Military K9 Is Separated From Beloved Sergeant — Two Years Pass And Dog Hears Him Crying Her Name
Oct 23, 2020
In 2014, military personnel Sgt. Jason Bos was reunited with his K9 partner, Cila, at O'Hare International Airport in Chicago after being separated for two years.
When a man spends five years constantly beside his canine companion, it is a unique bond of mutual dependability and reliance. There are few better feelings than having your dog beside you, guarding, protecting, and offering kindness and compassion.
Be sure to reach the end of this article to see the full video :-)
Imagine the level of trust and reliability in the most disturbing of hardships, in the most brutally difficult times of your life, when every day you are not sure if you will be able to stay alive or not. Well, that is the kind of circumstance the Sergeant named Jason Bos spent with his partner MWD Cila M389 — or Cici — a trained K9 military dog who worked by his side for five years in Iraq.
Finally, in 2012 Sergeant Jason Bos took his retirement when he suffered a back injury that sent him back to the United States, WOOD TV8 reports. But the gorgeous chocolate labrador was still on duty, and it would be years before she too retired. Sergeant Bos didn't know if he would ever see Cila again, or what events would transpire while she was still in service doing a dangerous duty for her country.
apost.com
After two long years, Sergeant Bos had come a long way to recover his back injury, but his heart had never quite healed from the loss of his best friend. As fate would have it, he eventually came to learn that Cila, the K9 military dog, was finally going to be retiring from her long years in service.
Along with the American Humane Association and Mission Canine Rescue, the K9 military vet was flown from Germany all the way to Chicago, where Sergeant Jason Bos was there waiting for her.
The moment Cila hears his voice, her attention is completely captured, unable to forget the voice of the man she spent over five years with as a constant partner and protector.
When asked about their future, Jason Bos told the Chicago Tribune that, “Her whole life has been about working. Now it's time for her to worry about just relaxing."
What do you think of this inspiring story? Dogs are serving our military besides our brave soldiers and deserve more recognition — make sure to help spread the word so that they can be recognized.