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Disabled animals given new lease of life at Israeli sanctuary

 Freedom Farm serves as a refuge for mostly disabled animals and as an educational center for visitors.

Elana Ringler (Reuters)
Moshav Olesh, Israel
Thu, March 14, 2019

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Disabled animals given new lease of life at Israeli sanctuary A volunteer walks with Nir, a cow with prosthetic leg at 'Freedom Farm' which serves as a refuge for mostly disabled animals in Moshav Olesh, Israel March 7, 2019. (REUTERS/Nir Elias)

M

iri, a three-legged donkey, Gary, a sheep with leg braces, and Omer, a blind goat, munch on some hay at Israel's only animal rescue and educational sanctuary.

Founded by animal rights activists Adit Romano, a 52-year-old former business executive, and Meital Ben Ari, 38, who used to work in tech, Freedom Farm serves as a refuge for mostly disabled animals and as an educational center for visitors.

"If you want people to open their hearts towards these animals, we have to bring them close," said Romano, stroking two pigs named Yossi and Omri.

Most of the nearly 240 animals at the facility were raised for slaughter. Some were donated by farmers who chose to save them. Others, like Miri, who was found lying in a ditch with a broken leg, were abandoned.

After Miri's rescue, her leg was amputated.

Read also: Sanctuary for prowlers, yowlers

Ben Ari said children with special needs particularly enjoy tours of the farm and its 5 acres (2 hectares) of green pastures, stables and a barn in Moshav Olesh, an agricultural community in central Israel.

On a visit with her 84-year-old father, Shira Breuer, 56, said: "I'm worried about the future of humanity and this place sounds like a place of hope."

The farm's most recent addition is Nir, a five-month-old cow fitted with a prosthetic leg to replace one that was broken and then amputated.

Freedom Farm raised money for the artificial limb and medical care through an internet crowd funding campaign.

It costs about $1 million a year to run the farm, which relies on contributions and volunteer workers from Israel and abroad, including musicians - who come and play for the animals. 

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