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Dear Religious
leaders of the Judeo/Christian/Islamic Traditions:
I am writing to
you with the hope that you will reconsider the morality of
religious views that sanction the harming/killing of animals to
benefit man, as such a view is inhumane.
While the taking of human life is a sin in these traditions, the
harming or killing of an animal is not.
The
Judeo/Christian/Islamic traditions value an animal’s life in
relation to human need and grant permission, that is to say,
sanctify the harming/killing of animals in the name of
NECESSITY. This is a self-serving, semantic premise based on
archaic perceptions, designed to violate animal lives, while
alleging compassion. Such reasoning has been used to
exploit, dominate and abuse animals for many millennia.
Fortunately for
animals this is not the only religious model for teaching
compassion towards animals.The following words are from the
scriptures of the Jain religion of India.
"For there is
nothing inaccessible for death.
All beings are fond of life, hate pain, like pleasure,
shun destruction, like life, long to live. To all life
is dear." Jain Acharanga Sutra.
These words
reflect the belief that the lives of all beings are sacred and
that an animal's life has intrinsic worth, measured by its value
to the animal.
It is called ahimsa (no-harm) and is the fundamental principle
of the Jain religion of India. In this tradition harm to any
living being is to be avoided, minimized whenever possible and
is viewed as gratuitous, not necessary. Furthermore Jain
scriptures specifically state that it is a serious impropriety
to harm another living being:
"He who harms
animals has not understood or renounced deeds of
sin" Jain Sutra "
For those of us
who, after personally observing, as well as studying the
evidence in research studies, have concluded that animals are
capable of suffering, of experiencing pain
the
position that animals may be harmed or even killed for human
benefit is untenable. Many possess a full array of
emotions such as joy, pleasure, fear, anger, jealousy and even
greed; they teach, nurture and protect their young; some mate
for life and mourn the deaths of relatives, while innumerable
others provide service and companionship to mankind.
Many of us have
left our birth religions, because we have found the
tolerance and teaching of acceptable harm to animals
intolerable, We view the preaching of compassion, mercy and
forgiveness by our religious leaders as disingenuous, since it
does not include the suffering of all sentient creatures. We
observe that while they recite lovely words, they also sanctify
and endorse violence to animals in the name of ‘Religion’.
Others have
arrived at the conclusion that their religion is incompatible
with compassion for animals and therefore no longer feel
comfortable attending religious events. Still others leave all
religion and embrace secular humanism,
or
seek out religions which offer a more compassionate view of
animals, while some attempt to advocate for change from within.
The model of
animal compassion, with human need at its
core,
is based on biblical interpretations
of
a
hierarchical scheme which grants dominion over animals to man
and therefore implies that the lives of humans are more
valuable. While dominion ought to imply protection and caring,
because of the provision that animals may indeed be
harmed/killed to benefit man, as they are unable to defend
themselves, the result has been untold suffering for untold
numbers of living beings, especially those designated as "food"
animals.
Compassion
should be measured, not by how we treat our equals, but how we
treat the vulnerable and weak among us. Despite claims of
compassion, allowing only necessary violence to animals has not
resulted in less suffering during the 5000 years this model has
been used. Instead it has been used to justify every manner of
cruelty imaginable, from ghoulish experiments which torment,
maim and kill them, to terrifying deaths in slaughter houses to
the killing of homeless domestic animals in the name of
convenience to humans.
At its very root
the argument of allowable harm to animals for human benefit is
inconsistent and unjustifiable as it is not possible to assess
"necessity" and certainly not in terms arrived at thousands of
years ago.
Thus, the question not addressed by this premise is how to
determine what is "necessary".
Today, we do
accept that it is necessary to slaughter an animal to placate an
angry God; this is of little consolation to all the
animals murdered in the name of pleasing God, when it was deemed
"necessary". Even to this day animal sacrifice continues as
custom, in some societies. While it is based on
superstition and fear, it is still justified in the name of
necessity.
Necessity is relative: a furrier, for example, would argue that
the survival
of
his family depends on selling fur. Innumerable cruel industries
are justified by the premise of "necessity". In other words,
when you set the bar at permissible killing when "necessary',
the bar can be adjusted to suit those seeking to benefit from
animal misery.
And while the killing of animals has been justified on
the grounds that meat consumption is necessary for survival, we
are now learning that it is possible to be healthy and strong
while following a meat-free diet. What was once deemed
"necessary" is not, and in fact, innumerable recent studies have
shown that a meat-based diet is unhealthy as well as one of the
primary causes of devastation to our planet.
Thus, if we do
not have sufficient understanding to determine what is
'necessary' killing, then how can we justify it? In
hindsight animal sacrifice and meat consumption are not
necessary yet so much suffering has resulted from these so
called 'necessary' practices..
Yet another problem inherent in permission to kill is that
taking the life of an animal is such a violent act that it
overshadows any concept or words of compassion which are reduced
to empty rhetoric
in
the face of such violence.
Permissible harming/ killing of animals cannot be included in a
system that claims to be compassionate and just - it is a
contradiction so strong that any other measures of compassion
are negated and neutralized.
The bottom line is that there is no compassionate way to kill an
animal. Animals suffer terribly when they are killed. They are
frightened and in pain. No form of slaughter is compassionate:
both ritualistic and secular slaughter are carried out with
total disregard to the suffering inflicted on the victims.
Finally and most
significantly, there are human societies which have remained
meat free and do not use leather, fur or silk. The ancient, yet
timely Jain religion of India, is such a tradition. It is based
on the belief of non-violence to all beings. This is not just a
noble sentiment, but a life style that has allowed Jains to live
healthy and well-balanced lives for many millennia.
If this society
has been able to survive and thrive for so long without
consuming animal flesh, how
then
can the killing of animals to meet human needs ever be
considered necessary?
It is time to
rethink the archaic concept of 'necessary' killing endorsed by
the Judeo/Christian/Islamic traditions as it represents a
concept which promotes and results in much UNnecessary misery
and suffering.
When such
religious views of animals
become part of the mainstream culture,
the
result is every manner of exploitation and gratuitous violence.
An epidemic of such acts indicates that the youth in such
cultures are prone to seeking thrills from the gratuitous
abuse of animals and random acts of violence to humans. In view
of such spiritual poverty one has to wonder what has gone wrong.
"No society that
feeds its children on tales of
successful violence can expect them not to believe that
violence in the end is rewarded" Margaret Mead.
What then are we
teaching our children that allows them to harm and kill animals
for sheer pleasure? The answer lies in religious models
which sanctify, endorse, and facilitate violence to animals,
couched in the language of compassion which does not ring true.
What does it say to young people when the number of slaughtered
animals escalates during the religious holidays of these faiths?
Teaching young people that it is permissible to kill animals to
meet a human need, is often mistakenly interpreted as a free
license to harm and kill.
The evidence is
clear. In the West, the Judeo/Christian/Islamic traditions
have
failed to instill a message of compassion for living beings,
This failure has resulted in enormous and extensive abuse all
within the realm of what is considered "necessary" and has led
to a proliferation of acts of sadism and gratuitous violence.
As long as
religions continue to perpetuate the argument that violence to
animals is allowable to meet a human need, there will be no
peace, just more of the same.
"Nonviolence
leads to the highest ethics, which is the goal of all evolution.
Until we stop harming all living beings, we are all savages". --
Thomas Edison
If the
Judeo/Christian/Islamic tradition is not able to extend its
circle of compassion to include animals, it will continue to
become more irrelevant. The conclusion is irrefutable, as
compassion for animals begins to take hold in society, religions
which endorse abuse will continue the trend of diminishing
membership and decline in importance.
It is my deepest
hope that you will consider the possibility that animal lives do
not have to be sacrificed to improve the lives of humans and
that you can begin to embrace and instruct your followers in a
broader definition of compassion for all of creation.
.
Respectfully,
Ruth Eisenbud |