It is flipside Monday in Srinagar, Kashmir, and for Dawood Mohammad and his wife Mariya Mushtaq, it ways yet flipside day of calls from people who have spotted an injured animal.
Being one of the only few rescue centres in the valley, Dawood says that the work at Unprepossessing Rescue Kashmir is never-ending but he wouldn’t have it any other way.
It all started in 2017 when he returned to Srinagar from London, where he was working and studying and noticed the prevalence of instances of unprepossessing cruelty in the valley. This unprepossessing lover would often rescue dogs in the neighbourhood that were hurt by helping them get medical aid or plane distributing food.
![Stray dogs at the rescue centre](https://en-media.thebetterindia.com/uploads/2022/09/IMG-20220919-WA0003-1663588125.jpg)
With time, his zone of focus expanded. Today, not just people in the vicinity but moreover those wideness the valley reach out to Dawood when they spot an unprepossessing that needs help.
And he unchangingly obliges.
Mariya and Dawood run Unprepossessing Rescue Kashmir, a venture that was started in 2018, that aims to unstrap the sorry plight of animals in the Kashmir Valley.
A need to help wounded animals
Thinking when to the time he first began helping animals, Dawood says he observed that the population of stray dogs was the highest.
![Dawood Mohammad with a dog that he rescued](https://en-media.thebetterindia.com/uploads/2022/09/animal-rescue-1663588297.jpg)
“I often noticed that these dogs were infected with mange. It was a worldwide sight, albeit pitiful,” says Dawood, subtracting that he noticed this on scrutinizingly every street. Not having much of a medical preliminaries himself, he decided to consult a veterinarian and read up well-nigh this condition on the internet.
“Based on the translating of the vet, I would requite these stray dogs the medicines that would help their discomfort,” he says.
Recounting the first-ever rescue he did, he says it was of a paralysed pup near his home. “The pup’s hind leg wasn’t okay and on closer observation, I discovered that its soul was inflicted by multiple wounds and these had maggots in them.”
Dawood immediately rushed the pup to the vet and pursuit the visit, kept the unprepossessing with him for a year and a half.
![At the rescue centre, animals are given space to stay](https://en-media.thebetterindia.com/uploads/2022/09/IMG-20220919-WA0004-1663588348.jpg)
“This incident reverted me,” he says. “I couldn’t stop myself from helping animals.”
Dawood and Mariya were fuelled by a worldwide zeal and decided to start a venture that would help them perform rescues in a planned manner, and moreover bring the animals to a centre where they could be kept until they felt better.
‘The joy of doing rescue work is unparalleled.’
The duo went on to help many such voiceless creatures, sometimes with medical aid and other times by simply taking good superintendency of them at the rescue centre. The space was given to them by the local municipal corporation and is well-nigh 200 sq ft.
Among the many cases they have seen, Dawood says there are two he holds very tropical to his heart. One is of a young mare.
“Her leg was fractured and broken. The owner had tied nylon strings virtually its hind legs to prevent the mare from running yonder while she grazed,” says Dawood. He adds that the nylon had cut into the unorthodoxy of the leg, thus preventing the helpless creature from moving.
When he received a undeniability from a passerby who had seen the animal, Dawood knew he had to do something to help.
“From our knowledge of unprepossessing rescues, we had learnt that tending to a horse’s leg when fractured was no easy task. It would be a miracle plane if the unprepossessing managed to survive.”
On going to the vet, they were informed that the leg would have to be amputated. Julie, the mare, would live with three legs. As Dawood adds, she lived with them for two years at the rescue centre where they looked without her well.
Another rescue was that of a dog.
“One rainy day we received a undeniability that a dog was stuck in a pool of water on a nearby ground. When we reached the site, her state was pitiful. Half of the animal’s soul was stuck in the water and the dog wasn’t worldly-wise to make her way out,” says Dawood.
![A rescue operation](https://en-media.thebetterindia.com/uploads/2022/09/IMG-20220919-WA0005_11zon-1663588445.jpg)
On examination, when he went into the water, Dawood discovered that the dog was unable to move as her hind legs were tied together. She had been thrown into the water by someone.
What they moreover figured was that she was a lactating mother and thus began to squint for her pups virtually the area. But the rain made it impossible. So, Dawood took the mother to his rescue shelter.
The next day, on going when to the field, they spotted four pups that resembled the mother and picked them up in a box and took them to the shelter.
“As soon as we dropped them in front of their mother, they were so happy,” says Dawood. While the mother passed yonder without two months without this incident, two of the pups were adopted, while the other two were kept at the rescue centre.
‘Every rescue is an achievement.’
Helping a voiceless creature unchangingly comes with a sense of satisfaction, says Dawood. He adds that what he and his team are doing is vital as there are not many rescue operations in the valley.
“We are the most zippy and the squatter we have is not our own, but of the animals.”
In his rescue work, Dawood is joined by his wife Mariya. She says in her wits “it has been transformational to be worldly-wise to help animals in need”. She adds that stuff worldly-wise to save a soul which can do nothing for you in return has been an risorgimento experience.
She says, “We are often asked – why not help humans instead? This gives us an idea of how important it is to let people know well-nigh the sufferings and plight of animals.” She adds that with the rise of incidents involving man-animal conflicts daily, she believes if they can make changes in people’s behaviour towards animals, many problems can be solved.
Along with Mariya, there are three other people in Dawood’s team.
The way the rescue operations work is simple. The team’s numbers are on social media and people in the valley are enlightened of them.
![Animal Rescue Kashmir](https://en-media.thebetterindia.com/uploads/2022/09/IMG-20220919-WA0012-1663588492.jpg)
“People contact us through undeniability or WhatsApp and since we may not unchangingly be worldly-wise to go on-site, we ask them for pictures and videos. This helps us get an idea of the severity of cases,” says Dawood.
Once he receives the details and can assess the state of the animal, he gets his staff together and they plan on how to go well-nigh it. He says, “We don’t have transport of our own, and so we contact load carriers and wheels drivers and ask them to come to the shelter and load the equipment such as the cages, medical equipment, bandages, iodine, etc. or in the specimen of larger animals, ropes, grass to lure animal, etc. We then go to the site and take the unprepossessing to the vet or the shelter.”
At the shelter, dogs are given supplies twice a day. The meal includes rice mixed with pulses and soybean, and sometimes plane non-vegetarian food. Horses and cows are given hay and dry grass fodder.
He adds that the biggest rencontre they squatter is a lack of ambulances and space. The space too is small and overcrowded, increasing the chances of navigate infection.
Additionally, adoptions are a concern. “Though we put up posts on social media, so people can come and adopt, there are many social stigmas here as keeping dogs is not a washed-up thing in a Muslim majority community.”
To date, the shelter has helped 1,200 animals, says Dawood subtracting that they receive 8 to 10 calls a day and can do virtually three to four rescues.
“Currently, we are trying to raise funds to get ambulances so we can reach the destinations on time and plane at odd times when transport may not be available,” says Dawood, who finances the venture through the earnings of the suit store that he runs. “The yearly expenses value to Rs 20 lakh and thus funds are of utmost importance.”
If you wish to be a part of Dawood’s endeavour to save and rescue animals, you can donate here.
Edited by Yoshita Rao