For the second
year running, Tamil Nadu has ‘celebrated’ (‘observed’, if you ask the affected)
the harvest festival of Pongal
without the traditional “Jallikattu”,
a ‘sport’ where bulls are ‘tamed’. A loaded statement, if you see the number of
words in inverted commas!
(image source:www.maduraitravelclub.com)
The tradition of Jallikattu extends to many years, the
days of yore when taming a bull was considered a ‘macho’ thing. It still is, in
the interior parts of the state. In many states, actually. Taming a wild bull
is appreciated as a display of masculinity.
The Supreme
Court, on a petition from animal rights activists has gone ahead and banned the
sport. The petition cited that "In
just four years, from 2010 to 2014, approximately 1,100 injuries to humans were
reported by the media as a result of cruel and dangerous jallikattu-type events
and 17 people died..." It is no secret that there are injuries caused
to the bulls - the way some of them are prepared for the event is itself not
for the weak-hearted.
We come once
again to the agenda of the animal rights activists and their point of view.
What about the
slaughter of innumerable goats, chicken and bulls / buffaloes at abattoirs?
Where are these activists when these things happen? What about the matadors who
impale the bulls in bullfighting contests in Spain? There is an allegation that
the only duty of the Animal Welfare Board in India is its arm twisting when it
comes to providing certificates for animals to be used in movies.
The impact on
the economy and the lives of people who are dependent on this sport needs to be
taken into account while arriving at a decision on the ‘sport’. In fact,
banning the sport has an impact on the animals too. These animals are bred and
made to live a life which they would not be otherwise provided. Now they head
straight to the abattoirs!
There needs to
be a balance between tradition and banning such conventions. Where these things
are part of conventions and life as such, a ban should be something that is
thought of before a judgement is delivered. Why not adopt a
middle path? Allow this with conditions? With neutral observers?
Can we ban horse
racing? Why don’t we do it? Why should horses be made to race? Isn’t it a form
of cruelty? Many horses are castrated so that their masculinity is ‘diverted’
to running the race. In many cases the horses which lose the race are shot and
killed. Which law says that you can use an animal for racing but cannot use
another for another sport? Who are the observers who lord over horse racing?
And pray, where are these animal rights activists when horses thunder in the
Guindy, Mahalaxmi, Ooty and other race courses in the country? One rule for the
rich and another for the rest? The law bans certain animals like bulls as
'performing animals'. When horses are used to race, aren't they 'performing'?
I am a
vegetarian but I know that the world is predominantly non-vegetarian. How do we
get the animals to our plate? Do we wait for them to die because of natural
causes and then cook and eat them? One visit to a slaughter house and you may
never eat meat again. For example, take chicken, which is the most commonly consumed
non-vegetarian item in India - how are these chicken grown for food? How are
their necks wrung so as to kill them and de-feather them? Do you know that when
they are dumped in boiling water, many of them are still alive? Fish? Aren't we
'killing' them before eating them? So are the activists, who would also be predominantly
non-vegetarian, going to ban non-vegetarian food as well ?
India, nay, the
world, has never been kind to animals. We will never be. It arises to the
primary nature of existence – the fitter survives. It is the cycle of life. The
finest things in this world come from man’s greed and his way of showing
superiority over animals – from food to wool, leather etc. How many people use faux stuff?
Let rationality creep in, please.
2 comments:
True. If Jallikatu has to be banned then Horse Racing should also be banned.
Well said! About horse race and non-veg
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