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EXCLUSIVE: When Russia launched its brutal full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, among the first defenseless victims were ...
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Saving the Animals of Ukraine Season 42 Episode 16 | 53m 29sVideo has Audio Description, Closed Captions| ADCC Witness a moving view into the effects of war on animals and the humans who help them.
He draws connections between past ecological losses—like the extinction of passenger pigeons—and modern policy rollbacks threatening wolves and other native species.
Fact and fiction blurs together in Maria Reva's beautifully chaotic 'Endling,' a novel set in Ukraine before the Russian invasion.
Volunteers that found themselves in active war zones stayed behind, facing bombs and Russian soldiers, to protect animals. Learn more on The Excerpt.
Saving the Animals of Ukraine is produced with the participation of Rogers Documentary Fund and The Canadian Film or Video Production Tax Credit.
A new book tells the story of life in Ukraine during the first year of war in that country, and it's written by a Utah native.
On the six-month anniversary of Russia's invasion and Ukrainian Independence Day, a Cloquet woman reflects on her trip to her home country.
For Ukraine’s Animals, a Home Is Getting Harder to Find Early in the war, thousands of pets were ferried out of danger, mostly to other European countries. But now adoptions are waning.
Thousands of people have been killed and millions displaced. Four-legged Ukrainians are also suffering, but there are groups working to help the animals.
Fact and fiction blurs together in Maria Reva's beautifully chaotic 'Endling,' a novel set in Ukraine before the Russian invasion.