Young Brothers Orphaned in World’s Worst Tsunami Were Taken in by Their Neighbors: 'Made Us Who We Are' (Exclusive)

Mar. 15, 2025

Before the tsunami Theo (left) and Louis traveled around the world with their adventurous parents.Photo:National Geographic/Charlie Laing/Alec Davy

When the tsunami hits, Theo Mullan and younger brother Louis Mullan (pictured here during an interview) were on holiday with their parents in Khao Lak, Thailand.

National Geographic/Charlie Laing/Alec Davy

Louis Mullan and his brother Theo returned home to the U.K. in shock after their parents vanished when theworld’s deadliest tsunami in historyslammed into Khao Luk, Thailand, on Dec. 26, 2004.

“Flying home without your parents and not knowing anything, but obviously [we had] common sense what the reality probably is,” Louis, who is featured in National Geographic’sTsunami:Race Against Time(streaming now on Disney+ and Hulu), tells PEOPLE in this week’s issue.

But back in Cornwall, England, the boys, then 16 and 12, received an unexpected offer: a neighboring family of four offered to take them in. (Theo was even adopted due to his age.)

Although they hadn’t really been close before tragedy struck, Louis, 36, still remembers when the family’s mom, Linda, “sent us a card and said, ‘We’d love to offer you a home.’ "

“She felt something was telling her that she had to do that,” he adds.

That decision, which allowed them to stay about 8,000 feet in proximity to their childhood home, also gave the boys the ability to “pretty much slot back into pre-tsunami life,” he adds. Although Louis says there was “obviously some disruption,” life carried on, which he’s grateful for.

“If we didn’t have that, I think that’s when it would’ve been so much harder,” he says. “The opportunities they’ve offered us and the love that they’ve given us has made us who we are.”

The Mullan boys with mother Catherine Mullan in the 1990s, location unknown.courtesy

Louis Mullan (L) and Theo Mullan with mother Catherine Mullan in the 1990s, location unknown

courtesy

Today, Louis runs a veterinary business with his wife Rachel, who is pregnant with their first child. Meanwhile, Theo, 31, works in media sales and is happily married, too. The brothers remain as close as ever.

For more on life 20 years after the 2004 tsunami, pick up the latest issue of PEOPLE, on newsstands Friday, or subscribehere.

And though 20 years have passed, Louis says he and his brother’s grieving continues especially as they reach different milestones in life.

The Mullan boys with father Leonard Barratt on vacation in Italy in the 1990s.courtesy

Louis Mullan (L) and Theo Mullan with father Leonard Barratt on vacation in Italy in the 1990s

“When I got married, I was like, ‘[I] wish my parents were here to see this or to meet Rachel,’ and now there’s a child on the way,” he adds.

He plans to tell his son what happened to his grandparents, but shares the reality: “Linda will be his gran.”

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But their parents would be so happy to see their sons living full lives, Louis says.

He adds, “Knowing that we are still here and together, more importantly, would be some comfort.”

source: people.com