A photo from open sources
This faithful dog has melted the hearts of millions of people around the world after it became known: he spent the last 20 months near the fateful place where he died in a traffic accident his master.
The dog received the nickname “Greek Hachiko” in honor of his the legendary Japanese fellow Akita Inu breed, which during nine years after the death of the owner came daily to railway station, where the man returned to life during his lifetime train from work.
According to reporters, the “Greek Hachiko” lives in a roadside booth in the desert, quite far from the nearest town Nafpaktos (Nafpaktos). Despite attempts by locals to take the dog to her house, she always runs away and every time returns to the place where her life was tragically cut short the owner.
The death of a 40-year-old man named Haris in November 2017 years shocked the neighborhood, since only a few years ago in A similar accident killed his brother. Dog Harisa stayed at the roadside a shrine erected in honor of the deceased, as if waiting for him returning here.
It is not known whether he was in the car during the accident, but the local residents say they see the dog since the tragedy. After futile attempts to pick up the dog they built for her improvised shelter where they began to bring and bring food and water. The dog spends all days lying on the side of the road and looking into the distance, as if waiting for the owner to return and take him home. Dog refuses move even on hot days and only in bad weather takes refuge in nearby bushes.
After the local news site Nafpaktia News published video about him on YouTube, “Greek Hachiko” became known to all to the world.
This is just one of many such dog stories. the loyalty that we shared on our site https://esoreiter.ru/ over the past few years. In particular, many probably remember the exciting story of the German Shepherd, who spent more than ten years on the grave of her master, refusing to leave from there even to the kindest and caring about her to people. How can one not recall the famous aphorism belonging to French writer Marie de Rabuten-Chantal and her utterance back in 1626: “The more I look at people, the more I love dogs. “(He became more famous with the filing of the German poet Heinrich Heine.) Alas, over the past centuries the truth embodied in this dictum, not at all lost its sad paradoxicalities …
Dog Life