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BLOOD
ON OUR HANDS
January
14 to 31st is celebrated as Animal
Welfare Fortnight ever year. Two weeks in the year
in which animal rescue workers and animal welfare organisations
try to awaken within the public conscience all the many
known and unknown ways in which we inflict abuse and
cruelty upon innocent animals.
Most
acts of obvious cruelty against animals can be argued
away as having a noble human benefit as the outcome.
Take meat eating for example. Slaughter is a plainly
cruel act, but the end objective is noble - food. It's
the manner of slaughter that really differentiates the
beast with the axe from the beast under it.
Animal
husbandry laws require the final act of slaughter to
be made as painless to the animal as possible, both
physically and emotionally. Prior stunning, not killing
one animal within sight of another, considerate rather
than considerable restraint - but who really cares about
all these? We dig in to that delicious tangdi kabab,
and the succulent leitao, eyes and ears shut to the
inhuman (and often unnecessarily cruel) treatment meted
out to the creature not just at its killing, but also
in the way it is transported to its death. Trussed up
upside down on cycle handles, or tossed carelessly over
a motorbike pillion with feet tied up much too tight.
Thirsty and unfed, beaten and pushed and made to walk
miles after miles in the sun, chilli powder in the eyes,
tails pulled and broken in order to be goaded into walking
slogged and flogged to their death- almost all the beef
or mutton we eat has been some poor creature's arduous
journey from Jerusalem to Calvary. Take away the cross,
and we worship one but feast on the other. Jesus' suffering
had a purpose and a meaning - the poor animal's has
neither, and worse, it has no power or voice to protest
either.
Using
animals in medical experiments and for developing vaccines
is another example. Again, the end objective is noble
- aiding the discovery or manufacture of life saving
substances. Here too, laws exist to ensure the least
amount of trauma to the animal. These cover proper housing
and feeding, using only as many animals, and as often,
as absolutely necessary, replacing a live animal with
a dead one or any other feasible alternative wherever
possible. Indeed, India has better laws in this area
than most countries. But that didn't stop a renowned
institute like Haffkines from bleeding pregnant mares
for the anti venom to the point of comatose.
Large
research laboratories connected with the pharmaceutical
companies usually comply with the law, they have too
much at stake if they don't. The miscreants are our
everyday college kids in science and medical institutes.
The pressure to submit a thesis here and a paper there,
on meager budgets, with improper supervision, and careless
professorial guidance - who can blame them if they cut
up a few thousand mice now and a hundred monkeys then
to present a theory without a past, present or future?
Especially if the system actively encourages this laziness
of thought and suspension of conscience.
A
debatably less noble reason to exploit animals is in
the name of entertainment - sometimes for education.
As children, who can argue against the fact that it
was the annual trip to the circus or the zoo, and films
like "Born Free", "King Elephant"
and the original "Dr Doolittle"
that brought the fascinating world of animals to us
in a larger than life way? We did not know anything
about the behind-the-scenes truth, the unnaturalness
of the entire experience for the creatures that we went
home to fantasise about. Though activists now fight
hard to keep wild animals out of the circus, improve
the living conditions in zoos, and enforce cruelty prevention
laws when animals are used in movies and commercials,
there is still a long way to go. Take a short detour
the next time you visit the Borivili National Park,
to the area at the back where they keep about twenty
very old blind and toothless lions rescued from circuses.
A heartbreaking sight, and a very far cry from Elsa.
Do
you think all of this is a big fuss over nothing? Just
some animal activists raising uncomfortable issues too
close to home, when there are so many more important
things to be concerned about - look, there's a terrorist
lurking in the corner!
May
be you're right, but then for you I have this little
story.
"Hitlers
soldiers came and they took away all the Jews and
I did nothing. They then came and took away the gypsies
and I did nothing. The homosexuals went next and still
I did nothing. The soldiers then took away all the
intelligensia and still I did nothing. They then came
for the crippled and the infirm and still I did nothing.
Finally, the soldiers came for me and
there was
no one left to do anything for me."

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