By DUNCAN STRAUSS
For the love of animals, avoid the
circus
Special to The Palm Beach Post
Sunday, December 23, 2007
Original
Article Link
On Wednesday, the Ringling Bros. and
Barnum & Bailey Circus lumbers into the South Florida Fairgrounds
Expo Center in Palm Beach County for 12 performances. To those considering
stepping into the big top to attend one of these shows, I offer
this polite request:
Please don't.
Who am I - some animal-hating killjoy
out to spoil your fun? Far from it. I'm a father, a pretty passionate
animal lover and, not coincidentally, I host a radio program about
animals that airs on Tampa National Public Radio affiliate WMNF.
I do not claim to be a renowned animal
expert. But over the years, I've done a great deal of research into
an array of animal matters. In hosting the show, I've had the good
fortune to interview a number of renowned animal experts, experiences
that have yielded one indisputable conclusion:
Animals in circuses endure a relentlessly
awful life, marked by constant travel in cramped quarters, where
access to food and water and proper veterinary care can't always
be counted on, but punishment, pain, cruelty and, sometimes, premature
death can be.
Hyperbole? Hardly. Any unit of Ringling
Bros. is on the road for six to 11 months at a time, typically traveling
in small train cars or trucks that are often poorly ventilated and/or
lack basic creature comforts.
But the travails of transportation
practically seem glorious alongside the covert and overt cruelty
of the training that prepares - if that's the right word - these
animals to perform in "the greatest show on Earth." Allow
me to pose two related rhetorical questions:
Do you think that tigers - who, like
most animals, are deathly afraid of fire - would be naturally inclined
to jump through a ring of fire?
Do you think that elephants would be
naturally inclined to balance on a colorful perch, stand on their
hind legs or heads, or dance?
The answer, of course, is a resounding
"No." So, to achieve the sort of unnatural and physically
challenging behaviors described above and others, the training is
fear-driven, revolving around punishing and hurting the animals:
whipping them, beating them with rods, etc.
Elephants often are restrained, then
beaten until they understand not to fight back. The chief tool of
the elephant training trade is the bull hook, or ankus, which is
heavy and clublike and has a pointy, sharp tip. Imagine a heavy
and sharp fireplace poker. The trainers hit the elephants with the
bull hook in various parts of their body, so that they comply -
"learn."
Sounds too horrendous to believe, doesn't
it? But there is plenty of testimony by former Ringling employees
that says as much, and lots of video that shows as much - some of
it as new as this year. To see an extensive array of germane video
footage in less than eight minutes, you could hardly do better than
watching the award-winning piece on Ringling and its abuse of Asian
elephants by television journalist Leslie Griffith, who has won
nine local Emmys and two Edward R. Murrow Awards, It's at www.youtube.com/watch?v=I3rQzLOLR4M.
Keen observers of Ms. Griffith's work
will notice that it's from 2004, and might reasonably wonder whether
Ringling has improved its treatment of animals. Nope. In October
2006, Robert Tom, a former animal keeper who worked for Ringling
for nearly two years (his wife, Margaret, also was employed by the
circus) issued a notarized declaration - six pages of hair-raising
accounts of animal neglect, abuse and cruelty in and around the
big top.
Mr. Tom's experiences echo those of
Archele Faye Hundley, a young mother of five, who worked as part
of the animal crew. Her lengthy September 2006 notarized declaration,
notes: "I quit the circus because the animal abuse was too
upsetting. The abuse was not once in awhile, it occurred every day."
The American Society for the Prevention
of Cruelty to Animals, along with three other not-for-profit animal
welfare organizations - The Fund For Animals, Animal Welfare Institute
and Animal Protection Institute - are in the midst of litigation,
under the Federal Endangered Species Act, against Ringling. The
allegations detail the routine abuse and neglect of Asian elephants.
The groups are joined in the lawsuit by a former Ringling employee,
Tom Rider, who worked as a barn man for the elephants for 21/2 years,
and is featured in the Griffith piece.
I digress here briefly for a prediction:
Ringling owner Kenneth Feld surely will dispatch someone to respond
to this piece - could be an official employee or maybe someone in
the guise of a Ringling fan writing a letter to the editor - to
dismiss these contentions as the ravings of a misinformed loon.
There will be rosy scenarios offered
about their training, about their "conservation efforts"
(their Center for Elephant Conservation is little more than a facility
to restock the touring units with fresh pachyderms), about how great
their animals are treated, etc. There are millions of dollars at
stake, and elephants are the prime drawing cards, so when someone
is critical of the operation, Mr. Feld and his fellow Ringling panjandrums
typically mobilize quickly. And they'll say anything.
Nonetheless, let's just say, for the
sake of ludicrous argument, that nothing untoward is visited on
elephants in the course of their big top training. They're still
forced to travel in those train cars or trucks to perform up to
three shows a day and to spend most of their non-performance time
anchored by leg chains.
Let me hasten to add that I'm not at
all universally opposed to circuses, just those that use animals.
There are numerous animal-free circuses - perhaps the most famous
is Cirque du Soleil, but the last list I saw featured more than
20 such outfits.
If your family has a hankering to see
a circus, go to one of those. But attending a Ringling performance
is tantamount to endorsing animal abuse.
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