Hero K-9 military dog honored with statue being sculpted by Salt Lake City artist
Dec 31, 2022, 10:43 PM | Updated: Jan 3, 2023, 3:37 pm
SALT LAKE CITY — There is something to be said about an artist who obsesses over every little detail.
Lena Toritch has sculpted several dogs in her career inside her Salt Lake City studio, but Layka is about as special as any she has done before.
“This statue has to be done perfectly,” Toritch said. “Layka is a Ranger dog. She is a hero dog. She has saved many lives.”
Layka was a military K-9 in Afghanistan with the U.S. Army Rangers. During a mission in 2013, she went into a house where someone was shooting at U.S. soldiers. Layka took that person down, but not before she was shot four times. Her injuries cost Layka her front leg.
“The wound was so bad they had to cut it off,” Toritch said.
Layka survived and was awarded the Purple Heart. She also became the first dog since World War II to be awarded the Medal of Heroism.
Layka is also credited with being the inspiration behind the 2022 movie “Dog” starring Channing Tatum. It is why Toritch feels the responsibility of getting every feature just right.
“This particular statue will be based on the iconic photo of the National Geographic issue,” Toritch said. “Everybody knows National Geographic. Even for those people who never saw the military dog, they know this picture.”
Layka was on the cover of National Geographic for a 2014 story about Hero Dogs. That picture, and several others, is what Toritch is going off to mold the clay into shape and then carve perfect lines.
Anybody who has ever tried to take a good picture of their dog will appreciate this story. Photographer Martin Schoeller got the perfect shot of Layka for the National Geographic cover, but it wasn't easy. This is the link to how he did it; https://t.co/J8pEew72On pic.twitter.com/9LmHJGEcxQ
— Alex Cabrero (@KSL_AlexCabrero) December 31, 2022
It also helps Toritch to talk to the statue.
“Well, that’s my secret. And they talk back,” she said with a laugh.
The statue will eventually sit at the 1st Ranger Battalion Heritage Center at Hunter Army Air Field in Savannah, Georgia.
Toritch has been working on the statue since September.
She said she is working faster than she normally does on a piece because Layka, who was adopted by her Ranger handler, is 11 years old now and could be at the unveiling if everything works out.
“I want to meet her in person. She is my inspiration,” Toritch said.
The statue will help tell Layka’s story for generations.
“That’s the reward,” Toritch said. “Many years from now, especially children will come and start touching and looking at reading the name.”