Elephant welfare – how much do we care?

Every day we receive messages about how captive elephants are being treated, often with disturbing photos or video footage. A mission of ElephantVoices is to promote responsibility for securing a kinder future for elephants. Our aim is to do this is primarily through education – by inspiring wonder in the intelligence, complexity and voices of elephants – rather than jumping on one campaign after another. We are a small team and we are not able to take on individual battles for each and every elephant. But sometimes we feel compelled to make our opinions known and below is an example. It’s a letter to journalist, Robert Wilonsky in The Dallas Observer e-mailed today, as a response to his request for Joyce to comment on video footage (linked below) of elephants in Africam Safari Zoo in Mexico where the Dallas Zoo plans to send their elephant Jenny.[kml_flashembed movie="http://youtube.com/v/il_rCzJrZ0U" width="425" height="350" wmode="transparent" /]

Dear Robert

The music is hauntingly beautiful and put to the swaying of confined elephants brought tears to my eyes. Why do we humans feel such a need to confine and control other animals? Is our pleasure in seeing them worth the cruelty that we inflict on them? Elephants are intelligent socially complex individuals who have the same basic needs that we have: Freedom and autonomy, companionship and affection, just to name a few.

The first elephant in the video looks very unhealthy; she is too thin; all of the elephants in the video are swaying – a behavior only seen in confined elephants. Like so many captive elephants they are bored and frustrated with nowhere to go and no one to see, no new smells to investigate and nothing to strive for. The result is standing in one place and rocking, slowly losing their minds. Well, wouldn’t we do the same given similar circumstances? I often try to put myself in the elephants’ shoes, so to speak. Ever had to stand for hours and hours alone waiting for that bus that never comes? Feet and back aching? I, too, start to step from one foot to the other. I, too, rock back and forth, I sway. But I don’t wait for a bus for days, for weeks, for months, for years. I have the freedom to choose to go.

We need to wake up to the reality of what we are doing to other creatures and stop hiding behind a lot of constructed arguments for keeping elephants in this way.

Jenny should go to a sanctuary.

Regards, Joyce Poole

Bookmark and Share

9 comments on “Elephant welfare – how much do we care?

  1. Joanne - UK on said:

    Hi there, I thought I’d post a link which I saw on the David Sheldrick site to try and get more people to sign the petition regarding the CITES decision to allow China to purchase from the ivory stockpiles.
    http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/CITES/

  2. I’m delighted to see you’re on flickr now! How very, very cool to see photos you took TODAY!!!

  3. TheTeach, Seattle on said:

    How much do we care? We care whole heartedly, from the depths of the soul! I’ve made the elephant my champion species for life. What does that mean? It means that every spare $20 dollar bill I can allocate will find its way toward people and NGOs that are working to study and save these magnificent beings from extinction. It means I will use my position as a teacher to educate my students about the magnificence of these beings and other animals. It means I will sign petitions and write politicians to address this issue. It means that as long as I am alive, I will fight on behalf of the elephant. I’m frankly ashamed at the death and suffering my species has inflicted on these intelligent and compassionate mammals (and many others). I vow to be part of the solution. Sure, I’m only one voice, a few dollars here and there, but if enough people also champion the elephant, we can save them from the ignorance, conflict, and greed that is destroying them, depleting their numbers one day at a time. We must stop the “march toward extinction”. For millions of years, these behemoths have marched across the sands and savannahs of the African continent, through the rainforests of Africa and Asia. Our duty and commitment must be to insure that they will march confidently into the future. And that future African and Asian people will be able to look over the horizon and witness with pure joy, the march of the behemoths, as they quietly stride on their way.
    You do what you must, because it is right, no matter the stats or the odds. Fight the fight! Champion the elephant! I am. Best Wishes.

  4. TheTeach, Seattle on said:

    We must all utilize our voices on behalf of elephants. Best Wishes.

  5. elephantvoices on said:

    Thank you, TheTeach. Passion is what this world needs more of, and certainly nature including wildlife/elephants. We’re drowning in requests and work related to how poorly we human beings deal with elephants, wild or captive, African or Asian. Right now Joyce is in the US in the so called Ringling case – while we at the same time are spreading our scope to include work on Asian elephants. More about that soon. Excuse us for being quiet lately – that’s only on WD until we get our heads over water… Best, P

  6. TheTeach, Seattle on said:

    So glad to hear that you’ll be taking up some efforts on behalf of the Asian cousins. They seem to get largely ignored by the conservation press, and their future and numbers seem to be even more precarious than the African elephant. We do have one thing going for us in Asia and that is the cultural reverence for the animal and its traditional role in some of those societies. Now mind you, I’m not condoning the use of elephants as loggers and slave laborers , but the traditional mahoot has demonstrated the bonds possible between our two species. There seems a genuine love and respect there. For now, if that helps sustain the species in parts of Asia, then we should take what we can get. What I’ve read is that this tradition is gradually dying out. Some mahoots in Thailand have been reduced to begging in the streets with their elephants at their side. It may be good that they don’t have to work anymore, but without a function to the people there, what is to become of them? The fact that females are tuskless also works to their survival favor. In Malaysia and Indonesia, it is the oil palm farm industry that is probably the biggest threat they face, from habitat destruction. Your thoughts on any of these points? Please correct any misconceptions I may have. Best Wishes

  7. TheTeach, Seattle on said:

    P & J,
    Please to reccommend a reputable NGO or group of fieldworkers who are working on behalf of the Asian elephant. I’ve been trying to direct some funds in that direction as well, but couldn’t find a recognizable charity that specializes in Asian elephant protection and conservation. I think WWF and WCS are in there but the online info was rather vague about the projects themselves. What I’d like to see is a wildlifedirect blog for an elephant conservation project in Asia. Surely some people there currently working in the field would like to set that up with wildlifedirect, and add there voices to the blogging community. There is a Bornean Sun Bear blog and orangutans. There should be one for Asian elephants as well. I curently support Elephant Voices, Dzanga Forest, Virunga, and Elephants-Botswana, as well as a number of large NGO’s working for elephants in Africa. Trying to help scattered populations of elephants throughout. It’s piece-meal at best, but one has to do what they can to show support.
    Best Wishes

  8. Pingback: Wherever they are - elephants need our support | Elephant Voices

  9. Marjorie in GA on said:

    I have only been writing for elephants for several months now,
    but I plan, like The Teach, to make it my life’s work. However, I don’t understand why members of animals rights groups are encouraged to write and re-write letters, calls and
    e-mails to the same people over and over. Take the Sec. of Agriculture, Tom Vilsack. I’ve written letters and called about the same lone elephants in 2 zoos and a traveling circus.
    Why doesn’t he do his job and confiscate these poor animals and send them to an elephant sanctuary? This is his job, especially when violations are committed. It shouldn’t take years to get a public employee to do their job. What’s the answer to this cruel reality? And worse, what can be done legally to get these wonderful animals away from the circus
    psycopaths that call themselves “trainers”? If people can be
    fined and arrested for cruelty to dogs and cats, why not to
    elephants? PETA has undercover videos of the cruelty done
    by these circus trainers to the elephants and worst still, the baby elephants. Look at PETA’s website 12/25/09. We need
    all of the help we can get to help these wonderful animals.
    “The greatness of a nation & its moral progress can be judged
    by the ways its animals are treated.” Mahatma Gandhi

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*


*

HTML tags are not allowed.