On a recent sunny morning at a remote U.S. base in northeast Syria, Rumi is sniffing around. She has white fur and black markings on her face. Some here call her “the raccoon dog.”
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“Rumi first started showing up in early January,” says 1st Lt. Shelby Koontz. “She was really emaciated, caked in mud.”
Even though the dog didn’t look pretty, 25-year-old Koontz immediately fell for her.
“You could tell she wanted to be around people,” Koontz says. “She’s very playful.” Koontz says Rumi would see a group of soldiers going for a run, and she’d think, “Oh, I want to come too.” Rumi would also follow soldiers when they were getting ready to go on patrol.
Soldiers’ emotional well-being can be tested when deployed to a war zone — especially if it’s their first experience.
The name Rumi is a play off one of the nearby towns. Koontz says that at the beginning the dog was curious though a bit skittish — the way abused dogs behave.
Animals are frowned upon on U.S. military bases. They can bring disease or cause problems with security — especially their barking. But Koontz’s higher-ups gave her the green light to keep Rumi. She started feeding her every morning after overnight shifts as a fire support officer.
She quickly got to work finding Rumi a forever home.
“Initially I posted a picture on Facebook just asking if anybody would be interested in adopting a dog from a war zone,” Koontz says.
She warned that it wouldn’t be easy caring for Rumi.
“The dog would need a lot of training,” Koontz wrote.
To her surprise, a lot of people reached out wanting to take Rumi in.
“The response was overwhelming,” Koontz says. The lieutenant says she felt a huge responsibility to find a caring, loving home for Rumi. “I didn’t want her to end up in a shelter,” she added.
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