
For Immediate Release:
March 29, 2023
Contact:
Nicole Meyer 202-483-7382
Norfolk, Va. â As work to rebuild Turkey ramps up after last monthâs devastating earthquake, one little cat who survived the disaster is now rebuilding his life with a PETA rescuer who found him hiding in the rubble. As told in a new video, PETA fieldworker Alex Cutshall, who flew from his home in Virginia Beach to Turkey to help rescue as many animals as possible, found the cat in a dilapidated building that tilted just like the Leaning Tower of Pisa. Thatâs how he got his nameâPisaâand a new home 8,000 miles away with his rescuer.
In the video, Cutshall recounts how he and the plucky rescue team coaxed the terrified cat into a carrier. They soon learned that Pisa wasnât microchipped, giving them no way to locate his family, if he even had one. So PETA had him cleared for travel, and he took to his new guardianâs lap on the flight home to Virginia, purring the entire timeâthe loudest purrs Cutshall says heâs ever heard.
Photos are available here.
âPisa was so scared when we first found him, surrounded by crumbling buildings, his world in pieces, and with nothing to eat. There was no question he had to come home with me,â says Cutshall. âToday, our whole family is showing Pisa heâs safe and loved, and heâs enjoying life, from cuddling with the kids to playing with our two dogs and even bringing energy back to our elderly cat.â
PETAâs Global Compassion Fund helps rescuers respond to animal emergencies around the globe at a momentâs notice. Rescue teams in Turkey have climbed into collapsed buildings to find injured animals, whisked starving animals off the street, and even used a crane to reach a cat who had been stuck in a fourth-floor apartment for 12 days, desperate for food and water (video here). More animalsâ stories are available here.
PETAâwhose motto reads, âAnimals are not ours to experiment on, eat, wear, use for entertainment, or abuse in any other wayââopposes speciesism, a human-supremacist worldview. For more information about PETAâs lifesaving work, please visit PETA.org, listen to The PETA Podcast, or follow the group on Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram.
Source: Peta.org