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A SHELTER IN UKRAINE SAVED HUNDREDS OF CATS AND DOGS — AND A LION

By Louisa Loveluck
, 
Kostiantyn Khudov
, 
Joyce Koh
and 
Heidi Levine
 
April 26, 2022 at 12:03 p.m. EDT
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Ukrainian woman saves hundreds of animals during Russian invasion
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Asya Serpinska, 77-year-old Hostomel Animal Shelter owner, went toward the front
lines to rescue animals caught in the fighting. (Video: Joyce Koh/The Washington
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HOSTOMEL, Ukraine — As Russian tanks neared Kyiv earlier this year, the
capital’s suburbs were emptying fast. Terrified residents poured out; roads were
gridlocked.

Asya Serpinska walked the other way.

The 77-year-old had spent two decades keeping her animal shelter going in
Hostomel, a town northwest of Kyiv. With the threat of Russian occupation now
looming, she thought, there was no place in Ukraine that needed her more.

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Shelling boomed out as she arrived at the shelter. Through the gate she
recognized the howling and whimpering of various animals.

“I knew it was my responsibility to look after them,” Serpinska recalled.

With three colleagues, she kept most of the 700 dogs and 100 cats alive — and
even rescued a lion — as Russian and Ukrainian forces exchanged shelling
overhead, and as Russian forces repeatedly entered the property and threatened
their lives.



Slight of build with soft gray hair, Serpinska says she was born stubborn. She
says her marriage is a testament to that. She met Valentyn at 18, and although
her parents didn’t approve, she went ahead with the marriage anyway.



With Russian forces on all sides of Hostomel, Valentyn, 78 and fighting Stage 4
cancer, drove through the night and hostile checkpoints to bring her a generator
that saved the shelter.

Serpinska grew up with animals. Later, when she was a math professor, she
volunteered with animal rescue groups in her spare time. After retiring from the
university 22 years ago, she founded her shelter, and four-legged creatures
began pouring in.

Her favorite was Gina, a glossy black dog with mismatched eyes.



Russia’s Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine upended lives across the country. As
Russian forces moved toward Kyiv, officials predicted the city could be seized
within weeks.

When Valentyn woke Serpinska at 7 a.m. that day, he told her it was beginning.

“The first thought that crossed my mind was that I had to run to the shelter,”
she recalled. “I was consciously going to war. My people were here, my dogs were
here.”

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For some shelters, the invasion spelled tragedy. In the Kyiv suburb of
Bordyanka, the owner of a government-run sanctuary left the animals in their
cages and fled. Without food and water, 335 of the almost 500 dogs died.

When asked why no one evacuated the animals, Natalia Mazur, the shelter’s
director, asked why people hadn’t been evacuated.

Serpinska was devastated when she saw photos of the animals’ emaciated bodies.
When she arrived at her shelter in Hostomel on Feb. 24, the first thing she did
was open all the cages so the animals could roam free.

“Why didn’t they open the cages there, too,” she said. “It would have been so
easy.”



As shelling continued over Hostomel, the shelter’s staff kept order, no matter
what was happening outside the gates. Feeding times remained 6 a.m. and 6 p.m.
The rest of the day, they cleaned and watched the animals, and at night, at
least 10 of the dogs huddled under Serpinska’s blankets. “They thought I could
protect them,” she said.

Friends and family begged her to leave, but she refused. “My place is here,” she
told them.

She affixed a golden icon to the shelter’s front door to scare away God-fearing
soldiers. They entered anyway, and often terrorized the staff.

Once, as two soldiers — “dressed like Terminators,” Serpinska remembered —
marched toward the shelter’s front gate, some of the dogs surged ahead to
protect her. A Russian soldier raised his gun and shot Gina through the fence.

She had been running the fastest.

“Why are you shooting? They’re good and kind,” Serpinska screamed at him as her
dog lay dead.

“Well, why are they barking at me?” came the reply.



Amid the chaos of the fighting, the dogs grew so scared that some dug holes
meters deep in the earth. Several were killed in the bombardment.

When a shell landed on a nearby private zoo that housed exotic animals,
Serpinska watched in horror as flames engulfed the building. Its owners had
abandoned it, so her team battled through the smoke, rescuing peacocks and
turtles.

“Only the lion got left behind,” she remembered, with a frown. “For five weeks,
we would go there under shelling and bullets to feed that lion, because it had
been locked in a cage and we didn’t have the keys.”

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One day, Russian soldiers placed a mine outside the cage, she said. Serpinska
began negotiations.

“We said to them: ‘Here’s some water in the bucket, here’s some food. Please
feed the lion.’ ”

The men didn’t budge, so she handed over two packets of cigarettes.

“Step back 10 meters and put them on the ground, then leave,” a soldier told
her.

He stooped down to grab the spoils, then detonated the mine. “It was quite an
explosion,” Serpinska remembered. But the lion was safe — she fed the big cat
daily until Ukrainian forces reclaimed the town in early April.



Hostomel is quiet now. Homes are still deserted. Many are burned or in ruins.
Driving through the town’s streets, Serpinska has been reduced to tears.

But she is rebuilding.

“My parents were terrorized by the Soviets, and so were their parents before
them,” she said as she approached the shelter. “Our generation must resist
them.”

When she enters the shelter’s yard, the dogs swarm her and their tails wag as
they bark in a chorus.

The shelter’s electricity has yet to be fixed, but the animals seem happy
nonetheless. A rescued peacock ambled in a patch of sunlight from a hole in the
roof. The cats were all in their bunk beds, each enclosure warmed by a little
coal chimney.

“We have a saying, and it’s important,” Serpinska said, as she watched them.
“For us, to save animals is to be human.”




WAR IN UKRAINE: WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW

The latest: Ukrainian forces withdrew from Lysychansk, allowing Russia to claim
control of the city that had been Kyiv’s final foothold in the eastern Luhansk
province. Kyiv’s loss means Moscow has seized essentially all of Luhansk and can
move its sights toward neighboring Donetsk.

The fight: A slowly regenerating Russian army is making incremental gains in
eastern Ukraine against valiant but underequipped Ukrainian forces. The United
States and its allies are racing to deliver the enormous quantities of weaponry
the Ukrainians urgently need if they are to hold the Russians at bay.

The weapons: Ukraine is making use of weapons such as Javelin antitank missiles
and Switchblade “kamikaze” drones, provided by the United States and other
allies. Russia has used an array of weapons against Ukraine, some of which have
drawn the attention and concern of analysts.

Photos: Post photographers have been on the ground from the very beginning of
the war — here’s some of their most powerful work.

How you can help: Here are ways those in the U.S. can help support the Ukrainian
people as well as what people around the world have been donating.

Read our full coverage of the Russia-Ukraine crisis. Are you on Telegram?
Subscribe to our channel for updates and exclusive video.

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