Meet the Ukrainian refugee pets — and their humans — who arrived in St. John's

Olga and Ivan Antoniuk and their two cats, Bella and Simba, arrived in St. John’s after fleeing from Ukraine.  (Caroline Hillier/CBC - image credit)
Olga and Ivan Antoniuk and their two cats, Bella and Simba, arrived in St. John’s after fleeing from Ukraine. (Caroline Hillier/CBC - image credit)
Caroline Hillier/CBC
Caroline Hillier/CBC

It turns out that Bella — a 13-year-old fluffy, skittish cat with kidney disease that, before last week, had never left her apartment in Ukraine — is a bit of a high-maintenance traveller.

Her stockpile of specialty food —120 individual packages of wet food, plus a hefty bag of dry food — took up most of the space in her owner's luggage.

Bella's age and health prevented her from being able to take the anti-anxiety travel medications her cat brother Simba took before the long journey.

Bella and Simba were two of 11 animals — eight cats and three dogs — aboard a flight from Poland to St. John's last week, a charter that the Newfoundland and Labrador government arranged for 166 people who fled Ukraine after Russia's invasion in February.

Caroline Hillier/CBC
Caroline Hillier/CBC

Before the war, Bella and Simba's owners, Olga and Ivan Antoniuk, operated their own real estate company.

"We had a good job and good money but once the war started, our business stopped," Olga Antoniuk told CBC News.

Caroline Hillier/CBC
Caroline Hillier/CBC

Before catching the flight to St. John's, Olga and Ivan drove from Ukraine to Poland — a stressful enough drive without having to stop every so often to use the litter box.

The couple decided to start fresh in Canada, and picked Newfoundland and Labrador because of its natural surroundings and "slow life."

The chartered flight and assistance that Newfoundland and Labrador's Ukrainian Family Support Desk provided was a surprising bonus.

Submitted by Olga Antoniuk
Submitted by Olga Antoniuk

"I think it's so crazy. The free chartered flight, free hotel here, free food here for us and free food for my cats," she said.

"I [can't] describe this kindness for us and for our pets."

Bella and Simba sat in their owner's laps for takeoff and spent much of the eight-hour flight in their carriers. They were tired when they arrived but were shocked at their "celebrity welcome" at St. John's International Airport, said Antoniuk.

"We met a lot of people with the banners, with the flags and everything. Everyone will be very happy to look for us."

"I was in shock, really, but the shock [is] for kindness."

Submitted by Olga Antoniuk
Submitted by Olga Antoniuk

An emotional meeting at the airport

Margo, a petite black and white cat, sat a few rows away from Bella and Simba on the chartered flight.

Margo's owner, Hanna Sukhinets, made the journey — which included a train ride, a bus ride and then finally the plane ride — with Margo and her mid-size dog, Dea. Her husband and their older dog are still in Ukraine.

Caroline Hillier/CBC
Caroline Hillier/CBC

When deciding which part of Canada to move to, Sukhinets, a dog lover, settled on Newfoundland and Labrador partly because the province's name bears the name of two breeds of dogs.

She posted a photo of herself and her cat on social media, inquiring about accommodations in Newfoundland and Labrador. Lori Best replied, offering her a room in her house in Conception Bay South, just west of St. John's.

"I made a split-second decision that I was going to get in touch with her," said Best.

"She looked so sweet with her cat. So I decided and then I came home and told my family that I invited someone to come live with us," said Best.

Their meeting at the airport was emotional.

Submitted by Hanna Sukhinets
Submitted by Hanna Sukhinets

"When I saw the big dog carrier, I knew it was her and I started running towards her and gave her a great big hug and had some tears," said Best.

"It was amazing. I just had no words and was crying," said Sukhinets.

"The person which never met me just offered me a home and suggested me to be a part of her family. So I still can't believe it."

Caroline Hillier/CBC
Caroline Hillier/CBC

Leaving her pets behind was not an option.

"A lot of people in the beginning of the war, they left their pets and they died," said Sukhinets.

"[War] makes you decide what things are really important. When you hear those sounds like rockets go above the city … you try to be together at this moment," she said.

"No clothes, no documents, nothing [matters]. Except lives."

Sukhinets is grateful for the help she's received and is optimistic about her future but worried about her husband and the rest of her family in Ukraine, whom she said goodbye to at the train station.

"It was hard because I don't know if I will see them again."

Caroline Hillier/CBC
Caroline Hillier/CBC

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