
Laika’s story represents not only the continued needless exploitation of animals at the hands of humans, but our paradoxical and arrogant relationship with them. And just like Laika, they are commodities who are turned into products for human use, whose needs are disregarded and whose innate status as sentient beings is erased. Their suffering is as profound as Laika’s was in that space capsule. These numbers don’t include the billions used for fashion, sport and entertainment. So why does Laika’s story still matter so much? Because every year over 50 billion farm animals are sent to their untimely deaths – nearly eight times the human population. Monuments were built in her honor, and her likeness was used to sell everything from cigarette cartons to children’s toys.

I wanted to isolate myself,” he told a Russian reporter at the time.Īnother trainer on Laika’s mission, biologist Adilya Kotovskaya (who died at ninety two in 2020), recalled of Laika in a 2017 interview: “I asked her to forgive us and I even cried as I stroked her for the last time.”ĭuring many years of Soviet state propaganda, Laika’s launch into space was lauded as heroic, even though she never gave consent to participate in her own demise. After I returned to Moscow from the launch, I left town. “When you understand that you can’t bring back Laika, that she perishes out there, and that no one can bring her back…that is a very heavy feeling. We did not learn enough from this mission to justify the death of the dog,” he stated during a Moscow press conference in 1998. “The more time passes, the more I’m sorry about it. Gazenko, who died in 2007, carried the guilt of sending Laika to her death for decades. She lived out the rest of her life with his family for 14 years. Three years after her launch, Gazenko adopted a dog from another space mission – Krasavka. Despite being responsible for her planned demise, his paradoxical devotion to her was so strong that he insisted on a window being installed in the pressurized capsule - so that she could have a view in her confinement. Oleg Gazenko, one of the lead Soviet scientists on the project, developed a bond with Laika during her training. In New York, dog lovers protested in front of the UN building with signs like “Pick on someone your own size.”Īltogether, the USSR sent 48 dogs into space. In the UK, the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals encouraged protests at the Soviet embassy in London, and the British Society for Happy Dogs called for a minute of silence for Laika.

The space shuttle was designed to not be retrievable.

Oblivious to the plans set in place for her, Laika unequivocally trusted her caretakers, who ended up betraying her. It included standing still for long periods of time, wearing space suits, being placed in simulators that replicated the high acceleration of a rocket launch and being kept in progressively smaller cages to prepare her for the confines of the space module. She was launched on Sputnik 2 as part of the Soviet space exploration program, with the USSR locked in a heated race against the United States to conquer space.Ī stray mutt from the streets of Moscow, Laika was described as being calm and quiet, complying obediently with her training. On November 3, 1957, Laika became the first living being to orbit the Earth.
