Sanichar was sent to the Secundra orphanage at Agra, where he lived among other humans for over twenty years. He never learned to speak and remained seriously impaired his entire life.
At the orphanage[9] he was given the name Sanichar (meaning Saturday) because he arrived on a Saturday.[10] It was reported that he initially walked on all fours and ate raw meat.[11] While he could not speak, he would make sounds similar to a wolf.[3] He went on to live among other humans for over twenty years but never learned to speak, and remained seriously impaired his entire life.[4][12] Sanichar was a heavy smoker.[13]
Sanichar died of tuberculosis in 1895 around the age of 34.[9]
^Zingg, Robert M. (1940). "Feral man and extreme cases of isolation". The American Journal of Psychology. 53 (4): 487–517. doi:10.2307/1417630. JSTOR1417630.