Dr Andrew Kushnir fed the pups around the clock and when there was no power he kept their milk bottles warm by placing them under his legs. Photo: Wildcat Sanctuary
Lion cubs rescued from the war in Ukraine by the International Fund for Animal Welfare, adjust to their new home at The Wildcat Sanctuary, in Sandstone, Minnesota. All photos: AP
The cubs, who are orphans, were bound for the pet trade and spent three weeks at Poland's Poznan Zoo before flying to Minnesota
The cubs explore their new home in Minnesota
The cubs, orphaned during the war in Ukraine, have been promised a permanent home by the sanctuary
One of the four cubs arriving at the sanctuary
The Wildcat Sanctuary is a 16-hectare site run by Tammy Thies, who is the founder and executive director
Taras, one of the orphaned cubs, being fed at Poznan Zoo in Poland before being transferred to a new home in Minnesota
Dr Andrew Kushnir fed the pups around the clock and when there was no power he kept their milk bottles warm by placing them under his legs. Photo: Wildcat Sanctuary
Lion cubs rescued from the war in Ukraine by the International Fund for Animal Welfare, adjust to their new home at The Wildcat Sanctuary, in Sandstone, Minnesota. All photos: AP
The cubs, who are orphans, were bound for the pet trade and spent three weeks at Poland's Poznan Zoo before flying to Minnesota
The cubs explore their new home in Minnesota
The cubs, orphaned during the war in Ukraine, have been promised a permanent home by the sanctuary
One of the four cubs arriving at the sanctuary
The Wildcat Sanctuary is a 16-hectare site run by Tammy Thies, who is the founder and executive director
Taras, one of the orphaned cubs, being fed at Poznan Zoo in Poland before being transferred to a new home in Minnesota
Dr Andrew Kushnir fed the pups around the clock and when there was no power he kept their milk bottles warm by placing them under his legs. Photo: Wildcat Sanctuary