache, the "thick and black waters" remain as vivid as ever in his mind, as do the details of that day when his parents were separated and he lost one of his two sisters.
"My mom was shopping in the market, and my dad was waiting for her on a motorbike," Iqbal says. "I was at home watching TV, a Japanese cartoon. There was a big earthquake and suddenly people were shouting, 'The seawater is rising! It's rising.' " Iqbal and his sisters and older brother ran out of the house together, he says, but one of the girls "didn't make it." He is now living at home with a brother, sister and their father, who works as a street merchant, selling ginger.
At Junior High School No. 9 in Banda Aceh, about 10 percent of the current students lost their mothers or fathers, says the headmaster, Abdullah.
"Many [tsunami] children were toddlers when their fathers got remarried because they had young children and it was hard to raise the family on their own," he explains. Abdullah, who doubles as the school's counselor, says remarriages have caused stress and behavioral problems in some children.
"Now they have grown up and realize that this is not their real mom," he says. "Some of them keep skipping classes or don't come to school at all."
Junior High No. 9 was one of about 1,500 schools in Aceh flattened by torrents of water so powerful that a 2,600-ton barge was lifted and dropped nearly two miles from shore. The tsunami arrived on Sunday morning when school was out, but the earthquake and tsunami claimed the lives of 45,000 students and 1,820 teachers in Aceh. At least eight teachers and an unknown number of students at Junior High No. 9 were lost.
With aid from an Indonesian bank, the public school was rebuilt and opened in August 2006. It now has 325 students in the seventh to ninth grades, compared with 500 before the tsunami. Tiasma, a 34-year veteran teacher at No. 9, says the students today score lower in tests and seem more distracted and sad than those she taught a decade earlier. Economically, she says, more families are struggling to buy books for their children.
Yet in a number of ways, Aceh children are better off than before the tsunami. Scores of international relief groups have helped improve health and hygiene standards. Vaccination rates for children are much higher; and significantly more are enrolled in early childhood education. Aceh's mental health system also has developed, although the World Health Organization says funds are drying up.