Chargement...
Chargement...

In Romania, tens of thousands of dogs are born in a country that doesn’t want them. We go and bring them back, one by one, since 2013. Over 6,000 have already found a family in France, Belgium and Switzerland.
September 2013, the first journey to Romania. The founding story of Remember Me France.
The plane was waiting on the tarmac. We watched it, tense, our stomachs in knots. What had possessed us to embark on this long journey to Romania? And above all, what was waiting for us on the other side? But there was no question of turning back, because we knew what brought us together: THEM.
We landed in Bucharest and, very quickly, too quickly, we met their gazes. The ones we were there for: the strays, the wandering dogs of Romania. Born in a country that does not want them and condemned to certain death. We stop at the first one we see, slow down at the second, but very quickly, we have to face the obvious and, like all the volunteers on the ground, we learn to look away, our hearts heavy, because there are far too many of them, and we are far too few.
After 7 hours on the road, where we crossed paths with so many dogs, dead or alive, that we stopped counting, we finally reach Pascani. This town has been haunting our nights for years and reading its name on the road signs, we can hardly believe our eyes. We hold our breath. We expected horror; what we discover is far worse. We had imagined purgatory; we are visiting hell.
The Pascani pound, sinister and isolated, freezes our blood. More than 120 dogs are penned in tiny, overcrowded kennels. All lying down, they probably cover the entire surface allotted to them. The wind whips us, but it is not the cause of the tears running down our cheeks. It is late September, it has frozen overnight, we are shivering. After an hour there, our fingers go numb, our lips turn blue. How can we imagine what these dogs go through at night, or worse, in the heart of winter, when snow covers the shelters and demands silence? Impossible, and yet true.
In a corner, death, lurking, waits its turn. In a pitch-black, freezing kennel covered in droppings, more than 15 puppies stare at us in terror. They are only a few months old, some are huddled in holes, others cry their endless despair, others still scream in fear when touched. Beside them, a tiny mother courage, skeletal, nurses 4 minuscule puppies, who must be 2 months old but look no more than one. There were 6 of them at the start. Exhausted, she will die during the night.
After the shock comes awareness. There is blood everywhere on the ground. A puppy has stopped eating; we take him out of the hell to try to save him. He dies during the night and the diagnosis falls: parvovirus. They are all carriers, they are all doomed. The medicine that could save them is not available here, deep in Romania. We order it, but it will not arrive until 3 days later. Far too late for them. A second puppy dies during the night, a third in our arms.
In our arms, Remember, a beautiful 4-month-old female puppy, slowly fades away. The warmth we try to give her can no longer reach her. A few hours later, she goes out, a small starfish in an ocean of suffering. Remember will become our star and the emblem of our association.
Thanks to the wonderful volunteers on the ground, Carmina and Lucian, we manage to save the others. With them, we share the worst. And undoubtedly, a bond is created. We read in their eyes the reflection of our own despair at the situation of the pound. But also hope, faint but real, of being able to change things. What they tell us freezes our blood: winter is coming, and problems with it. What we saw was not the worst. We leave with heavy hearts and tears in our eyes. We were only there for 3 days; it already felt like a year.
In Bucharest, we visit other shelters, all facing different challenges. Carmina has chosen a small shelter where all her dogs are well looked after, but she has only her own financial resources. She had to borrow money to fund work needed to improve her dogs' living conditions. Anda and Alina, for their part, are in a critical situation: after having had to move their shelter a few months earlier, the new owner of the land they rent has decided to evict them and their dogs.
On the last day of our trip, all the Bucharest volunteers are gathered to protest the slaughter of the strays. We meet those who want to change things, including Stefan Eck, German MEP, and Rémus Cernea, Romanian member of parliament. We cannot resist taking the microphone and telling what we have seen and lived. In their place, would we find the strength and courage needed? And who will support them if we don't? How can we abandon them?
We did not know what we had come looking for; we know what we found: the strength and courage to support them in their fight and to come to the aid of the Romanian strays. And above all, above all: never again do we want to forget.
« We will be there, today, tomorrow, always. Our Remember Me association is born, and we will never abandon them. »
Vanessa, President and founder of Remember Me France
« We will be there, today, tomorrow, always. Our Remember Me association is born, and we will never abandon them. »
Vanessa, President and founder of Remember Me France
A dog might be waiting for you
See our dogs →In Romania, under the Ceaușescu regime, dogs were banned from apartments. Decades later, 60,000 stray dogs roam the streets of Bucharest alone. Hunted, beaten, euthanized by authorities.
In October 2014, we said enough. In 2015, we built Remember Me Land, our private shelter in Pascani, in the Iași region: 52 kennels, a veterinary clinic, a quarantine zone, a 2-hectare park with large exercise areas. By December 2015, the public pound in Pascani was empty.
Since then, over 6 000 dogs have been rescued and repatriated to families in France, Belgium, Switzerland, and Luxembourg.
Route Nord
Sarrebourg → Haucourt-Moulaine → Villeneuve → Cesson-Sévigné
Route Sud
Sarrebourg → Haucourt-Moulaine → Villeneuve → Mâcon → Vourles → Robion
2,400km
Pascani → France distance
48h
Length of one convoy
4
Borders crossed
24/yr
Convoys per year
In October 2014, faced with the situation of stray dogs in Romania, we said enough. Remember Me France was born.
Construction of our private shelter in Pascani: 52 kennels, a veterinary clinic, a quarantine zone, a 2-hectare park with large exercise areas. By December, the public pound in Pascani was empty.
Opening of the transit center in Valea Seaca, with individual kennels to prepare each dog 48 hours before transport.
476 repatriations in 2025. 390 adopted in France, 58 in Belgium, 28 in Switzerland. 5.7 adoption requests processed daily.
14 km from Pascani. 52 kennels, veterinary clinic, puppy house, staff housing, 2-hectare park. Around 437 dogs live there permanently.
Valea Seaca, near Topilé. Individual kennels to prepare each dog 48 hours before transport. Partner clinic Apistopvet directed by Dr. Lucian Radu.
Behind every adoption are volunteers. Around 120 people in France, Belgium and Switzerland give their time to review applications, organise the transports, keep the listings up to date and follow each dog all the way to its family.
Vanessa
President
Émilie
Vice-president · dog trainer in Pașcani
Anne-Catherine
Treasurer
Tiphaine
Deputy treasurer
Patricia
Secretary · contracts & repatriations
Camille
Deputy secretary
Victoire
Administrator · veterinary · listings
Gaëlle
Administrator · human resources
Karine
Administrator · volunteer lead
Patricia
Administrator · adopter's guide
Morgane
Adoption application review
Several of them tell their story in our portraits.
Keep the website, its hosting and visibility running.
David · Guillaume · Laurent · Carole · Marie-Noëlle
Tell the shelter's story every day.
Andréa · Aelia
Follow every sponsor and every sponsored dog.
Nadège · Jennifer
Answer calls, from emergencies to pre-adoption questions.
Frédérique · Laurence
Coordinate calls, organise pre-visits across France, Belgium and Switzerland, and announce approvals.
Aurélia · Nathalie · Delphine
Around 80 families offer a convalescence step before adoption.
Coordinated notably by Katia
Dr Lucian's clinic
Cares for the shelter's dogs, partner clinic Apistopvet, in Pașcani
Bogdan
Licensed professional transporter · repatriations
Dogs rescued since 2014
Repatriated in 2025
Sterilizations per year
Goal: 700 in 2026 71%
Social media followers
No-kill policy. Communication without dramatization. No dog is left behind: puppies, abandoned dogs, seniors, dogs with special needs (illness or disability). 76% of our dogs come from the Pascani area.
French nonprofit association (loi 1901) recognized as serving the public interest · RNA: W841002435
Head office: 84440 Robion, France
Donations are 66% tax-deductible · Tax receipt issued annually
Adopt, sponsor, give, foster: there is bound to be a way for you to step into the story.
Not ready to adopt? Sponsor a shelter dog
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