An elderly woman shows a cat its new entry to an apartment building in Zheleznodorozhny
Credit: Alexander Zemlianichenko Jr for The Telegraph
A group of middle-aged and elderly women looked up in adoration at the tall 39-year-old Ramil who arrived in their Moscow suburb with several crowbars and a circular saw.
Ramil, who asked his last name to be withdrawn for security reasons, is not a builder but a volunteer making rounds to rescue cats trapped in the basements of Soviet-era blocks of flats which often serve as the only shelter for stray cats in winter’s cold.
Russia is a world beater when it comes to cat ownership. A GfK poll in 2016 showed that 57 per cent of households have at least one cat, the world’s highest.
Russians have only recently been waking up to the reality of stray cats, estimated at hundreds of thousands in Moscow alone, who badly need shelter as temperatures in the capital typically stay below zero for the most part of winter.
In a major victory for cat lovers, Moscow’s parliament this autumn secured a decree by a deputy mayor, ordering all apartment buildings to provide an unfettered access to basement vents for “small pets” and threatening with sanctions for non-compliance.
Safe at last
Credit: Alexander Zemlianichenko Jr for The Telegraph
But now Ramil’s band of cat-saving activists is expanding its work to the city’s sprawling suburbs which are not covered by the new legislation — enforcing a law that does not exist there.
On a recent afternoon The Sunday Telegraph joined Ramil on a secret visit to the satellite town of Zheleznodorozhy where utilities companies persist in putting bars on the vents, robbing strays of the only reliable winter shelter.
Guided by local women who appear to know every stray cat in town by name, the activists went around several addresses in the sleepy, snowcovered neighbourhood to inspect the vents.
As pincers failed to snap the bars on one window, Ramil, lying on the concrete walkway around the basement, took out his circular saw and went at it, sparkles flying around.
The activists quickly retreated, anxious to avoid unwanted attention from the police.
Ramil gets to work
Credit: Alexander Zemlianichenko Jr for The Telegraph
Kotospas’ work is a real help for people like Adel Osadcha, a retired nurse, who takes care of six strays living in the basement under her flat in a five-story Soviet-era block.
She recalled with horror how she had to scramble a few months ago when the utilities company put bars on all the vents, trapping the cats inside.
“We, Russians, love the cats out of compassion. It’s impossible not to feel for someone who suffers,” the 80-year old said.
Moscow’s new laws are largely thanks to pressure from an NGO called Kotospas, which translates as Save-a-Cat.
A cat looks from a window of a basement of an apartment building in Zheleznodorozhny
Credit: Alexander Zemlianichenko Jr for The Telegraph
The NGO’s head Anna Feldman, 44, a former HR professional has for years been battling to overcome the hostility of utility workers who used to claim that cats are a health hazard. But Russians’ overwhelming love of cats has helped her campaign grow.
“People in Russia really like cats and denounce those who don’t,” said Ms Feldman who is open about using social media for shaming authorities or companies who seem to be scared to death of being exposed as cat haters.
“Putin would not have been able to stay in power that long if he had said something bad about cats.”
Allegations of animal cruelty can be more damaging to a politician’s reputation in Russia than, say, reports of sexual harassment.
Cats look for food near an apartment building in Zheleznodorozhny
Credit: Alexander Zemlianichenko Jr for The Telegraph
Just as he launched his campaign for the Moscow city council, Ilya Yashin, a prominent opposition politician, faced public wrath last year over a leaked video, showing a man who looks like him kicking a cat in the street.
In Moscow, businesses reliant on Russians’ love for cats are thriving.
Vladimir Kuzin ditched his corporate job to found Moscow’s oldest cat cafe, Kotiki i Lyudi, in 2015 even though he was never able to secure a bank loan:
“I was told: ‘Who’s going to pay to spend time with cats?’”
Kotiki i Lyudi currently hosts 23 cats who lounge in their baskets or roam around, pressing themselves against the visitors’ legs.
Vladimir Kuzin, founder of the Moscow cat cafe
Credit: Alexander Zemlianichenko Jr for The Telegraph
These are either former strays or abandoned cats who typically find a home within two months as the cafe tries to match the felines with potential owners by their health and psychological profiles.
Mr Kuzin, a burly ban with tattoos peeking from underneath his rolled sleeves, rejects suggestions that his business is an abnormality in Russia where toxic masculinity and militarism is celebrated by state media and powers-that-be.
“We have another Russia here,” he said. “Our idea is that wild animals and pets should help us become kinder people and eschew aggression.”
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