Paw Justice Launch Operation S.O.S

Paw Justice

Paw Justice has partnered once again with iconic motorcycle brand Harley-Davidson for a fundraising raffle benefiting Operation S.O.S [Save Our Shelters], an initiative that aims to support the Paw Justice Food Bank.

So far, Paw Justice has provided over 1.8 million meals to homeless animals in shelters and struggling communities nationwide.

Entrants will go into a raffle to win a 2024 Harley-Davidson Fat Boy 114 in vivid black, with all funds from tickets purchased directly going to support the Food Bank Program. The Fat Boy is a heavyweight knockout, designed with bright chrome and bold finishes, boasting a Milwaukee-Eight 114 Engine with loads of torque for on-demand power you can feel with each twist, accompanied by that evocative H-D sound.

“We are pleased to be partnering with Harley-Davidson for this important initiative,” said Shaughan Campbell, Co-founder of Paw Justice.

“Paw Justice is an organisation dedicated to eliminating animal abuse while helping feed animals in need throughout New Zealand, and partnering with powerful brands is an important way to extend our reach to the public and garner strong support for our cause.”

 Managing Director of Harley-Davidson Australia/New Zealand, Nigel Keough, said the raffle coincided with Harley-Davidson’s ethos.

“At Harley-Davidson, we live by the ethos United We Ride and that certainly transcends to man’s best friend. In offering the chance to win our iconic 2024 Fat Boy, we hope to raise awareness and essential funds for homeless animals across New Zealand,” said Keough.

There are only two thousand five hundred tickets in total, plus fourteen other chances of winning some great prizes, as part of this charitable drive, so all are encouraged to help animals in need and take advantage of this opportunity now.

To purchase tickets and find out more information, click here, or go to the Paw Justice Website.

Paw Justice has long worked within the animal rights sector to promote law reform, re-homing and adoption, and to aid rescue groups with resources, including the setting up of a food bank and funding of emergency surgeries for animals that have been abused. The organisation’s Paw Justice Food Bank started in 2011, supplying over 80 tonnes of food to help families and animals in  Christchurch following the devastating 2011 earthquakes. Since then, the food bank program has expanded nationwide to help support homeless animals, overloaded animal shelters, and struggling communities.

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