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Animals 'Own' Argentine Sanctuary

Animals rule the countryside at the “Animal Paradise” sanctuary, 75 kilometers outside


Argentina’s capital, Buenos Aires.

The sanctuary is a labor of love - something being operated for pleasure, not for profit.

Gabriela Bezeric and Armando Scoppa have been heading the center for over 25 years. They
rescue animals that would otherwise have been killed for meat.

Around 850 animals live in the sanctuary. These “residents” include ducks, pigs and horses. The
sanctuary is also home to llamas and capybaras – large mammals native to South America.

Bezeric hopes one day to expand the Animal Paradise.

“I always say that I am going to save all the animals that are at risk of death,” she told the
Reuters news agency.

Bezeric and Scoppa, who are a married couple, support animal rights. Their ideas stand out in a
country where meat consumption is central to the culture and to the economy.

Yamila Buboff volunteers at the sanctuary.

“The Animal Paradise is the product of the work of two visionaries who a long time ago
believed in giving a second chance to animals, mostly those destined for consumption,” she said.
“So that they can be treated as the sentient beings they are and not just as a plate of food.”

An economic crisis has held up some of the couple’s plans for expansion. They are now looking
for financial supporters.

“The important thing is that our ‘Paradise’ can keep going,” said Bezeric. “Everything I do is for
the animals and I want to continue so that this remains for them.”

As he fed “Wolf”, one of the sanctuary’s horses, Scoppa said that he sometimes worried about
the future. He and Bezeric are now in their 70s.

“There are no heirs here, the animals are the only ones to inherit it,” he said. “The animals own
the place.”

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