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Mission Possible

Newkirk, president, PETA, exhorts kids to be the guardian angels of animals in her latest book

Photo: R. SHIVAJI RAO

Catch them young Author Ingrid Newkirk at the launch of her book 50 Easy Ways Kids Can Help Animals

How would you feel if a chicken ate you? If Ingrid Newkirk’s questions are so uncomfortable, it’s simply because they’re so reasonable. Start looking at animals from the point of view of the co-founder and president of PETA (People For The Ethical Treatment of Animals), and you begin to see feathered and furry individuals, with feelings and emotions. And it suddenly gets a lot tougher to look a chicken nugget in the eye.

“Be their guardian angels. We are important protectors and guardians of the environment,” she says, addressing a crowd of rapt children at the Landmark Bookstore, in connection with the release of her latest book, “50 Easy Ways Kids Can Help Animals”. On their part, animals have certainly played guardian angel to many humans. Ingrid, for instance, tells the children about a goose that saved a toddler from drowning by holding on to her dress. Between painstakingly signing books and autographs with lines like, “Thank you for being kind to animals,” Ingrid talks of how she was “raised as a big meat eater.” At the same time, she constantly adopted stray animals. “I just never made the connection,” she shrugs.

Then, she became a law enforcement officer in Maryland (USA). “I looked into cruelty complaints. I was once called to a farm where all the animals had been starved to death,” she says. Unfortunately, by the time she got there, the animals were dead. “Except for one pig,” she continues, “but he was so weak, I had to hold his head up. I gave him water in my hand. And he survived.” Then, as she was driving home, she says, “I thought, ‘What do I have to eat for dinner? Oh good, I’ll defrost those pork chops’.” And that’s when it hit her. She had saved one pig, only to eat another. She turned vegetarian. In 1980, she founded PETA, the largest animal rights organisation in the world, to investigate, publicise and end animal cruelty.

So far, the organisation has exposed cruelty in animal laboratories, convinced designers and consumers to stop using fur and promoted vegetarianism, among other things. Ingrid’s tireless campaigning has been met with both admiration and disapproval, since PETA gets results, but animal activism sometimes borders on aggressive. Especially in the case of The Animal Liberation Front, (described as a ‘domestic terrorist threat’ in the U.K. and the U.S.), which Ingrid’s been linked to. The ALF was recently involved in a campaign of arson and vandalism in Oxford to prevent work on a controversial facility for the university’s animal testing labs. “Anger’s fine,” she says, referring to Oxford, and adds: “That’s the first reaction you get when you tell someone a home truth they don’t want to hear. But activism works. Consumers and shoppers have to be vocal. If you know something is immoral, it is your duty – as a citizen of the world – to protest.” She talks of over 600 companies that stopped animal testing just because people said “I’m not using it.”

“You are very powerful,” she tells the children. “You have the choice with every rupee you spend. You can be kind to animals and the earth. Or unkind.”

As activists, Ingrid insists: “You have to have a gimmick… You have to have a celebrity in a cage, or wearing a lettuce dress.” Designer Stella McCartney works with PETA, as does Pamela Anderson, Alicia Silverstone, and in India, Jackie Shroff, John Abraham and Madhavan among many others.

Affinity for animals

Explaining why she’s written the book for children, she says: “They understand animals. They have a natural kindness and affinity for them.” She adds that children are far less resistant. “Adults try and justify everything, it’s all about ‘my money, my business.’ Children’s concerns are more innocent. The questions they ask are, ‘Does it hurt.’ Or, ‘Is this a real chicken on my plate?’ Children can see eye to eye with an animal. They find natural friendships. They realise, this is another individual.”

SHONALI MUTHALALY

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