Mohammad Alaa Aljaleel A photo of a cat at the sanctuary weeks prior to the bombing.

Update: Nov. 18 ― The sanctuary said Friday they had been attacked again and would be moving the animals to another location.

home of Ernesto cats, will close !! now also they bombarded with chlorine. We go away with our cats and Dog .😔#HouseOfCatsErnestoinAleppo pic.twitter.com/5cZ0pfh3CB — Il Gattaro D' Aleppo (@gattarodialeppo) November 18, 2016

Previously:

Renewed airstrikes in Aleppo this week have killed at least 32 people, including children. The attacks, which struck a children’s hospital and a blood bank, were carried out by either Syrian or Russian warplanes, Reuters reported, citing the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

The bombings also hit an internationally celebrated animal sanctuary that was hailed as a place of peace and hope in the war-torn city.

The sanctuary was a refuge for hundreds of cats as well as local children who would spend time with the animals and play on an adjacent playground.

Excuse us today we can not show you the cats,because ......

ladies and gentlemen, this is our home of Ernesto cats today. pic.twitter.com/XiaVzAOH6x — Il Gattaro D' Aleppo (@gattarodialeppo) November 16, 2016

Mohammad Alaa Aljaleel, the man who runs the sanctuary and cares for the cats, is alive, said Alessandra Abidin, an Italian woman who helps Aljaleel run a Facebook group to communicate with his supporters.

Mohammad Alaa Aljaleel

Aljaleel, an electrician and ambulance driver, has stayed behind in Aleppo to care for the city’s many stray cats, some of which had been left behind when their owners fled the region. He told the BBC in a September interview that he would stay and protect the animals, “no matter what.”

House of cats Ernesto in Aleppo pic.twitter.com/V2YTlkMpk6 — Il Gattaro D' Aleppo (@gattarodialeppo) November 4, 2016

On Wednesday, Abidin announced on social media that bombs had hit the sanctuary and killed multiple cats and a dog (warning: graphic images). The dog, named Hope, was known as the sanctuary’s mascot.

The strike also hit Aljaleel’s house, killing two cats, including a tabby that had been entrusted to him by a young girl when her family fled to Turkey.

However, many cats survived. Photos posted Thursday showed cats being fed at the sanctuary amid some rubble and fallen branches.

The Facebook group, Il Gattaro D’Aleppo ― meaning “the cat man of Aleppo” in Italian ― allows Aljaleel to post daily photos of the cats and aids supporters in making donations. Those funds allowed him to build the cats a proper shelter, construct a playground for local children, and purchase food for the cats as well as local people in need. He has emphasized the connection between compassion for humans and animals.

“There is a firm bond between humanitarianism and caring for animals,” he told Syria Direct.

The airstrikes on rebel-held eastern Aleppo were part of a major military escalation by the Syrian government and its allies after a three-week pause.