Sponsor a Horse
BORN TO GALLOP
Horses have evolved alongside us for millennia. Intelligent and sensitive animals, they have always fascinated humans. Born to gallop unrestrained, they show us the path to freedom.
Horses (Equus caballus) are still in search of their ancestor. While it is known that the earliest representatives of the equid family roamed the earth more than fifty million years ago and that the genus Equus (which also includes zebras and donkeys) emerged around five million years ago, scientists are still struggling to identify which wild species gave rise to the horses we know today. Researchers long believed it was the Botai horse in Kazakhstan, but genetic analyses in 2018 proved them wrong. The mystery remains unsolved. One thing is certain: horses have accompanied human history and survival since the dawn of time. Our prehistoric ancestors hunted them extensively for their meat. They also used their skin for clothing, their bones for making tools, and their hair for crafting ropes. Horses also served as models for representation, as evidenced by cave art.
Later, with their domestication, horses continued to serve humans in numerous ways: pulling plows in fields, facilitating transportation and communication, and taking the blows in battles. Today, these animals, with their extremely high emotional intelligence (see sentience file), are still subjected to numerous forms of abuse: exploited and pushed beyond their limits in horse racing, trained and degraded in circuses, blinded and pierced in bullfighting arenas, abandoned or sent to slaughter when they are no longer profitable. Our species shows terrible ingratitude towards those to whom it owes so much.
Friendicoes sanctuary for retired equines in Gurgaon
We support the Friendicoes Lifetime Sanctuary in Gurgaon, India. Managed by our partner Wildlife SOS, this sanctuary rescues horses exploited by riding centers in Delhi. Due to neglect, overwork, and poor levels of care, the equines develop health problems prematurely. When their “owners” have pushed them to the brink of collapse and can no longer profit from them, they do not hesitate to sell or abandon them on the side of the roads. Thus, broken, stressed, and underweight animals are welcomed into the sanctuary. But, thanks to the dedication of the team, they find the support they need to enjoy a happy and dignified retirement.
Animal sponsorships
Totem
Sponsoring Totem means giving him all the support he needs to finally find respite after years of abuse.
After struggling to survive in a circus, then in a field where his owner had abandoned him for long weeks in the dead of winter, Totem was a shadow of his former self when we took him in. He was very nervous throughout the rescue operation. However, with a great deal of silence, patience and gentleness, he agreed to let us put a halter on him and guide him safely onto the truck.
Care
We transferred Totem to a partner shelter in France where we provide all his care. In this shelter, dedicated to the care of domestic and livestock animals that have been abandoned, mistreated or almost sent to the slaughterhouse, he is surrounded by all the attention he needs.
Sponsoring Totem means giving him all the support he needs to finally find respite after years of abuse.
ORION
Sponsoring Orion means restoring his trust in the human race by comforting him and meeting his every need.
The circus owner who exploited Orion had seen fit to let him roam for many weeks, without care or food, in a field that didn’t belong to him. After a call for help from the village mayor, we were able to seize him and other animals abandoned to their fate. Despite being very nervous during the intervention, he eventually regained his composure on board the truck.
Care
We transferred Orion to a partner shelter in France, where we provide all his care. In this shelter, dedicated to caring for pets and livestock that have been abandoned, mistreated or almost sent to the slaughterhouse, he is surrounded by all the attention he needs.
Sponsoring Orion means restoring his trust in the human race by comforting him and meeting his every need.
Heera
Heera – which means “diamond” in Hindi – was living her last moments when she was rescued in December 2013. Abandoned for nearly a year by her “owner” on an Indian farm, this mare lay among the corpses of ten deceased peers and writhed in pain. Taken in at our care center in Gurgaon, it took her months to regain the ability to eat normally and recover from her suffering. With all the patience and affection necessary, the caregivers managed to reassure and comfort her. The beautiful horse understood that she was now surrounded by humans who only wanted the best for her. Thanks to them and her own resilience, she was able to heal her physical and psychological wounds. She now displays an optimistic temperament and robust health. She is often seen playing with other animals in the shelter, galloping and neighing happily in the field. Her strength and determination are a model for all.
Sponsoring Heera means providing her with the water, food, and care she so desperately lacked. With your support, she can finally gallop freely without any hindrance!