![]() |
|
How it began It all began with a holiday in Greece in 1987 - the first proper holiday in 15 years for my husband Paul and myself and one we both very much looked forward to. We drove to Greece and intended travelling around for one month before returning home, but as we crossed the border, we encountered the first stray, not realising at the time that he was just one out of hundreds we were to see during our so called holiday. We spent ten days of our holiday on Crete and that’s where we saw appalling neglect of animals ... dozens of hungry stray dogs and cats begging for scraps, ‘guard dogs’ chained to rusty oil drums or to a tree (more often than not there was nothing for them to ‘guard’), not to mention numerous dead dogs and cats lying by the roadside, donkeys and mules left tied in barren fields with no food or water in sight, often hobbled and barely able to move ... We were horrified by all the terrible sights, but what was worse, we were unable to help the poor animals, or at least we didn’t know how we could help them - nobody seemed interested to listen to our complaints and we were even laughed at. The last few days of our so-called holiday found us helping at an animal shelter near Athens and it was there we realised that sterilising of dogs and cats wasn’t a common practice in Greece, but abandonment of unwanted litters of puppies and kittens was. |
|
This is something I can't understand! What is the point
of bringing into this world even more dogs and cats, when their chances
of ever being rehomed were virtually nil and left on the streets, most
of them perish within a few months, if not weeks, either through disease,
starvation, deliberate poisoning or under the wheels of the cars. The
few decent shelters there are in Greece, should be there to help and
to provide a sanctuary for the neediest cases - the starved, sick or
injured animals, but unfortunately they also become a dumping ground
for unwanted litters of puppies and kittens and for older dogs, who
have been replaced by ‘younger models’. |
|
Greece is a beautiful country and there is no doubt many
of the islands are unique in their structure like, for example, Santorini,
but when I visited the island in 1989, the picturesque scenery is not
what I noticed first – it was the poor ‘beasts of burden’
– donkeys and mules, struggling up the steep winding steps with
either the tourists or their luggage on their backs, some were frothing
at the mouth, clearly exhausted ... how pitiful they looked! Yes, the
tourists also need ‘educating’!! |
|
Our fund-raising to help animals in Greece began as soon
as we returned home from that fateful holiday in 1987 and a few months
later, we also set the wheels in motion to apply for a charity status,
which we finally obtained in October 1989. Thanks to several articles
in newspapers and magazines, we ‘spread the word’ about
the plight of animals in Greece and our membership gradually grew. GAR
Newsletters feature many rescue stories and other articles, which ‘show’
people where their kind donations are going.
Vesna Jones |
| CONTACT US HERE | |||
| Email: info@greekanimalrescue.com | |||
| Telephone: +44 (0)20 8203 1956 | |||
|
Address:
69 Great North Way, Hendon, London NW4 1PT
|
|||
Updated: 4th November 2010