

The write-up is taken from the book Heads and Tails Vol - II. It is
electronically published with the permission of the author Mrs. Maneka Gandhi. For
queries on Pet Care send in your mail to
manekagandhi@mid-day.com
Related
Articles under H & T
An
Agenda for Earth Day
© People for Animals
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E V E R Y D A Y I
S A N I M A L D A Y
Every year World Animal Day is
celebrated in the worst possible way in Delhi. People who do nothing for animals the whole
year round get together at the Boat Club, call a Minister to deliver a homily against
cruelty, have shamianas, buntings and streamers put up, get children to walk up and down
in the heat parading their pets, get police dogs and army horses, a few bulls that walk
for miles to reach the festivity, distribute posters and have themselves photographed by
the press. Everyone has a good time - except the animals in whose name this tamasha takes
place.
Why' not have a year-round raffle instead called Buy a Bird and use the
money to release as manv birds as possible outside the city or in a bird sanctuary? Or use
the money to hold a camp for setting up permanent water troughs in as many colonies as
possible for stray cattle, as was done by the Mughal rulers and the British in old Delhi.
Or rescue healthy dogs from the pound and get them adopted. Or even give the money to
those institutions that care for unwanted animals all the year round. What is being done
now is the equivalent of having World Leprosy Day and making the lepers parade up and down
for the amusement of passersby.
There is no one day for animals. Every day should be a Caring Day for
all life.
I receive a lot of letters from people - specially school and college
children - asking me what they can do. Here is a list of suggestions:
First concentrate on your locality. Find other people who are
interested in animal welfare and organise an informal group. Then locate the places where
the stray animals - dogs, cats, cows - are. They usually have fixed places where they
scavenge for food. Collect the leftovers in your houses and put them at fixed hours in
these places so that the animals have a fixed source of food - banana skins, carrot and
radish heads, apple cores, whatever is usually thrown away. If you have a lawn, collect
the grass when it is cut. This will do ideally for cows. Ask your neighbors for left -
overs too.
As you get familiar with the locality animals, you will notice if any
of them need medical help. If you have made friends with your local vet you can enlist his
help and your group can chip in with the small sums of money collected from selling the raddi
for the medicines needed. Alternatively, you can ring up a shelter in your town to
keep the animal temporarily and then have it returned to its locality.
You can act as a vigilante group for your locality. If you see
someone mistreating an animal, the group can approach (politely!) and explain an
alternative treatment. Keep a quiet watch on the owner and if he continues, offer to find
it another home - and start looking around for a home.
One of the main problems that animals have is finding water. You can
buy a deep bowl and put it outside the house twice a day for passing strays to drink out
of. The Mughals and the British constructed permanent troughs in the colonies of Delhi for
cows. In the small towns you can still do it in your colony on some unused land. You can
put a birdbath bowl in your garden or terrace or roof.
Start writing letters to newspapers, magazines, municipal
authorities, to your MP, to celebrities protesting against cruelties that the
administration either perpetrates or has allowed to take place. For instance, the campaign
against bringing camels to Bombay for the amusement of beachgoers has just begun and
should be kept alive by citizens until the existing camels are returned to their natural
habitat and a ban is put on for more. Dog pounds, bird markets, zoos - inspect them
yourselves and start complaining if you see something is wrong.
Start a Kindness Club in your school or college. Get
permission to talk to students on specific cruelties that we inflict unknowingly on
animals by buying unnecessary animal products. Distribute Beauty Without Cruelty Lists of
products that do not use animals for experimentation. Organise expeditions to shelters
once a week/month to help in the cleaning and care. Persuade fellow students to adopt
"pure Indian dogs" instead of pedigreed ones. Collect items from house to house
- old blankets, flypaper, tin bowls, cleaning rags, medicine and money for the shelters.
Put together a list of people interested in adoption. Invite guest speakers to come to
your school/college so that you can generate more interest in the club. Ask those parents
who manufacture something to donate an item and when you have several of them hold a
raffle. If your school kills animals for biology classes get a signature campaign started
among the students to have it stopped and substituted with blackboard/video/model
instruction.
If you have an association with a Rotary or Lions club, campaign
among the members to have a local shelter adopted by the club in its annual welfare
programme.
Doing things is easy. it's just knowing how to start that is difficult.
Don't let it deter you when people say, (a) why are you doing so much for animals when
human beings need more attention or (b) what is the point of doing something for only
these many when lakhs more need attention. It's that one colony that is going to make all
the difference.

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