It’s 10am on a Saturday morning in Santo Domingo’s Colonial Zone. Today, instead
of watching the morning news, I’m firmly holding the tail end of a surgical
table in a desperate attempt to demonstrate to my girlfriend that I’m strong
enough to handle what’s happening before our eyes.
The surgeon, searching the patient’s entrails with his right pointer finger,
jokingly says, “Wow… no electricity today. It feels weird not having electricity
in the Dominican Republic.” I let out a whimper of a laugh since I’m still
trying to hold down the cereal and milk I had eaten just an hour before.
I let my eyes wander, in order to avoid fixing my sight on the patient’s
wide-open stomach. “Not the nicest facilities,” I think to myself: a dark
operating room, a surgical table that looked like it had been used during the
battle of Gettysburg, noisy patients in the waiting area and the obvious lack of
a secretary to answer the numerous calls.
“Focus,” I say to myself, as I concentrate once again on the surgery at hand,
now alone, as my girlfriend had since fled the surgery room, too grossed out to
see more. In front of me are two young men in their 20s, working as a team to
finish the first of this morning’s operations. The procedure seems very
complicated and tedious, as the head surgeon pokes and prods through the stomach
of the unconscious patient.
After what seemed like an eternity (but was probably a half an hour), the target
is ready to be removed. With the assistant holding it in place, the head surgeon
cuts the object out, placing it on the metal surface of the surgical table. Less
than a minute later, another object, identical to the first, is placed in a V
shape formation next to its partner. “What’s that?” I think to myself. After
wiping some blood from the surgical opening, the surgeon answers my question.
“This is what they call the V of the fallopian tubes,” he says. “This is where
the egg is fertilized.”
On this Saturday morning I find myself at the Patronato Amigos de los Animales (PADELA)
- one of the few animal protection agencies in the Dominican Republic. Founded
in 1983, this non-profit organization has been quietly helping improve
conditions for the capital’s stray cat and dog populations through a variety of
services that include collecting the animals off the street, administering
proper vaccinations, performing sterilizations, and finally, putting them up for
adoption or returning the animal to the place from which it was collected.
Now, as the organization approaches its 25th anniversary, PADELA is falling on
hard times. In a country where animal rights and abuse are ranked far lower on
the list of priorities than other social problems, organizations such as PADELA
suffer greatly in their attempt to collect the funds they need for their
intended missions.
“Sometimes all the cages we have are full and up to four dogs are loose in the
office so we can’t bring in any more,” says Manuel Híchez, a veterinarian who
works part time at PADELA. “People have told me that they will let them loose if
we don’t accept their dog … and they throw them out on the street. But sadly,
because of our limited space, we can’t have too many animals.”
Due to its status as an official non-governmental organization (NGO), the
Dominican government earmarks a total of RD$10,800 a month to PADELA, an amount
that sometimes takes several months to be paid and usually only covers the cost
of the office utilities. PADELA itself is left with the task of drumming up
enough resources to support their very needy patients. These funds usually
trickle in from sparse donations and at times from the pockets of their own
staff. One peek inside PADELA’s humble office/shelter suggests that although the
money doesn’t pour in as fast as the strays, somehow things are being held
together.
“The government funding is supposed to pay for everything, but that money covers
next to nothing. (The dogs) are like children, you can’t tell them that they’re
not going to eat today. You have to find (the money) any way you can for food
and medicine,” says Híchez.
PADELA may be going through tough times, but they are not alone in their
support for animals. There are around five registered animal protection agencies
throughout the country. These include: The Sociedad Dominicana Para La
Prevención de Crueldad a los Animales (SODOPRECA), Fundación Salvavidas,
Fundación Dominicana de Estudios Marinos (FUNDEMAR) and the Sosua-based Amigos
de los Animales. The funds available for these organizations vary quite a bit,
with some enjoying a larger resource pool than others. Despite the difference in
wallet size, each of these organizations has more or less the same mission: to
protect the rights of animals and promote their wellbeing, so, why can’t they
work together? PADELA’s vice-president Luisa Pérez admits that she has contacted
SODOPRECA at times for cases she cannot handle, but also attributes the ultimate
lack of teamwork to personal politics. She mentions that in the Dominican
Republic especially, many prefer to take the credit rather than share it with
others.
“I’m not the type of person who believes in self-promotion, and I don’t do
things so that others can say, “Luisa you did it”- it’s not like that,” says
Pérez. “Yes, there is rivalry between the groups, but I don’t see why we can’t
help each other. It’s a small country, but none of us can expect to do anything
alone.”