A n i m a l   W r i t e s © sm
                                                 
The official ANIMAL RIGHTS ONLINE newsletter

Established 1997


Editor ~ JJswans@aol.com
Issue # 06/29/03

Publisher   ~ Susan Roghair - EnglandGal@aol.com           
Journalists ~ Greg Lawson   - ParkStRanger@aol.com
                 ~ Michelle Rivera - MichelleRivera1@aol.com
                 ~
Dr. Steve Best  - sbest1@elp.rr.com


THE ARTICLES IN THIS ISSUE ARE:

1  ~ Why I Am Vegan  by Jeffrey M. Freedman
2  ~
Harry Potter and The Abandoned Owls  by KMBwolf@aol.com
3  ~
New Course Will Examine Status of Animals in Society
4  ~
Farm Sanctuary Country Hoe Down
5  ~
Website of Note
6  ~
Our Little Furry Friends  by Dalene TenEyck
7  ~
Memorable Quote

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~1~
Why I Am Vegan
By Jeffrey M. Freedman

Being vegan is about more than what I do or do not eat. For me, it is a prayer, a petition asking why animals and people suffer greatly in a Universe created by a benevolent and loving G-d. This question led me to a lifestyle that is focused primarily on abstaining from the consumption or use of anything that comes from or contains animals or animal products.

Veganism is a corollary of ahimsa, the universal principle of compassionate, nonviolent living, the a priori maxim of Judeo-Christian ethics and Eastern spiritual philosophies. Mohandas Gandhi said "The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be measured by the way its animals are treated."

Veganism, for me, is not so much about dietary abstinence as it is about spiritual sustenance; spiritual sustenance that fills the dark and empty spaces I feel lost in when I witness animal and human suffering, or anything that is an affront to what is Holy or good in the world. It is a lifestyle imperative that flows from my love of animals and reverence for life.

It wasn't until I got to university, on my own for the first time, that I realized there was a disconnect between what I felt in my heart (love for animals) and what I was putting in my body (corpses of animals), and that my spiritual life would have to mediate between and reconcile the two. It did. I stopped eating meat and chicken and—after I realized fish are not plants with gills—seafood went too. Becoming vegetarian made me feel I was doing something to lessen the suffering of animals (or that at least I wasn't contributing to it). I was making a statement about what my conscience could not live with and what my body could live without, but it also felt like an inadequate-human response to a spiritual dilemma.

Why G-d's creation suffers, and how and when this suffering will cease is a question that has always tormented me—a mystery only G-d has the answer to. But I couldn't even bring myself to ask this question knowing that what I ate, what I wore, what I did, contributed to suffering in this world. For me, to be able to fully explore the question of suffering, I had to give up the products and by-products that can't be produced without causing suffering to animals—including meat, eggs, milk, fur, leather, wool, down, and cosmetics or chemical products tested on animals. (I include circuses, zoos, and all other institutions that confine or exploit animals in this list). To the extent they don't cause suffering, in any way, I consider consuming, wearing or watching them acceptable.

This ethical standard I try to live by is predicated on Albert Schweitzer's "Reverence for Life," my desire to decrease, or at least not contribute to, the suffering of any sentient being; and the interrelatedness and common origin of all life on Earth. If she, he, or it suffers, I suffer. What constitutes suffering, as far as I understand it and the way most Buddhist's define it, is that everything/everyone wants to live and nothing/no one wants to feel pain. Anything that causes pain or death causes suffering. But eradicating all animal products from my diet, my clothes, and every aspect of my life is also, ironically, a statement about my powerlessness in the face of the world's suffering. I have had to admit that what I don't eat isn't going to have a major impact on the violence and the suffering of the innocents in the world; that it would take more than my abstinence from eating animals to bring about a state of ahimsa to the world. Veganism, for me, is asking G-d to do what I am incapable of doing myself.

I read something in the news recently about the ongoing abduction and breaking of baby elephants in Thailand. They are taken from their mothers, tied by their feet so they can't move, beaten with sharp instruments on their head till they bleed, and kept awake by loud noise, sometimes for days. This torture goes on until they either go mad or become docile enough to perform in circuses and tourist attractions.

Two blocks from where I live and work an injured pigeon has been cowering under a store ledge trying to avoid the prowling cats, blinding snow, wind, and other urban predators. Hundreds of people have passed by and ignored him the way they ignored the mangled pigeon I found during one of last summer's most unbearably hot and humid days. He was attacked by a cat, couldn't fly, hobbled on one leg, looked unbearably sad and worn out. When I take these animals to the local wildlife rehabilitation center I am as much pained by the broken-hearted indifference of the other people who saw their suffering and did nothing as I am by the suffering itself.

For anyone sensitive to the suffering of animals and people who cannot defend or fend for themselves, these are the things that rend the heart and are a call to action and prayer. They are a call to action because to do nothing is to court helplessness and depression and defeat. They are a call to prayer because in an imperfect world, suffering, which is a symptom of separation from the Divine or the whole of creation, must exist. Prayer then becomes the last refuge of those who suffer greatly as a result of bearing witness to great suffering.

I realize this is somewhat of a spiritual-evolutionary leap; that I am, to a certain extent, intervening in the process of natural selection and survival of the fittest in my desire to pre-empt or lessen the severity of suffering in the 'animal kingdom.' People are always reminding me that, in nature, the big fish eat the little fish, we all prey on and consume some thing or someone, that it's a dog-eat-dog world. I know all that. I know it. But a fundamental principle of evolution is that those who adapt to the environment most efficiently increase their odds of survival. The predatory, polluting, war-mongering behavior of humanity has pushed us—and unfortunately most other life forms—perilously close to extinction. So is it too much of a stretch to posit that reverence for life, eating as low down on the food chain as possible and a desire to preserve that which sustains life (e.g. lakes, rivers, streams, forests, the ozone), may be a last-ditch attempt by the evolutionary, self-preserving wiring in us, if not the entire life-force of the planet, to move us further from the precipice of extinction?

We have polluted, consumed, caged, corrupted, deracinated, tortured, and tormented just about every form of creation on Earth. I think ahimsa and veganism are both a symbolic and a very real way to reverse this trend. Disregarding the sanctity of life and the planet with impunity has given us a world that is rife with violence, war, pestilence, starvation and poison in our air, water, and food. Being vegan is a way of becoming conscious of our actions and their consequences. It is a way of giving thought to the pain, suffering, and terror that occurs as a result of turning a living, breathing, feeling animal into the meat we put inside ourselves or in front of our children; a way of considering the global consequences of deracinating another forest, poisoning another river, depleting more of the ozone, feeding cattle on arable land that could be used to eradicate world hunger.

Like a fast at Yom Kippur or Christian Lent, I am trying to make myself ready to petition G-d to rid the world of suffering and violence that I can't personally eradicate or change in any lasting or globally significant way. I am asking Him to do something about the baby elephants and the wounded pigeons and the broken hearts of the world.


Jeffrey M. Freedman is a longtime writer and journalist (www.jeffreymichaelfreedman.com), animal rights advocate, and frequent contributor for the International Vegetarian Union in the United Kingdom and several other publications. jeffmf@earthlink.net

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~2~
Harry Potter and The Abandoned Owls
By KMBwolf@aol.com

No, this isn't the latest book from J.K. Rowling. It's the sad reality of what happens when animals in movies or books and children collide.

With the release of Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix on June 21, 2003, the fifth book in the series, and "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban," the third movie, tentatively scheduled for summer of 2004, wildlife rehabilitators and animal rights activists are concerned. Again.

Hedwig, Harry's snowy owl, soars upon the screen, delivering the young wizard's daily post. She's adorable, obedient, and delivers mail. So is it a surprise hundreds of thousands of children are begging their parents for their own pet owl?

The Independent Midlands Birds of Prey Rescue Centre in Norton, Stourbridge, England wasn't surprised. Not even when they found themselves with over twenty abandoned and surrendered barn owls. (1)

"There are so many barn owls being bred in captivity," says Chris Jones, who runs the centre. "People have been breeding them to sell on the black market since the Harry Potter films came out. But it is getting out of hand now."(2)

Owls might be cute birds, but what the movies don't show is that they require a lot of special care. Their diets consist of small rodents and chicks, they need excessive exercise, and need to live in either the wild or in an aviary (during rehabilitation or if they are unable to be returned to the wild).

"The snowy owl is featured in this particular movie. We understand that Harry Potter keeps it in a parrot cage, which is against everything we know," said Jenny Thurston, a trustee at the World Owl Trust at Muncaster Castle near the village of Ravenglass, England. "That is horrendous. It will foul up people's imagination." (3)

And what many do not realize, is that owls can live 30-50 years. Can you see your ten year old child taking care of an owl at 60?

While the books and movie are fictitious, many parents still succumb to the pleading, tearful requests of their children. Luckily, owl guardianship is illegal in the United States, thanks to the fact that owls are protected under international treaties and federal laws, such as the Migratory Bird Treaty Act and the Wild Bird Conservation Act.

But there are many animals in movies that spark a child's craving that are readily available in the US.

Like Dalmatians.

In 1996, Disney released "101 Dalmatians," and "102 Dalmatians" in 2000. With the two movies came the inevitable demand for spotted pups. And, much to animal shelters' fears, the inevitable surplus of surrendered and abandoned dogs.

Dalmatians became the most abandoned breed at US shelters in 1997. (4) Families that fell in love with the on-screen antics of the star puppies soon learned that taking care of a real dog is harder than it looks, and that the breed came with it's own unlikable quirks-deafness, high shedding, and high energy, to name a few.

Shelters were the hardest hit. Rescue organizations found themselves dealing with a 300% increase of Dalmatians. (5) Even though many of the Dalmatians in shelters were adopted out, thousands were euthanized. Not a scene found in the movie.

Owls and Dalmatians aren't the only animals affected by entertainment popularity. Parents bought Red-eared Terrapins for their children who wanted their own "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles." Pugs were sought after the release of "Men in Black" movies. And who can forget the amount of bought-then-abandoned orange tiger kittens and pug puppies after "Milo and Otis?"

So what can parents do to help stop animal suffering when their children watch movies and read books?

* Explain to your child that the movie/book is fantasy-Owls do not deliver the post, and dogs cannot talk

* Explain why the animal would not make a good companion-Owls can crush a child's wrist and need a lot of space. Puppies do not stay puppies forever.

* Do not buy an animal purely because of a child's interest in a movie/book character-While children are the ones who ask, it's the parents who buy. Remember, a companion animal is a member of the family, and all members of the family must agree on the animal (including the parents).

* Use this chance to educate-If your child really wants his/her own Hedwig or Pongo, take books out from the library about the animals. Surf the web with your child to find sites about the animals.

* Buy plush, not live-Official plush Hedwigs and Dalmatian puppies are readily available in toy stores and online. You can even find unofficial look-alikes in stores. You can even take it one step further by leaving personalized letters with the Hedwig plushes for your child to find after school, or hide the Dalmatian puppy plush and leaving clues so your child can "rescue" him/her. Children will love these new games because it ties in with the movies, and brings you and your child closer.

* Decorate with the animals-Stickers, postcards, pictures, etc!

* Educate about rescue-If you have a Harry Potter fan, teach him about owl wildlife rehabilitation. Child like the spotted pups? Teach her about Dalmatian rescue organizations If possible, take the children to the rescue centres, rehab centres, and shelters to see the animals in real life. Don't, however, take them to pet stores, zoos, or circuses to see them.

* Sponsor an animal-There are many rescue programs that allow you to "adopt" an animal without ever having to worry about messes, feeding, and care. All you need to do is give a sponsorship pledge to an organization You'll receive pictures, information, and updates about your "adopted" animal.

Useful Information

Owls

* Soaring Hawk Raptor Rehabilitation--http://www.soarinhawk.org/sp-snowo.html
* Raptor Education Group, Inc-- http://www.raptoreducationgroup.org/index.cfm
* Snowy Owl Hub-- http://www.projectlinks.org/snowy/ 
* Defenders of Wildlife's Save Owls Site-- http://www.saveowls.org/

Dalmatians

* Dalmatian Rescue Resources-- http://bcf.usc.edu/~thaase/DOT/  
* Dalmatian Rescue List-- http://dalmatianresq.tripod.com/  
* Dalmatian Info-- http://www.dalspot.com/newown.html  
* Recycled Canines-- http://www.dalrescueofhouston.homestead.com/welcome.html  

Endnotes


(1) Plea on homes for 'Harry Potter' owls--http://www.expressandstar. com/cgi-bin/artman/exec/view.cgi?archive=9&num=33333
(2) ibid.
(3) Harry Potter Owl Scenes Alarm Animal Advocates--http://news.nation algeographic.com/news/2001/11/1116_harrypotterowl.html
(4) Animal lovers scramble to save abandoned Dalmatians--http://www.
     news-star.com/stories/091197/dalmatians.html
(5) With movie craze over, woman helps Dalmatians find homes-
     http://www.cnn.com/US/9705/06/dal/

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~3~
New Course Will Examine
Status of Animals in Society

Students at the Community College of Baltimore County (CCBC) Maryland will examine the moral and legal status of animals in contemporary society in the first of a new series of classes that will begin in September.

“Animals and Society” will explore the sociological, historical, economic, philosophical and public policy issues that ultimately determine society's treatment of animals.  Instructors Brenda Fick of CCBC and Kim Stallwood of the Institute for Animals and Society will focus on the use of animals in factory farming, medical research, hunting and trapping, and the entertainment industry.

The class is one of four in a series designed for animal rescue workers, grassroots activists, and others who want to learn more about animal issues. Other classes will compare racism, sexism and speciesism, as well as focus on advanced leadership in the animal advocacy movement.

“The IAS’s mission is to advance animal advocacy issues within public policy through research, education and foster cooperation with other social movements,” says Stallwood, executive director of the Baltimore-based organization. “Our partnership with CCBC exemplifies the successful fulfillment of that mission.”

Upon completion of the four-class series, students will receive 12 credit hours and a certificate. Students may take one or more of the classes as they choose. Plans are under way to make the classes available on line through distance-learning technology.

For more information, contact Kim W. Stallwood at the Institute for Animals and Society at (410) 675-4566.


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~4~
Farm Sanctuary COUNTRY HOE DOWN
Camp & Conference - Watkins Glen, NY
August 2 & 3

It's much more than a conference-it's a Hoe Down! Join Farm Sanctuary co-founders Gene and Lorri Bauston and an array of animal rights speakers, including Bruce Friedrich, PETA's director of Vegan Outreach; Miyun Park, president of Compassion Over Killing; and David Wolfson, Author of Beyond the Law .

Whether you're a novice or an experienced hand at speaking out for farm animals, the New York Country Hoe Down is a unique weekend of education and entertainment with the latest news on farm animal issues and campaign strategies. Tour the beautiful 175-acre shelter, enjoy a hayride and cuddle with friendly farm critters. In the evening, let your hair down and boogie the night away at our Saturday night Barn Dance where we party 'til the cows come home!

The Hoe Down conference fee is $75 per person for the full conference and includes Saturday and Sunday lunches, Saturday dinner and Saturday night barn dance with complimentary snacks and beverages. Please note: Seating is limited and this conference does sell out every year. Early reservations are recommended.

For information on the Hoe Down and to register online, visit http://www.farmsanctuary.org/visit/Newyork_hoedown.htm.
or call 607-583-2225 ext. 221.


Kate Capecelatro-Beals
Communications Coordinator
Farm Sanctuary
P.O. Box 150, Watkins Glen, NY 14850
Ph: 607.583.2225 x235
Fax: 607.583.2041
Email: kbeals@farmsanctuary.org

Visit our Website: www.farmsanctuary.org

Sign-up for Farm Sanctuary email news list at http://www.farmsanctuary.org/signup.htm

ABOUT FARM SANCTUARY: Farm Sanctuary is the nation's largest farm animal rescue and protection organization. With over 100,000 active members, Farm Sanctuary works to end farm animal suffering and promote the humane treatment of animals used for food production through legislative and legal actions, investigative campaigns, humane education and public awareness projects, and direct rescue and shelter efforts.


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~5~
Website of Note

Today [June 27th] the website of Responsible Policies for Animals, Inc. (RPA) -- the nonprofit organization I recently founded -- went online.  I hope you will visit the site at your next opportunity.  Here is the URL:

www.RPAforAll.org

RPA shows leaders how to establish responsible policies for animals that are also responsible policies for human beings and ecosystems.  An example is our first campaign, described in detail at the site: 10,000 Years Is Enough, aimed at ending the teaching of animal agriculture at universities. 

Since the billions of dollars in corporate welfare to the animal industries from university animal-agriculture programs support cruel practices in the industries and the industries are extremely harmful to human beings and ecosystems, we decided 10,000 Years Is Enough would make an ideal first RPA campaign.  And we are developing others.

At www.RPAforAll.org, you can read brief descriptions of the work RPA has already done on the 10,000 Years Is Enough campaign; see the news coverage the campaign has already received, including significant animal-industry reporting and letters we have published; read the RPA factsheets already circulating; get an idea of future RPA efforts; and more.

I have always wanted life to be wonderful for all human and nonhuman animals, and I believe it can come close when humans make sound choices.  It is in that spirit that I founded RPA and invite you to visit our website. 

Best wishes,

David Cantor
Executive Director
Responsible Policies for Animals, Inc.
P.O. Box 891
Glenside, PA 19038
215-886-RPA1
RPA4all@aol.com

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~6~
Our Little Furry Friends
By Dalene TenEyck - poet4animals@ij.net

They are the strong,
as they will fight our enemies
until their death if necessary
for the love of you.

They are our teachers,
as they show us how to love
with all their hearts, unconditionally
even when we do not deserve it
and others turn away.

They are the true,
as there is NO greater loyalty in the world
greater then theirs to you.

They are as children,
as they cannot drive themselves to the Doctors
when sick or tell you
when they need warmth and food.

They are gifts from God,
the trusting ones who trust us completely
to love and care for them
in times of need as they care for us
everyday in every way.

Our truest spirit
our truest self shines through our love
and kindness to all creatures great and small.

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~7~
Memorable Quote

"The fact that man knows right from wrong proves his intellectual superiority to other creatures; but the fact that he can do wrong proves his moral inferiority to any creature that cannot."
~~ Mark Twain, What is Man?


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Susan Roghair - EnglandGal@aol.com
Animal Rights Online
P O Box 7053
Tampa, Fl 33673-7053
http://www.geocities.com/RainForest/1395/

-=Animal Rights Online=-
«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»
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