My mom found this article last night when searching the web for something. She told me I just don’t remember. Anyway, remember the horrible shooting in Newton, Conn.? I am glad I am homeschooled. After we read this article in the New York Daily News by Jennifer H. Cunningham and Adam Edelman we had to go hug Sunny and Klaus.
We begin Therapy Dog training at Paws in Motion September 23. I can’t wait to take Sunny to the children’s part of a hospital. I know she will make the little kids so happy.
I have put a copy of the article below but if you want to go to the website the address is:
Comfort dogs help ease pain of mourning Newtown community
Groups from across the country brought dogs, some of them therapy animals, some just caring pets, to help both young and old cope with their grief over the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre.
Dogs comfort a little boy Monday — three days after the Newtown, Conn. shooting.
A pack of sympathetic groups bearing supportive canines spent much of Monday with bereaved Connecticut residents affected by last week’s Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre, providing children and adults alike with the cuddly comfort that only a four-legged friend can give.
The “comfort dogs,” or “therapy dogs” as they are sometimes called, were brought in by at least three groups late Sunday to help kids and adults alike cope with last week’s horrific shooting in Newtown that left 20 first graders and six school officials dead. Among the groups was the Hudson Valley Golden Retrievers Club, whose members spent the afternoon at a makeshift memorial near the town center, where both kids and adults in need of compassion stopped to pet and cuddle the dogs.
ALLISON JOYCE FOR THE NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
The “comfort dogs” were brought in by several groups to help residents cope with the tragedy.
Mourning or otherwise devastated children and parents said that petting the dogs gave them relief from their sadness.
“I just love dogs, so whenever I’m around them, they make me feel better,” said 12-year-old Ryan Williams. “When they come over and you pet them you kind of forget about what’s happening for a little bit.” Jenna Stuart, a school bus driver from Newtown, said the dogs were an enormous help to her four-year-old daughter, Kylie, who attends preschool at the Children’s Adventure Center in front of Sandy Hook Elementary and lost friends in the tragedy.
ALLISON JOYCE FOR THE NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Among the groups was the Hudson Valley Golden Retrievers Club, whose members spent the afternoon at a memorial in Netown, Conn.
“I like the dogs because they made me happy,” said Kylie, after petting one on the head. “The dogs love me.” Some residents, who weren’t directly affected by the bloodshed, found peace in simply bringing their own dogs to help others.
ALLISON JOYCE FOR THE NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
A little boy receives a kiss from a new friend brought in to provide comfort to residents of Newtown, Conn.
Sandy Hook resident Ann Mari Cioffi, a member of the Hudson Valley Golden Retrievers Club, brought her dog, Libby, 5, to comfort victims, at a memorial in the center of town.
“They’re just gentle, caring, kind and sweet. Cioffi said of the dogs. “They just seem to sense it. They just sense when somebody’s sad.” Massachusetts- based K-9’s For Kids Pediatric Therapy Dogs was also among the groups sharing their tail-wagging buddies.
Crystal Wright, 52, of Becket, Mass., a dog handler with the group for Rhiku, a 5 year old Sheltie, said the canine had been easing frowns all day. “Everyone likes to pet a dog,” she said. “It changes the mood. It kind of takes them away from what they’re going through for a moment. I think it’s helping. I think they needed it.”
ALLISON JOYCE FOR THE NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Some dogs were brought in to help from as far away as Chicago.
Some canines even traveled across the country to help out. Trainers from the Chicago-based Lutheran Church Charities, which has deployed its comfort dogs to other communities hit by tragedy in the past, brought in 10 to 15 Golden Retrievers and their handlers to Connecticut to help with the consolation efforts, Tim Hetzner, the president of the organization, said.