After Being Buried for Hours in 2004 Tsunami, Survivor Says Next Generation Needs to Know What Happened (Exclusive)

Mar. 15, 2025

Soffie Modin was on holiday on Koh Phi Phi, Thailand, when the tsunami hits the islands.Photo:National Geographic/Charlie Laing/Alec Davy

Soffie Modin is on holiday on Koh Phi Phi, Thailand when the tsunami hits the islands. Finding herself injured and trapped beneath piles of debris, all she can do is call out for help. When fellow survivors hear her shouting, Soffie thinks she is saved, but the dangerous rescue operation means that she must wait and hope that her rescuers return. The definitive story of the 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami – the deadliest in history – is told through unseen video and stories of survival, courage and self-sacrifice in the face of impossible odds, from those who were there. Featuring scientists who raced to understand the unfolding disaster and warn the world, journalists who broke the news, and rescuers who risked everything to save others. (National Geographic/Charlie Laing/Alec Davy)

National Geographic/Charlie Laing/Alec Davy

Soffie Modin can’t forget the horrors she endured after she survivedthe Dec. 26, 2004, tsunamibut says fewer young people know about the world-changing disaster.

“Maybe it’s hard [for the younger generation] to understand,” she tells PEOPLE in this week’s issue.

Without the ubiquity of cellphone cameras to record what happened 20 years ago, younger people now may not grasp the scale of the horror. (“it wasn’t so easy,” Modin says.)

“We only heard a sound, like a really loud sound,” she explains. “No people screaming, nothing like that, just like a train was coming.”

Modin, who is featured in National Geographic’sTsunami:Race Against Time(streaming now on Disney+ and Hulu), says the group was ultimately split up amid the chaos. She describes “tumbling around and not being able to breathe,” likening it to being inside a washing machine.

“I had nerve damage in my leg because it was like a big woody thing was pressuring into my stomach,” she adds. “So down there at that moment, I thought I would lose my leg totally.”

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

The Swedish native also recalls hearing people crying out for help. She realized, “They’re not getting any help … They are dying around me.”

Eventually, Modin was rescued and reunited with Magnus — but his brother was killed. It took her eight months in the hospital and home care to recover. But she ultimately realized she needed to embrace her “second chance” in life — “grateful to be alive.”

While Modin and Magnus are no longer married, the two continue to keep in touch with the tsunami being the “one thing” they can still share. She also finds it has become “kind of therapeutic” to talk about.

But she decided to revisit the ordeal because there’s a younger generation that doesn’t know much about the terror that unfolded that day. “It’s a little bit nice to just lift that lid again,” she adds.

source: people.com