Pit Bull Heroes: 49 Underdogs with Resilience and Heart
By Greg Murray
()
About this ebook
A celebration of pit bulls doing a world of good.
Pit Bull Heroes spotlights forty-nine underdogs who beat the odds and became heroes in their families, neighborhoods, and communities. Meet Chad, found on a street corner, who now serves as the first pit bull in the pet therapy program at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia; Apollo, who finished first in his police training and now sniffs out narcotics at his full-time job in Washington State; and Charlie, who rallied an entire community to fight breed-specific legislation laws in Lakewood, Ohio. All pit bulls; all heroes in their own way.
Animal advocate and photographer Greg Murray captures these pit bull heroes in their day-to-day lives and shares their inspiring stories.
Helpful resources show how you, too, can become an advocate for pit bulls and animal safety in your community.
Greg Murray is an award-winning animal photographer and rescue and pit bull advocate. His first book, Peanut Butter Dogs, is a rollicking portrait collection of more than 140 dogs, many of them pit bulls, enjoying peanut butter. His work has been featured in Huffington Post, Today, Daily Mail, Elle, People, and other media outlets throughout the world. He lives near Cleveland, Ohio, with his wife, Kristen, and two rescue dogs, Leo and Kensie.
Greg Murray
Greg Murray is an award-winning animal photographer and rescue and pit bull advocate. His first book, Peanut Butter Dogs, is a rollicking portrait collection of more than 140 dogs, many of them pit bulls, enjoying peanut butter. His work has been featured in Huffington Post, Today, Daily Mail, Elle, People, and other media outlets throughout the world. He lives near Cleveland, Ohio, with his wife, Kristen, and two rescue dogs, Leo and Kensie.
Read more from Greg Murray
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Pit Bull Heroes - Greg Murray
Pit Bull
Heroes
49 Underdogs with
Resilience and Heart
Greg Murray
Photo ofDigital Edition 1.0
Text © 2019 Greg Murray
Photography © 2019 Greg Murray except a noted otherwise
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced by any means whatsoever without written permission from the publisher, except brief portions quoted for purpose of review.
Published by
Gibbs Smith
P.O. Box 667
Layton, Utah 84041
1.800.835.4993 orders
www.gibbs-smith.com
Designed by Rita Sowins / Sowins Design
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Murray, Greg, author.
Title: Pit bull heroes : 49 underdogs with resilience and heart / Greg Murray.
Description: First edition. | Layton, Utah : Gibbs Smith, [2019]
Identifiers: LCCN 2018058563 | ISBN 9781423650454 (ebook)
Subjects: LCSH: Pit bull terriers--Anecdotes.
Classification: LCC SF429.P58 M87 2019 | DDC 636.755/9--dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2018058563
Photo of Diesel.Photo of Hot Rod Mel.Photo of Lola.To all the animals in shelters looking for their forever humans.
More than 4,000 of them are euthanized daily in the US alone. Help bring that number down by adopting, fostering, volunteering, donating, advocating, and educating.
Photo of Lucky.Contents
Foreword
Introduction
Apollo
Chad
Moni
Mel
Elvis
Roxy
Acorn
Calista
Buford
Chango
Theodore
Taco
Gemma (Los Angeles)
Dobby
Tyrion
Beatrice, Kimberly & Stilton
Bear
Lexy
Chauncy
Penni
Gibson
Lola
Ashley
James
Sometimes Carl
Mira
Gino
Lucky
Charlie
Valentina
Meryl
Abel
Zoey
Gemma (Cleveland)
Owen
Rocco
Trent & Ella
Leonard
Suka
Baxter Bean
Toby
Angel, Todd & Sally
Diesel
Malibu
Tips to Help End Breed-Discriminatory Legislation
Safety Tips
Dogfighting
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Foreword
A Love Letter to Good Dogs and Their Defenders
I met Scarlett at the pound in Gary, Indiana. She looked like a dull, brown sack with nothing but bones inside. She didn’t have the strength to climb into my car. So, not knowing the first thing about this sorry-looking dog I’d just sprung, I scooped her up and arranged her on the passenger seat. As I pulled out of the pot-holed parking lot, I handed her a big, meaty treat. Holding it in her teeth, she glanced at me for a long moment, then—no kidding—she looked back at the dilapidated building and growled. Good riddance! After a trip to the vet, where she was diagnosed with severe malnutrition and an incurable type of anemia, I brought her home to my condo on the South Side of Chicago, which I shared with my partner, Matt, our tough little cat, Sushi, and our beloved resident pit bull, Beatrice. For days Scarlett recuperated in our guest room, lying beside me as I wrote my doctoral dissertation in social work. Her pressure sores began to heal, she steadily gained weight, and she learned that she was safe, perhaps for the first time in her life. She became friends with Beatrice, who showed her how civilization worked: You potty outside, you play with this ropey-rope, you watch movies on the sofa, and the human people feed you and make a big deal about how cute you are.
Scarlett, like so many of the pit bulls we fostered through Chicagoland Bully Breed Rescue, had what seemed an almost supernatural sensitivity to human feelings. Once, as Scarlett slept on her velveteen dog bed in the corner of the living room, my sister-in-law began to cry. To our surprise, this apparently sleeping, terminally ill dog with no reason at all to trust humans leapt onto the sofa beside Mary and gently licked her tears away.
As Scarlett’s anemia inevitably worsened, Beatrice donated blood and stuck by her tired friend. But in the end, the best we could give her was four months of the good life—four months that she so totally deserved. Being a part of what I’ve begun to call the Pit Bull Movement can break your heart. We have seen acts of abuse and neglect that haunt our dreams. Being a part of this movement means looking squarely at the profound, seemingly endless injustice experienced by a group of dogs that many Americans have written off as monsters. Sometimes it also means ruined carpets or nibbled cell phones, a crate in your kitchen, endless fundraising, weekends spent doing home visits with potential adopters, or educating police departments or city governments about the plight of pitties.
It often means dealing with the ignorant and harmful prejudices of people who believe you can determine the content of a dog’s character by the shape of its head or the shine of its coat.
But being a part of the Pit Bull Movement has also put me in touch with some of the world’s toughest, kindest people—folks who, on a shoestring and out of a deep commitment to making the world better for people and dogs, keep on doing the almost impossible. They are my heroes. They go into the back rooms of high-kill public shelters to make gut-wrenching decisions
Photo of cute dog.Photo of Leonard.about which lucky pittie will find her way into their one available foster home. They deliver donated kibble to dog owners who are homeless and arrange for their dogs to be spayed or neutered. They meet strangers under the L
tracks to pick up sick and injured dogs, no questions asked. They comb the terrifying online pet-for-sale ads trying to prevent dogs from falling into the hands of dogfighters. They show up at city council meetings all over the country to advocate for just and effective animal welfare laws rather than ineffective breed-discriminatory legislation. And they lead by example, through responsible dog ownership and by helping their own pitties become ambassadors of the breed.
As a social worker, I am part of a profession with a long (if imperfect) history of fighting for social justice. From my point of view, I can’t help but see the maltreatment of pit bulls and the discrimination against them as bound up with the same social forces that sustain racism and economic injustice. As scholars like Erin C. Tarver and Bronwen Dickey have shown, pit bulls have become associated with crime, poverty, and people of color—an association that harms both dogs and people of color by perpetuating a false stereotype that both are dangerous. In reality, pittie owners are people of all races, ethnicities, genders, and socioeconomic backgrounds. So are the rescuers and advocates working on their behalf. Few of the pit bull–type dogs found in America’s shelters have ever been involved in dogfighting, and ongoing research continues to show that pitties in shelters pass temperament testing at higher rates than many other well-loved breeds. I’ve come to hear in arguments for breed-specific legislation
not-very-subtle racism and classism. Maybe it sounds simple, but I want for pit bulls something I want for myself: To be judged by my own actions in the sometimes-difficult circumstances of my life, to be known without prejudice. The goofy, affectionate, brave, resilient dogs Greg Murray has photographed for this book have been lucky enough to be seen in this way.
So, when I look into the eyes of a pit bull, I don’t make assumptions. Instead, I find myself silently asking, Who are you? Show me who you are.
Finding out has been one of the great joys of my life.
Eevie Smith, Ph.D.
To read more, see Beatrice, Kimberly & Stilton .
Photo of cute dog.Introduction
As someone born and raised in the Cleveland, Ohio, area in the 1980s and ’90s, I learned to root for the underdog. Whether it was our sports teams’ championship drought, the over-polluted Cuyahoga River catching fire in 1969, or the disparaging nickname Mistake by the Lake, we always seemed to be crawling out of a hole.
While things have improved immensely over the past decade, being part of an underdog city has unquestionably played a significant role in my life. Along with my upbringing and a community service–heavy education, being a Clevelander
helped propel me into pit bull and rescue animal advocacy.
I started volunteering as a photographer with the Cleveland Animal Protective League and other Cleveland-area rescue organizations in 2012. When I began taking photos of the dogs to help them get adopted, I learned that the majority of them were designated as pit bulls.
Other than the way they looked, with their beautiful blocky heads and the fact that there were a lot of them, I didn’t see pit bulls as being any different from the other dogs waiting to find their forever humans. I grew up with dogs and other animals as beloved household pets; to me, all animals were unique individuals.
In 2014, my wife, Kristen, and I decided to move from Cleveland to Lakewood, Ohio (the first suburb west of Cleveland). I grew up in Lakewood and was beyond excited to be moving there with Kristen. It’s on the shores of Lake Erie, walkable to countless great restaurants and local hangouts, a ten-minute drive to downtown Cleveland, and it’s one of the most densely populated cities in the country. This population density gives it a real community feeling—it’s hard not to get to know your neighbors.
As Kristen and I began our apartment search for ourselves and our two rescue dogs, Leo the mutt and Bailey the black cane corso mastiff, we only had one concern: the way Bailey looked. In 2008, the city of Lakewood implemented a ban on pit bull–type dogs. To some, including trained professionals, Bailey could be perceived as a pit bull–type dog. We didn’t want her to be discriminated against and possibly kicked out of Lakewood after we moved, so I emailed a Lakewood animal control officer a photo of Bailey and asked if she would be allowed to live in the city. Keep in mind, Bailey was a well-behaved dog. Emailing a photo for approval seemed ridiculous and sad to me. Although we ended up receiving the approval, it left a bad taste in my mouth. Why would