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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Tuesday, April 11, 2000 |
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Animals and humans
HEADS AND TAILS: Maneka Gandhi; Other India Press, Above Mapusa
Clinic, Mapusa-403507, Goa. Rs. 175.
Ms. MANEKA GANDHI has become quite well-known for her unflinching
and almost one-woman campaign waged against the killing of
animals for food. The pleas she has made in this book to meat-
eaters to switch over to vegetarianism present her as a very
warm-hearted lady with her heart in the right place. The
arguments she has put forward for ruthlessly demolishing the
arguments supporting eating of meat are borne out by the
extensive studies she has carried out and it would be very
difficult for anyone to dismiss her as a crank. Her response to
those who are not impressed with her reasoning, is with a spray
of facts and statistics delivered with a disdain for meat-eaters.
She repeatedly makes the point that killing of animals for food
is putting the earth on the road to eventual extinction of all
living species, including human beings. Part of the brutal
thoroughness which is now being resorted to in many countries
including India, for fattening the animals for enriching their
meat content prior to their slaughter, is their extensive grazing
and their being fed with cereal. This has already impoverished
grasslands and led to the animals devouring the grain which could
have fed the starving children in Africa. Apart from the
slaughter of animals for meat, killing of animals for laboratory
research is another sad story.
Ms. Gandhi mentions that the chimpanzee, the killing of which has
gone on for years in the interests of science, falls short of the
human DNA by only two per cent. She writes that during a state
visit to Mauritius she came to know about an ambitious programme
for the killing of monkeys, cats, dogs, goats and crows because
their presence discouraged western tourist inflow.
The gains brought about by the ``Project Tiger'' launched two
decades ago would not have materialised had they listened to the
stupid objections against the saving of forests to enable the
tiger to hunt wild deer and boar without any thought being given
to the ecology which has a way of sustaining these animals
against beasts of prey. ``Together,'' says Ms. Gandhi, ``these
life forms restored a multi-tiered canopy which brought health to
the forest. By simply doing nothing and by allowing nothing to be
done, the forests regenerated themselves and nature sprang back
to life. One of the first signs of restoration was that dry
streams began to flow all the year round.''
A comment repeatedly made on the state of legislation in India is
about its spreading where it is not needed and being obstructive
on the one hand and its being wholly absent where it is badly
needed. An instance of this given by Ms. Gandhi is while the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration has enforced laws against the
administering of as many as 143 drugs and pesticide residues in
meat and poultry, ``India is using every single one of these
drugs and quite a few more as our standards are much more lax.''
Among the many other matters at which she has taken a piercing
look is the pedigreed dog - which is a ``manufactured species'' -
to give it an alluring look derived from a heartless cross-
breeding. She has much to say about the myth - to the spreading
of which even the Khadi and Village Industries Board has been
vulnerable - about the leather products being made only from the
hides and skins of dead animals. She gives details about how a
great deal of slaughtering of young and healthy animals takes
place before leather is obtained.
The prodigality which precedes the making of meat could be seen
from a pound of pork requiring 430 gallons of water, with the
corresponding figures for beef and chicken being 350 and 375
gallons respectively. The ignorance about the ecology chain which
links every species from the smallest insect which sustains the
butterfly and which brings about cross pollination, right up to
the homo sapiens, has led to the thoughtless and callous killing
of them, making man the only cruel and unteachable species.
The research which Ms. Gandhi has been engaged in for years to
give us a torrential run of facts on everything she has dealt
with in this remarkable book reveals her as a dedicated lady who
runs a number of centres for taking care of animals which
otherwise would have died from lack of care and cruelty to which
they would have been exposed. If, even as a Minister in the Union
Government holding a portfolio which is obviously of her choice,
she finds herself in a state of helplessness, it is a reflection
of how things will not change or change only very slowly.
CVG
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