Newsline
Feb 07, 2026

Jimmy the Bear — A Kind-Hearted Giant Who Loves Everyone

In the rolling landscapes of Orange County, the traditional boundaries between the human and animal kingdoms are being quietly redrawn. At the Orphaned Wildlife Center, a sprawling 100-acre sanctuary, Marty and Debbie Kowalczik have traded the conventional rhythms of life for a more primal calling: the lifelong care of the injured, the orphaned, and the unreleasable.

While the center provides a permanent refuge for a diverse roster of American fauna, it is the sanctuary’s bear population—ranging from Syrian and American black bears to massive Kodiaks—that serves as its emotional heartbeat. And at the center of that heartbeat stands Jimmy, a 1,500-pound testament to the power of interspecies trust.

A Life Defined by Human Care

Jimmy, a 21-year-old bear, is an “ambassador of the impossible.” Born in captivity, his life story is a departure from the sanctuary’s primary mission of rehabilitation and release. Because he was raised entirely by human hands from birth, Jimmy never developed the essential predatory or survival instincts required to navigate the unforgiving New York wilderness. For Jimmy, “freedom” in the wild would have been a death sentence.

Instead, the Kowalcziks have provided a different kind of liberty: the freedom to exist without fear. Standing over nine feet tall when upright, Jimmy possesses the physical power to be a formidable predator, yet he has earned a reputation as one of the most affectionate residents in the history of the facility. His personality is defined by a startlingly calm and friendly demeanor, forming bonds with his caretakers that defy traditional wildlife management expectations.

Sanctuary Over Spectacle

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