By Chris Dadok www.chrisdadok.com
It’s dusk, and Molly Sweeney, a community organizer at the Harriet Tubman Center, is driving back home from Honey Bee Market in Southwest Detroit. Suddenly she brakes, stopping at an intersection empty of people. A black dog with pointy ears and a fluffy tail is limping across the road. The dog has just been hit and it is panicking on its three legs, running in zigzags.
She is laying in the central park in Tegucigalpa, the capital of Honduras. Her boobs are hanging out; she is already pregnant. Her brown hair is a grungy – littered with dandruff. She smells like trash. No one knows her name and no one seems to cares –not even little kids point at her. She is literally a bitch – a female dog – without a home.
The poverty of these dogs in Detroit and Honduras exemplifies detrimental economic parallels. Both Detroit’s and Honduras’s fate have been largely dependent on the profits of a single sector economy. Detroit is known as Motown for its inexorable connection to Ford, General Motors, and Chrysler. Honduras is called the Banana Republic for its historical ties to Dole and Chiquita Fruit Companies. As GM filed bankruptcy last year, studies in The Economist and other mainstream newspapers have argued that governmental dependency on a small number of economic giants increases the risk of elevated unemployment because the job market of the populace fluctuates with the vagaries of the both the economy and the management of these respective megacompanies. Both Detroit and Honduras have unemployment rates over 27%.
Molly wants to call Animal Control. It is past working hours. “I hate seeing hurt dogs. I can’t just leave it,” she tells me. As Molly calls Animal Control, she tries to attract the dog to her Ford with the guacamole and chips she has just bought. The dog looks at her for a second and then jets away on its three legs.
Today, Tegucigalpa, Honduras and Detroit suffer from high quantities of destitute stray dogs. According to a survey conducted at Roberto Clemente Learning Academy in Southwest Detroit, 93% of parents said that stray dogs are a problem. Rebecca Brown, president of the Local School and Community Organization explains to me that stray dogs are liable to attack families, especially small children who are walking to school. In Tegucigalpa Honduras, residents bear scars from similar incidents. Moró Sosa, a nurse lifts up her pant leg and shows me a blackened scar on her ankle. “I’ve been attacked twice – this was when a little dog got my ankle.” According, to Alan Beck, veterinarian and professor at Purdue University, dogs are able to transmit 65 different diseases to humans.
Unlike Detroit, Tegucigalpa, Honduras neither has dog shelters, nor animal control. Even non-profit organizations like the Humane Society are non-existent in Honduras’s capital. Moró tells me that on top of this, there are very few veterinarians. According to National Geographic, the average lifespan of an urban stray dog is two years.
Molly’s call to Animal Control leads to a voice mail informing her that the office has closed. Molly tries to reach Harry Ward, the director of Animal Control in Detroit, but his cell phone has been switched off. The Humane Society staff has also left. As Molly follows the stray dog towards St. Anne’s Catholic Church, the oldest Catholic Church standing in the Michigan, she calls the neighborhood city office.
In addition to economic parallels, the lack of representative democracy speaks to another apparently crippling similarity between Honduras and Detroit. Less than 25% of liable adults voted for the elected officials in Detroit and Honduras. These shocking numbers speak to the disconnect between the public officials and the public. In a city where the literacy rate is 47%, Detroit Public Schools announced a $300 million debt last year due to embezzlement and misuse of funding. In Honduras, where the minimum wage was $120/month, last year the military and business leaders engineered a coup d’état against a democratically elected president who had increased the minimum wage by 60%.
In Tegucigalpa, Patrick Pavón, a social work student tells me, “When I was growing up, there was once a dog that lay injured on the road with one broken foot. The next day, when I awoke, his other foot had been run over and he couldn’t get up. The dog was yelping and whining alone for hours but no one took him in. The poor animal had died by the third day.” According to Patrick, most Hondurans don’t take in stray dogs because they hardly have enough money to take care of themselves. He tells me that he wishes Tegucigalpa had a dog shelter. He believes dogcatchers and a shelter could fix the problem of stray dogs in Tegucigalpa.
Molly hangs up the phone. Neighborhood Services of Southwest Detroit has told her that there are many other problems; and that they can’t even respond to her phone call. They might be able to take her call in 30 minutes. Molly’s frustration is characteristic of many newcomers to Detroit. As she takes the car out of parking, she mutters, “This city is broken. You can’t even save a dog.”
Detroit has an Animal Control office and a Humane Society. However, the phenomenon of stray dogs apparently takes root in challenges deeper than the existence of city and non-profit dog shelters. Karen Santos, former coordinator of the International Fund for Animal Welfare says, “The animals need to be healthy in order to have a healthy community.” In Detroit and Honduras, at least, Karen’s logic seems to be reversed. Fortunately, a growing number of community organizers and leaders like Molly, Rebecca, Moró and Patrick are working to involve residents in efforts to change the cities’ unhealthy economic and political trends.



