Wednesday 18 May 2011

Animal welfare and veganism

As you'll no doubt have realised, I am passionate about animal welfare issues. Treating animals with kindness is a Baha'i principle. I've noticed that many people who are passionate about animal welfare are also vegan. Vegans not only do not eat meat, but do not make use of other animal products either, such as eggs or milk, or leather for shoes. I think it's unfortunate for the animal welfare movement that it appears to be dominated by vegans. Many people can be won over to the idea that farm animals should be treated humanely, but many people don't see a problem with eating meat and think veganism is extreme.
I am pleased to be a member of WSPA (World Society for the Protection of Animals). It may be run by vegans for all I know, but such things are never mentioned in its animal welfare work. The organisation sticks to its purpose of preventing animal cruelty and leaves people to run their own lives. But other animal advocacy groups, such as the New Zealand organisation SAFE (Save Animals from Exploitation), also promote veganism. SAFE's board members "Ideally ... will possess a compassionate attitude for all life, a personal commitment to improving the wellbeing of all animals, and an understanding and belief in a vegetarian/vegan lifestyle." I've also found that many people discussing animal welfare on the Internet are vegan.
For example, I took a look at a lecture by Gary Yourofsky, an animal rights activist in the States, in which he outlines the philosophy behind his veganism. He relies heavily on the religious principles that we should do unto others as we'd have them do to us and that we should not kill. He widens the usual interpretation of these principles by arguing that they apply to animals as well as to humans. Gary argues that, when we say we should treat 'others' as ourselves, 'others' means animals as well as humans. He puts animals and humans in the same category, in that animals share the physical capabilities of humans, such as sensory organs and a brain, and the ability to experience trauma and distress too. It is therefore not right to kill such creatures. He believes that treating animals differently to humans is like racism; he calls it speciesism. "The term is mostly used by animal rights advocates, who argue that it is irrational or morally wrong to regard sentient beings as objects or property." Wiki
I see two separate issues here, which vegans conflate: one is animals living free of cruelty, and the other is killing animals for meat. In Gary's lecture, he forces his audience to watch what goes on in a slaughter house. He really lays it on thick in order to get people to feel disgusted about eating meat. But all along I am thinking that he's merging the two issues into one. For him, cruelty is the same thing as killing. All the abuse of animals that goes on in factory farming is just a prelude to the killing end game. The unavoidable conclusion is that everyone who eats meat is responsible for the horrific abuse of factory farm animals. It isn't smart politics to alienate people like me who really care about animal welfare.
I see Gary's view as a product of modern Western society. The idea that the 'do not kill' principle applies to animals is very modern. I'm not familiar with Old Testament law, which is where the principle comes from, but I can't imagine anyone who lived a thousand years before Christ ever imagined it applied to animals. Unlike people back then, people today have a very uncomfortable relationship with death. We hide it away in hospitals, homes and slaughterhouses. I know from my experience how difficult it was to accept the (humane) killing of some of my roosters. But in the end, it was good to go through that process because I gained more appreciation of life and the reality of death as a defining moment within it. (The latest craze about planking, where guys lie down flat and balance in dangerous places like railings, is a good example of how death is unreal to young men.)
As I understand Baha'i law, cruelty to animals is forbidden but eating meat is permitted:
"Burden not an animal with more than it can bear. We, truly, have prohibited such treatment through a most binding interdiction in the Book. Be ye the embodiments of justice and fairness amidst all creation." Baha'u'llah: Kitab-i-Aqdas, page and para 87)

"Briefly, it is not only their fellow human beings that the beloved of God must treat with mercy and compassion, rather must they show forth the utmost loving-kindness to every living creature. For in all physical respects, and where the animal spirit is concerned, the selfsame feelings are shared by animal and man. Man hath not grasped this truth, however, and he believeth that physical sensations are confined to human beings, wherefore is he unjust to the animals, and cruel." Selections ... `Abdu'l-Baha, pp 158-159)

"Say: O concourse of priests and monks! Eat ye of that which God hath made lawful unto you and do not shun meat. God hath, as a token of His grace, granted you leave to partake thereof save during a brief period [ie, the fast]. He, verily, is the Mighty, the Beneficent. Forsake all that ye possess and hold fast unto that which God hath purposed. This is that which profiteth you, if ye be of them that comprehend." Tablet to Napoleon III, in Summons para 154, p80
Based on the above, I agree with much of what Gary Yourofsky says. Yes, we should treat animals with infinite kindness and yes, they do suffer under cruelty just as humans do.
But is killing animals for food a form of cruelty? As I understand it, there is a fundamental difference between humans and animals. Humans have a soul, which means they are eternal life forms. When they die physically, they continue living in spiritual worlds forever. Animals do not have a soul. When they die physically, that is it for them. (Note though, that although animals do not have a soul, that does not mean they do not suffer under cruelty.)
The soul is also the vehicle behind our conscience and moral dimension. It's via the soul that a person has the ability to understand abstract concepts like justice, loving kindness and cruelty. Animals do not have a soul and therefore do not have the capacity to understand such concepts. They do not establish institutions to discuss the implications of these principles for the affairs of this world.
Animals, then, do not have a moral code that tells them not to be cruel to each other. My chickens will happily peck each other just to get an advantage over others. Little chicks are not protected, but picked on. As the farmer and the one with the moral code, it is me who interferes to ensure that the weakest in the flock get sufficient food and are protected. I think that, although humans and animals have much in common, we should avoid getting romantic about animals. We say they are innocent, but that is because they can't be held responsible if they are cruel. They don't know any better. They are not innocent because they are always kind. Animals kill each other for food, and always will. You can't tell an animal that this is cruelty. This shows that, despite shared sensory capacities, there is a fundamental difference between humans and animals.
Animals also do not understand the concepts of time - of past, present and future, and eternity. I noted someone saying that animals were eternal but humans not. But what is eternity to a creature that is created to be always in the present? A creature in the present is focused on whether life is good right now. If it is, all is well. They do not understand that they might be killed for food one day. They do not suffer weeks and years of terror in anticipation as a human would. Ideally, animals live very happy lives and then, maybe, one day, suffer a quick and painless death. That is that.
Some of my chickens in a house Steve built for them
Some of my chickens in a house Steve built for them

But although I am not against meat-eating, I am wholly against factory farming, which is cruel. If we are to eat meat, the least we can do is ensure that the lives of the animals we benefit from are happy. Factory farming means high-density animal populations, and no animal will be happy living like that. Some 'free-range' farms house thousands of chickens in very large barns. In theory, the chickens are free range because they can go outside, but in practice very few do because that many chickens cannot get to the doors. For example, in theory, you can get 'out' when you are at a packed rock concert (the doors are not locked), but you only make the effort if you absolutely have to. Chickens are creatures of habit and if they are not trained to find the door, they'll stay put for good.

7 comments:

Karen Effie said...

There is always a tension in our reltiaonship with animals betweent he demand for difference and the demand for similitude. We want animals to be like us, but not so like us that we see our worst selves in them. Hence we romanticise them. The word abbatoir means cutting down trees -killing animals is sanitised and kept away from our lives, when even three generations ago people kept small animals for meat in protsuburbs. Worth reading is Karen Dawn's Thanking the Monkey, for the pro-vegan side

evolvingstar said...

How do you know Human beings have a soul and animals don't? Where is your evidence? As the Buddha himself stated: 'Only through ignorance and delusion do men indulge in the dream that their souls are separate and self-existing entities. Their heart still clings to Self. They are anxious about heaven and they seek the pleasure of Self in heaven. Thus they cannot see the bliss of righteousness and the immortality of truth.' Selfish ideas appear in man's mind due to his conception of Self and craving for existence. Yes, Carnivorous animals kill other animals, Human's are not Carnivores, so how can this justify our killing of animals.

Alison Marshall said...

I believe humans have souls and animals don't because that is what the Baha'i writings tell me. Also, I know I have a soul because I use it all the time. But I don't expect you to believe what I believe. You are welcome to believe as you wish. About being anxious about heaven, the Baha'i writings say that we must love God, not heaven. There is a difference. If we are anxious about heaven, then we don't love God - we have put up a partner to God.

Unknown said...

How sad that you think Veganism is extreme when humans are capable of living healthy lives without animal products. As long as animals are treated as commodities, their value as individuals and their right to life is lost, especially because of the high demand for animal products with our increasing population. Consuming animal products is a tradition like any other that we can outgrow. Do not demonize Vegans for standing up for this wonderful new belief system that opens our eyes to create a better future. Embrace any positive belief. Watch this: http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1217824721/unity-the-movie

Steve said...

Hi Ashleigh,

Alison didn't say she thinks veganism is extreme. Here's what she did say:

"Many people can be won over to the idea that farm animals should be treated humanely, but many people don't see a problem with eating meat and think veganism is extreme."

Unknown said...

I am commenting years after the original post. I am a Baha'i and a vegan. I do not understand how killing cannot be cruelty. If a farmer has given an animal a good life and then kills her to eat, is that not betrayal and cruelty. If a farmer, after kindly raising an animal, sends her to the slaughter house, the cared for animal will suffer the same painful death, emotionally and physically, as all the factory farmed animals experience. We know as Baha'is, we are not forbidden to eat meat, but we are also not forbidden from being vegan. On the contrary, in terms of compassion and Justice, for people, for the environment, and yes, for the animals, the only way that makes sense for me for those of us who have a choice, and that is the vast majority of us.

Susan jeffers photography said...

I know this article was written back in 2011 but I'm just seeing it now for the first time. I decided to do a vegan and gluten-free Thanksgiving this year and that's how I found you. I am A member of the Baha'i faith as well, but I am not a vegan. I am really trying hard to make the transition and this article has been incredibly helpful. Thank you for writing it in a way that is very nonjudgmental, and sensible. Also if I may offer a suggestion for the Second comment ... Evolving star, the Buddha and what He says about why we think our souls are self existing entities... We as Baha'is believe that Each person has their own soul but the soul cannot be understood fully. It is not made up of parts rather is conscious and exists in some formless form that none of us can ever ultimately understand fully till we die. It's like a baby who doesn't really understand himself until he is born in this world and becomes oriented in it. I think Buddha is warning us to not believe in a false conception of the soul. To be detached from reserving a place in heaven. Loving God is different than loving heaven like Allison mentioned

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