Helping Hands for Hounds
of Honduras, run by Pilar Thorn, is one of ten Animal-Kind International
partner organizations. Pilar rescued
Chalo during a de-worming and feeding clinic last April in Tegucigalpa. During the clinic, a woman came up to Pilar
with a closed plastic bag, and opened it to reveal a near-dead, soaking wet and
hypothermic puppy that was full of parasites and too weak to stand, skin and
bones. The woman turned him over to Pilar and took a phone number to check on
him (she never did call).
Pilar wrote to AKI, “The
first week was touch and go. He had diarrhea and would not eat. So lots of
antibiotics (thank you AKI) and after treating him for external and internal
parasites, he started to eat but continued with diarrhea. Finally after two
weeks, he was better and beginning to play. I got him his first vaccinations
(also thanks to AKI) and then started looking for someone to adopt him since
after more than a month, I was quite attached. He learned sit very quickly and
also was crate trained and almost house trained. Jesus wrote to me and asked to
visit the HHHH sanctuary. He came with
his girlfriend to walk a couple of dogs but more to meet Chalo. The next day,
they came to adopt him.” (See photo below of Chalo with his new owner, Jesus.)
I was especially taken with this photograph and wanted to find out more about whether attitudes towards dogs were changing.
AKI asked Pilar, do you think
there's a difference between how men in Honduras treat dogs and cats, and how
women do?
Pilar: Yes, I think there is a difference. It might be a macho thing that makes men not
want to seem sensitive or caring, but on the whole women seem to be more in
tune to animal’s feelings, maybe the maternal instinct but in all the campaigns
you mostly see women helping with some guys (usually boyfriends of women who
are helping).
AKI: Do men in Honduras have
issues with getting their male dogs sterilized--as many men do in the US?
Pilar: Men here have a big problem
with neutering their male dogs or anyone’s male dogs. They think they will no
longer be good guard dogs. Men act as if
you were going to castrate them. They are very reluctant even if the dog is
very uncomfortable and ill from Sticker's sarcoma or transmissible venereal tumor.
It takes a lot of convincing and finally they might agree if they understand their
dog might die if not castrated.
AKI: Are younger men more likely
to show affection towards dogs than older men in Honduras (or younger people in
general)?
Pilar: I see more and more kids of both sexes becoming more
interested in dogs and cats and their needs. They want to go with their pets to
the vet and see what is happening, but the girls like to cuddle them more. I also think young men are more compassionate
than older men. This might be due to the influence of TV, internet, movies,
books or because they do not have to struggle out in the fields working from
dawn to dusk to help feed their families giving them more free time to enjoy
pets. (Photo below of Galip, another HHHH rescue dog enjoying the company of his new family.)
AKI: Do you think animal cruelty
is linked to domestic violence in Honduras?
Pilar: I feel there is definitely a link between animal
abuse and domestic violence with some men beating wives and children as well as
pets. This is especially true in the campo where life is harder and the men go
out drinking and then come home to beat wife and kids and any pets around.
Although I have also seen very poor people treat their pets much better than
some very rich people. I am not sure why.
Thank you Pilar!
To read more about HHHH, AKI's partner organization, and to donate to HHHH's rescue and sheltering efforts, see: http://www.animal-kind.org/honduras.html
To read more about HHHH, AKI's partner organization, and to donate to HHHH's rescue and sheltering efforts, see: http://www.animal-kind.org/honduras.html
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