August 29, 2022

Puppy Love


Puppy Love
Stray dog in a Moscow animal shelter. VDNKh

On August 19, the mayor of Moscow invited citizens to attend a festival for stray animals at VDNKh. The event took place on the eve of International Homeless Animals Day to encourage Muscovites to adopt cats and dogs in need of new homes.

Thirteen city shelters in Moscow care for more than 16,000 animals. Since January, about 1500 pets have been brought home by new owners, and the city of Moscow is organizing campaigns to increase adoption.

Five cats and five dogs from the shelters "Zoorasvet" and "Zelenograd" participated in an exhibition at the festival, and six of the animals were adopted. Attendees viewed the profiles of other pets in printed catalogs. They can now visit them in the shelters. 

In addition to socializing with the animals, guests of the festival listened to three lectures intended to educate pet owners about training and caring for their four-legged friends.

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This gripping autobiography plays out against the backdrop of Russia's bloody Civil War, and was one of the first Western eyewitness accounts of life in post-revolutionary Russia. Marooned in Moscow provides a fascinating account of one woman's entry into war-torn Russia in early 1920, first-person impressions of many in the top Soviet leadership, and accounts of the author's increasingly dangerous work as a journalist and spy, to say nothing of her work on behalf of prisoners, her two arrests, and her eventual ten-month-long imprisonment, including in the infamous Lubyanka prison. It is a veritable encyclopedia of life in Russia in the early 1920s.

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