Houston Chronicle Sunday

Pug Queen takes in abused pup from Iran

Amid uncertaint­y of travel ban, tortured animal whisked to LA

- By Hailey Branson-Potts

LOS ANGELES — Katy Kargosha worried her inand-out flight from Iran to Los Angeles might look a little sketchy.

She had left her home in New Orleans two days earlier and flown to Tehran, where she would spend only four hours — just long enough to pick up a severely disabled passenger before flying back to the United States.

Her passenger, frail and tired from the long trip, was a pug. Like him, Kargosha had once called Iran home. As her plane touched down at Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport, Kargosha trembled with anxiety.

“I was sure they were going to ask, ‘Why did you go to Iran for four hours?’ ” said Kargosha, a dual citizen of the U.S. and Iran. “I was worried I’d get in trouble. I was worried about the dog if they kept me for a thousand questions.”

The dog had been abandoned beside a Tehran highway and was now being escorted by Kargosha to Los Angeles — into the arms of The Pug Queen.

As relations between the U.S. and Iranian government­s have deteriorat­ed during Donald Trump’s presidency, travelers increasing­ly have become pawns in the political tug of war amid talk of travel bans, sanctions and the nuclear agreement that Trump has called “the worst deal ever negotiated.”

The Supreme Court recently affirmed parts of Trump’s travel ban involving six Muslim-majority countries, including Iran. Much narrower than the president’s original executive order, it would presumably not affect people who have “bona fide” connection­s in the U.S.

Weeks before the Supreme Court’s decision, over Memorial Day weekend, Kargosha rushed to her homeland to get the dog on behalf of pug rescuer Izabella St. James. As a dual national, Kargosha can travel with relative ease, without the visa-processing delays and denials that have beset others.

The pug was whisked to the U.S. without a hitch. But the dog’s rescue, amid uncertaint­y about the ban, illustrate­d the anxiety that accompanie­s traveling to Iran in the Trump era.

In the current environmen­t, the possibilit­ies of complicati­ons are greater if the Iranian traveling to the U.S. is a human being, said Trita Parsi, president of the National Iranian American Council, which advocates for better U.S.-Iran relations.

“It’s astonishin­g that you have a greater chance of coming to the United States if you are a dog than if you are a relative of an American citizen,” Parsi said. Symbols of decadence

The skinny, fawn-colored pug limped across a red Persian rug, his front legs splayed awkwardly in front of him, falling repeatedly. He’d been beaten.

In Iran, Islamic clerics view canines as unclean and symbolic of Western decadence. Conservati­ve lawmakers have, in recent years, called for their owners to be lashed and pay steep fines.

Still, dog ownership appears to be growing among the country’s upper and middle classes. Videos of dog beatings and killings have gone viral on Iranian social media, prompting major protests and calls for laws that would punish animal abusers.

“Having a dog is a political protest of sorts,” said Alex Vatanka, a senior fellow at the Washington­based Middle East Institute. “It’s kind of like giving the finger to the regime.”

Kargosha, a dog lover whose own pug died recently, saw a video of the puppy’s tortured walk on Instagram, where she follows several Iranian animal rescuers. She sent a message full of crying emojis to The Pug Queen, whom she had never met: Did she think he could be helped?

St. James replied within seconds: “I will take this baby and get it help if it can be flown here!!! I will pay for the flight.”

It was Feb. 1. Five days after Trump issued his original travel ban.

Massive protests had erupted that weekend at LAX, where several Iranians with visas and green cards were among those detained by federal authoritie­s after the ban was announced. Kargosha’s Persian acquaintan­ces in the U.S. were canceling travel plans, afraid to leave the country.

St. James and Kargosha tried to find volunteers in Iran to bring the pug to the U.S. There were no takers.

“I was like, ‘Oh, Iran. Awesome. Here’s a challenge for you, Pug Queen,’ ” St. James said. “But if there’s a pug that needs to be rescued, everyone step out of my way. I’m not deterred by anything: time zones, politics, continents, religion, culture.”

St. James, one of Hugh Hefner’s former live-in girlfriend­s and author of a book about life in the Playboy Mansion, has taken in dozens of pugs.

As a child, she had to leave her dog behind when her family left communist Poland, and she always wanted another. Hefner bought her first pug, Balbina.

Followers of her prolific social media accounts — who crowdfund the rescues and the dogs’ myriad medical expenses — report to her when they find neglected pugs.

The Iranian pug was her biggest challenge.

“A travel ban for a pug?” she said. “I don’t think so!” Suffered whole life

The pug, now about a year old, had suffered his whole life, said St. James and Kargosha, who pieced together his history from Iranian animal rescuers.

He urinated on his owners’ rug as a puppy and was kicked so hard his neck was nearly broken and his spine damaged, hobbling his ability to walk properly, St. James said. A visitor to the family’s home contacted a local dog rescuer, who took him in.

The pug’s story spread over Iranian social media, which is how Kargosha learned of him.

As St. James and Kargosha were trying to figure out how to get him to the U.S., the rescuer found a surgeon to operate on the dog’s neck, and an Iranian family offered to pay and foster him while he healed, St. James said. But the surgery, she said, made his injuries worse. He lost all use of his front legs.

Then, the dog of the family caring for him had its own medical expenses, and the family couldn’t care for the pug. They returned him to his original owners, who left him on the side of the road with no food or water, St. James said.

Two days after he was abandoned, some Iranians who feed stray cats spotted him and scooped him up. Dog was deathly thin

Kargosha and the pug were greeted at LAX by admirers waving American flags and holding a sign: “Welcome Puggy!”

The dog St. James hoisted up, weeping, was deathly thin, just 8 pounds, with convulsing front legs. He couldn’t move his neck and could only drink water through a syringe.

On a recent afternoon, St. James, wearing a shirt with “Pug Queen” in gold letters, brought him to a Brentwood Starbucks. He lapped up a “Puppaccino,” a cup full of whipped cream. Because he now is a hip Angeleno, she said, he was wearing a polo shirt emblazoned with flamingos.

St. James cooed at him in Persian: “Salam!” Hello. His ears perked up.

Days later, he would undergo a risky surgery to realign his spine and to remove a wire left behind in the Iranian surgery. Maybe, one day, he’ll walk again.

St. James asked her followers to name him. They chose Chance because this was his.

“A travel ban for a pug? I don’t think so!” Izabella St. James, pug rescuer

 ?? Christina House / Los Angeles Times ?? Izabella St. James, known on social media as The Pug Queen, hugs Chance, an abused pug rescued from Iran. “If there’s a pug that needs to be rescued, everyone step out of my way,” James said.
Christina House / Los Angeles Times Izabella St. James, known on social media as The Pug Queen, hugs Chance, an abused pug rescued from Iran. “If there’s a pug that needs to be rescued, everyone step out of my way,” James said.

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