Some People see a Homeless Person with a Dog and assume the worst!

Most innovative and powerful idea.💙

Heavenly good idea, bring good chances upon all those who need it.
Homeless people helping find homes for pets is a great way to better society.

This shelter was built on the opposite belief.
That sometimes the deepest love for animals comes from people who have almost nothing else.
In Rio de Janeiro, journalist Glenn Greenwald and his late husband, David Miranda, created a different kind of animal shelter idea: one staffed by homeless people who already lived on the streets with pets and had shown real devotion to animals.

The goal was simple but powerful.
Help homeless animals.
Help homeless people.
And use the bond between them to give both a new start.

The idea came after years of rescue work. Glenn and David had rescued dogs themselves, including an [in.jur.ed] pregnant dog named Mabel, who unexpectedly doubled their pack after giving birth to six puppies. Over time, their home grew to 23 dogs, and animal rescue became a central part of their lives.
But their work with homeless people and pets changed their view even more.

They saw something many people miss: homeless people often share food with their dogs before feeding themselves. Sociology professor Leslie Irvine even titled her book on this bond “My Dog Always Eats First”, because the devotion can be that deep.

One of the first people hired for the shelter project was Lucas, a 20-year-old homeless man in Rio who had helped care for a severely [si.ck] puppy with remarkable tenderness. After being hired, his salary helped him rent an apartment and begin stabilizing his life.

That is what makes this story so important.
It does not treat homeless people as invisible.
It does not treat street dogs as disposable.
It sees both as lives worth investing in.

The shelter plan included animal rescue, veterinary care, adoption support, employment, housing help, counseling, identification support, bank account help, and long-term stability services through a partnership with CREAS.

This is more than an animal shelter.
It is a reminder that compassion can work in both directions.
Sometimes the person saving a dog also needs saving.
And sometimes a dog gives someone the reason to keep going.

What an inspirational couple. An awesome prosptive on helping the homeless humans and dogs.
Love the giving someone something to care for and a reason to want to do better.

This approach celebrates the powerful bond between humans and animals while giving both a chance to thrive.
More shelter should think abt doing this… It’s a Win Win for both party…

 

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