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Wednesday 10 September 2014

Remembering the hero dogs of 9/11.



We’d like to remember just how much dogs helped humans in the aftermath of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. If there was ever a time in history where dogs proved their distinction as Man’s Best Friend, it was during this unimaginable and overwhelming tragedy.



The 9/11 attacks brought about the largest deployment of Search and Rescue (SAR) dogs in U.S. history. Over 350 trained SAR dogs and handlers came to the Twin Towers site and the Pentagon to search for survivors and to find bodies. The SAR dogs were mostly Labrador Retrievers, Golden Retrievers, German Shepherds, Collies, along with some Spaniels, Dachshunds, other pure breeds and plenty of talented mutts.

This event created a remarkable elevation of the human-canine bond, where dogs and people worked together, understood each other's needs, and helped each other on physical, emotional and even spiritual levels, to get through a crisis neither species understood. Over and over again, there were amazing scenarios of dogs helping people and people helping dogs.

As the dogs worked with their handlers up to 16 grueling hours a day, it soon became apparent that the dogs were nearly as distraught as the human rescuers when there were so few survivors to be found. For the human rescue workers, the lack of survivors made the attacks feel ever more horrific and tragic. For the dogs trained to find survivors, though, it felt like a personal failure.

From a SAR dog's perspective, being a good dog means you do your job and find the people you're supposed to find. The long days of climbing through rubble, squeezing through tight spaces, sniffing every nook and cranny and finding no living people caused the dogs great stress – they seemed to think this failure was their fault. Handlers and other rescue workers had to regularly hide in the rubble in order to give the dogs a successful find, and keep their spirits up.

After only a week or so, it became apparent that no more survivors were to be found. The SAR dogs trained to find the living were honorably discharged from duty, as heroes. Dogs trained to find the deceased took over. They worked side by side with their handlers dutifully, for weeks on end.
There was a support system in place to care for the dogs, who could become exhausted, overwhelmed or injured. A canine medical camp was set up to treat them. Sometimes a chiropractor would come in and give dogs a soothing massage to relieve stress and sore muscles.

A few weeks into the rescue, a SAR dog named Servus, a Belgian Malinois, fell head-first 20 feet into a jagged pocket within the rubble. The reaction that followed demonstrates how much a SAR dog means to his handler and disaster workers. The crew stopped what they were doing and worked frantically to save the fallen dog. His handler climbed down and found Servus suffocating, his nose filled with dust and debris. Servus was in shock. The crew lifted him out, cleared his nostrils and gave him oxygen. A nurse shaved a leg and inserted an IV. Then, he was placed in the back of a police cruiser and sped off with three police motorcycle escorts, blaring sirens and flashing lights to get Servus to the nearest animal hospital. Servus recovered and demanded to return to work the very next day!

Not every dog dispatched in the recovery effort worked in the rubble. Some dogs were dispatched specifically for therapy. They are trained to detect stress and trauma in humans and aided the people who worked long days doing the heartbreaking job of finding human remains. The dogs brought comfort to weary, stressed workers. The SAR dogs also took on side duties of comforting their handlers and other workers who were overwhelmed.

One dog hero of 9/11 was actually on the 71st floor of the north tower when the plane hit. Dorado, a Labrador Retriever, was a guide dog for his blind owner. When glass was flying everywhere, the heat and smoke were intense, and there was panic all around, the blind man knew he had no chance of getting out. He unleashed his dog and commanded him to go, so he could escape and live. Dorado was swept up in the panic, but moments later found his owner and insisted that he move. Dorado guided his owner down 70 flights of crowded stairs. It took an hour to get out, but they emerged to safety just before the building collapsed.

Search and Rescue Dogs save human lives every day. The magnitude of 9/11 brought over 300 of these devoted canines together, bringing international attention as to how remarkable they are. After 9/11, some SAR dogs retired from duty and lived out the rest of their lives as pets. Some went on to work other major disasters, such as Hurricane Katrina.




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4 comments:

  1. Thank you for this important and poignant post, Sheba and Ian. Heroes come in all shapes, sizes and species. And we will never, ever forget.

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  2. wow. what a heavy, great post. Thank you for remembering.
    ღ husky hugz ღ frum our pack at Love is being owned by a husky!

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  3. thiz bee a grate post sheba....thanx for sharin....de food gurl hada friend who took two cadaver dawgs
    two de towers; sad lee only one came home frum that trip ♥♥♥♥♥

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  4. That was a great post and we all need to take a moment to remember those whose lives were lost and those who gave so much trying to help and who do so now, Truly a day that changed so much in our world.
    Have a terrific Thursday.
    Best wishes Molly

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