Compassion is their calling

Despite limited means and strong biases, stray animal feeders continue to care for thousands of community dogs across the country

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Despite limited means and strong biases, stray animal feeders continue to care for thousands of community dogs across the country

Last year, 26-year-old Riddhi Paliwal started to experience anxiety attacks. In her second year of CA, the Bhopal-based Paliwal couldn’t concentrate on her studies. Along with the anxiety of the ongoing pandemic, she was burdened by another deep worry—with the enforced lockdown and self-quarantine mandates, how would the stray animals under her care survive? As donations shrunk considerably, vets became less accessible and movement became restricted, Paliwal’s sense of helplessness took a toll on her mental health.

Being a stray dog feeder is never easy even in the best of times. Practical challenges and backlash from residents are just a few of the daily challenges Paliwal faced along with her friend and colleague Akash Saxena, with whom she runs the NGO Kartavya Society in Bhopal. Through it all, they feed hundreds of dogs and rescue emergency cases everyday around the city. “We face a host of new challenges constantly—either funds, a difficult emergency case, finding a vet at odd hours. I am always problem-solving and the stress can sometimes make me panic,” she says. Even at the time of writing this story, the duo was worried about a dog with a deep gash around his neck. “Someone had tied a wire tightly around his neck which left him seriously injured. The dog is on the outskirts of Bhopal and is scared of humans. He runs away as soon as someone approaches him. We need to help him,” Paliwal frets. 

The task taken on by animal lovers like Paliwal is a herculean one. In India, the stray dog population alone is estimated to be somewhere between 35-40 million. Apart from non-spayed, non-neutered indie breeds that produce litters, many of these include well-bred dogs rejected by puppy mills and commercial breeders as well as dog parents who thoughtlessly buy and then abandon them.

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