30 August

Taking Over Payments For Sakler’s Tuition: 2018

by Jon Katz
Big Checks

This has been an intense few days  for me, for Ali, for the Army Of Good and my bank account. Monday, I wrote a check for $3,000 to the Albany Academy cover the difference between Sakler’s scholarship grant and the total tuition  due.

So far this week, I’ve send the school $6,357 dollars – thank you Army Of Good. This a commitment I have undertaken for the next four years.

Sakler’s tuition for 2018 is now paid. He will start school as planned.

Tomorrow, I will open a Sakler Moo Education Fund account at my local bank and start saving for next year. Any additional money that comes in will go to the fund for next year’s tuition, and if there are additional expenses this year.

I want to keep this tuition money separate and accounted for, i will be visiting Sakler and collecting the money over the next four years.

Each month, all the money that comes in is examined by a bookkeeper and a New York City accountant. We make sure everything goes where it is supposed to go.

Every person we help must agree to be photographed so that everyone can see and know where their money is going and to whom. That is our contract, our way of documenting our work.

This week,  I took over the $2,000 payment to the school that Sakler’s mother, Lae Pwy, hoped to make each year.

It’s a serious commitment, I am happy and proud to make it.

Lae Pwy, a sweet and loving mother,  was very anxious about the money. I could see how torn she was between wanting Sakler to go and the reality of her life, the life of the refugee in America.

The only income from the family comes from Sakler’s father, who is a goods stocker at Wal-Mart. Lae Pwy is a brave and loving woman, and a very devoted mother, but I was not comfortable leaving her under so much pressure, I couldn’t get easy about it, and I thought it would be easier for me to raise that money than for her.

When I saw the look on her face of relief and happiness, I knew it was the right decision.

Monday, I bought her and the family lunch at a local restaurant to celebrate. I realized it was the first restaurant meal of her life. She is making dinner for Maria and I next week, Ali and Caroline are coming as well.

This will be a profound experience for Sakler and his family. I can’t say I have ever felt much better than this, there’s doing good and there’s doing good.

Law Pwy is saving money for the incidental costs that accompany life in a private school.

Supporting Sakler: Ali, Sakler, Ehkuidoh, Law Pwy

I was also glad to forestall one of Sakler’s elementary school teacher,  Caroline  Espinoza, who was about to sign a contract also to commit to sending some of her money to the school.

I know what teachers make in Albany and she has two very young daughters. Teachers like this need support, not more pressure and obligation.

Caroline  has been  telling the Academy about  Sakler for several years now, and lobbed  effectively and persistently for his admittance. She embodies the very best tradition of the teacher.

I thought the simplest thing was to take over these payments, they will come to between $5,000 and $6,000 a year. Lae Pwy wants to support Sakler, but she was immensely relieved.

Elementary school teachers with two small children do not have a lot of money lying around.

I’ve  received more than $5,000 from donations so far, and I expect more to arrive at my post office box in the next few days. If anyone wishes to help, you  can: Please  send a contribution to Jon Katz, Post Office Box 205, Cambridge, N.Y., 12816, or via Paypal, [email protected]. Please mark your check or donation Sakler Moo Fund.

Starting next week, when the account is opened, all money for Sakler over the next four years will go there, and stay there until it is needed.

Sakler went to the school for his second day of orientation today, classes start around September 7.  He says he loves it, he is a little daunted by how smart the other kids are. He will not have a problem.

Then some unexpected and unwanted news:

While I was at a retinal eye specialist having my eyes examined, Ali called and said the red van we purchased to ferry the soccer team to gaves and other activities was in some trouble.  He had that  regretful voice he gets when he needs to ask me for money. He never asks for anything  wasteful or unnecessary, but he hates to do it.

He told me that the van needs four new brakes and ball joints, as well as a tire rotation and three other things I can’t quite remember.

The van is essential to the life of these children, and to Ali and our work. So when Ali asked if I could help, I knew i would need another $2,000, that is the mechanic’s estimate, and he is a good person who has given us many breaks on repairs for the van.

He has to be paid in the morning. He will be.

The van needs to be ready by noon tomorrow to get to soccer practice. I’ll figure it out tonight. When it rains, it does pour, and Ali, as always, was upset  at asking for money this week. We are still basking in Sakler’s triumph.

I told him life happens, the measure is grace is not that we have no trouble, but that we handle trouble with dignity and acceptance. I’ll get that money together. Life happens to everyone, and quite often, much worse than this.

So contributions are still very welcome and still much needed. He’s got to buy uniforms as well.

If you wish to help Sakler Moo in his journey through this very prestigious private school, you can make a contribution to Jon Katz/Sakler Fund, P.O. Box 205, Cambridge, N.Y., 12816, or via Paypal, [email protected]. Please mark the check “Sakler Moo Fund” Thanks.

Audio: Life Happens. The Big Red Van Needs $2,000 In Repairs

30 August

Waiting For Bud. Almost Done: The Hard Stuff is Over

by Jon Katz
Almost Done: The Hard Stuff Is Over

At the bottom of the page, a message for Bud.

The finish line is in sight for Bud.

Today, he left Dr. Jonathan Bradshaw at the South Arkansas Animal Clinic, he was spayed and just had his final heartworm shot. In 30 days, he will be tested for the heartworm bacteria, if the test is negative, he can come home to us.

Carol Johnson of FOHA and Dr. Bradshaw are miracle workers, they take sick and  abandoned and unadoptable dogs and just flip them over, they work hard to make them healthy and spare no expense on their treatment.

I can’t believe the progress they made with Bud in just a couple of months. When he was taken in by FOHA he  was an emaciated and terrified wreck, traumatized by the very sight of men. That is no longer the case.

Everybody who deals with Bud loves  him, he is a sweetie.

FOHA specializes in caring for homeless heartworm dogs, they are worthy of support.

They take the toughest cases, which means they are the most important and most interesting cases to write about.

Once Dr. Bradshaw clears Bud, he will be put in a huge  FDA approved truck and he and other animals will come up from the South to be dropped off at various urban sites. One of them is Brattleboro, Vt., about 90 miles away.

Dr. Bradshaw told me today that Bud isa  very fine dog, sweet and smart and easy to be with. Sounds great. Carol says the same thing. He has formed some sort of devilish pact with a cat, she knocks bags of chips off of the counter and Bud steals them and tries to hide. When he’s caught, says Carol, he gives the “stinkeye.”

Anyway  Bud, I recorded a short message to you, perhaps Carol will play it so you can hear my voice. I hear you are a terror when you play with other dogs. Fate is waiting for you.

See you in October.

Message For Bud:

30 August

Evie’s Angel, Evie’s Joy, Evie’s Pneumonia: Can She Find A Home?

by Jon Katz
Evie’s Angel, Evie’s Joy

Evie is a dog that stretches the boundaries of rescue for me, I can’t imagine myself adopting her, yet I wake up thinking about her and am hoping one of the many dog lovers out there will want to give  her the first loving home of her life.

Not every dog deserves to live forever, often suffering, and at great expense. Very few humans are given that gift.

But I am thinking that Carol Johnson of FOHA/RI is right about her, Evie is not ready to leave the world, she is ready to experience the love of a dog and animal lover with a big heart, and I know many. I am  trying to do some good these days, and I want to do some good for dogs.

Carol and the vet techs call Evie “sweet Evie.” She is a sweet dog.

We’re getting close. Carol Johnson (of the Friends Of Homeless Animals rescue group [email protected]), is handling Evie’s adoption and medical treatment.  She says a half dozen people have called to ask about Evie, but no one has yet asked to adopt her.

An anonymous angel appeared yesterday, a reader of the blog.

Carol told me and made a big donation: “We had a wonderful person who wants to anonymously pay her current vill at the vets. This was over $600. They also will pay for her heartworm treatment. We are over the moon about this. We have many kind donors but this is special. They saw the story you wrote….”

I think I know this person, but will not say.

I do not believe there is only one way to get a dog, nor do I accept that the only more way to get a dog is to rescue one. The only moral way I know of is to get the dog I want and become its steward, offer a healthy, loving and meaningful life.

The best dog to get is the dog you most want. Evie is an admitted wreck, she has suffered every one of her ten years on this earth, yet she is sweet and forgiving, in the way only dogs can be.

I talked with Dr. Jonathan Bradshaw at the South Arkansas Veterinary Clinic this afternoon, he told me that Evie had contracted pneumonia, common in poorly ventilated shelters that are worm and with dogs in close quarters.

He said Evie would recover. She will be fine, it will just take a while.

I asked her if Evie would get healthy enough to be adopted, and  he said yes, absolutely. Evie is the dog that has never known human love, says Carol, she was dumped off in a shelter and was in horrific condition, the photos are almost unbearable to look at. She had no hair and could barely stand up.

Because of her health problems and age, said Carol, she will be a  very difficult job to place. We’ll see what me and my blog are made of.

Under Dr. Bradshaw’s loving treatment, she has made enormous strides already, she is being treated for heart disease, she has a hernia and heartworm.

And now, pneumonia.

It will take about three months to heal her, when she will be able to be transported to a new home (FOHA pays for transport.) The donation request for Evie is $299.

Is there a place in our dog scheme of things for an animal like this?

Is it going too far?

Maria said if Bud weren’t coming, she adopt Evie in a minute. So there must be other people out there would also adopt he and are taking more than a minute.

Late this afternoon Carol posted this message about Evie:

“Sweet Evie is recovering from spay and hernia surgery.  We will begin heartworm treatment as soon as medically appropriate. First step will be 30 days of antibiotics to kill the detris produced by heartworm.”

We’ll see what happens. I know the people who read my blog, and I suspect one of them will want to provide that home,  and wherever she goes, I hope to know how she turned out..

Audio: Thinking Of Evie

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