Starving and weak, the mother held on—while her baby clung to her with tiny arms, unaware she was giving everything just to keep him alive.

The roughly 20-year-old orangutan, who was later named Mama Nam, was a victim of the recent spate of fires sweeping through the jungles of Borneo. When Mama Nam’s forest burned down, she lost her home as well as her source of food. But she wasn’t about to give up on the little orange bundle who was clinging to her side.

In order to protect her baby, Mama Nam resorted to stealing food from a nearby village – a dangerous task as farmers will sometimes kill and torture orangutans in return for stealing their crops. Fortunately, International Animal Rescue, a group that rescues and rehabilitates wild orangutans, heard of her plight late last week and rushed to the scene.

“It is amazing that, despite the fact that she was so skinny and weak, this mother was still determined to protect her baby,” Ayu Budi Handayani, a vet with IAR, said in a statement. “She had already undergone the trauma of losing all sources of food and shelter when the forest was destroyed and then she had to contend with being hit by an anaesthetic dart and caught in a net. The poor thing couldn’t know that we were there to help not harm her.”

But despite her struggles, photos show just how much her little baby needs her. Even as Mama Nam lies unconscious, her child won’t let go of her emaciated body, hugging her mother tight as the medical team gently works around her.

“This poor mother and her baby have been without food for many months because their habitat was destroyed by fire,” Karmele Llano Sanchez, program director for IAR, said in a statement. “It is heartbreaking to see wild orangutans in this extreme state of starvation … the horror of rescuing animals from the burning forest and seeing their habitats wiped out before our very eyes is almost impossible to bear.”

“I hope it won’t be long before both mother and baby are fit enough to be released into a protected area of forest where there is a plentiful supply of fruits and other food to sustain them,” Alan Knight, CEO of IAR, said in a statement.