
AMMA SANCTUARY
gets started as a pilot project in Mukudal, South India: May 19 2008

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This is
Tillai Devi, our first Animal Elder. She was saved
from the slaughter on May 19 2008. This photo was
taken just a few moments after she was untied. She
will now spend her remaining years of retirement
with us in peace, with love and our respects.
Tillai Devi
had been milked all her life. She was sold because
she ran dry of milk and she had become old. She was
already bought up for slaughter and her neck was
tied in such a manner, in a small vehicle, that her
body could not move- to accommodate space for more
old animals to be packed in together- enroute for
slaughter.
When we
saved her, we felt that we pushed the start button.
The start to a grand reality that will in its course
of time save hundreds of thousands of old animals. |
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Mukudal
Village Farm/Our Sanctuary:
May 19 2008
was an auspicious Full Moon. As though to bless us,
the clouds crossed the sky to provide us the much
needed shade as this was a hot season. We
started the sacred fire (yagna) late afternoon to
invoke all the Divine to guide, protect, nurture and
grow our intent. As the yagna fire rose, the first
drizzles of the season fell on us.
Lokah Samastah Sukhino Bhavantu.
May All Beings in the Universe be Peaceful and Happy!
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The work
before us to ensure that not one Animal Elder is
taken for slaughter! These old cows had been milked
all its life. The oxen are made to lift heavy load
each day under the hot sun until the day their legs
have given way or old age has caught up on them.
Most of the
old cows would have been tied in a shed with minimum
grazing all its life- milked each day and fed dry
hay. They may not have walked more that 2 miles any
day of their life. The unsuspecting animal is then,
one day sold by the owner to end up at the cattle
auction centers. Upon being bought up by
slaughter houses that caters especially to the needs
in the state of Kerala and exports to the Middle
East, some of the the animals are jam packed
together in trucks. Most are made to walk- a
distance of over 50 kilometers each day over 3-4
days. Their sad journey begins with their
tails being broken to create pain and fear and
getting them to walk. Next, the herder starts
applying chilli (pepper) powder in their anus.
Throughout the route, minimal water is given. When
in extreme exhaustion, the animal falls to the
ground unable to move further, chilli powder is
applied into their eyes. This slow torture is
until they reach the slaughterhouse in Kerala. At
the slaughterhouse, it is obvious to these
frightened animals that death await them. They try
to resist the final death walk. Death in these
primitive slaughterhouse is slow intense torture.
Is it not
amazing how we collectively are participating in
this crime by not doing something about it?
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It is sad
that of all countries, it should be in India that
such cruelty happens. Watch this video of Peta.
Almost all leather in America
is imported from foreign countries, and one of the
top leather producers is, surprisingly, India. Six
years after a PETA video
exposé of it, the leather industry in India
continues to subject cows and other animals to
illegal cruelty during transport and slaughter. Cows
and other animals are forced to endure transport in
extremely crowded trucks, suffering broken bones and
dehydration, before having their throats slit in
full view of other animals and sometimes being
skinned and dismembered while still conscious.
If you're wearing leather, you're probably wearing
leather from India or China, and conditions for
animals in China are at least as bad as they are in
India. Even if your shoes were manufactured in
Italy, the United States, or another such country,
the raw materials (skins) are probably from India or
China. |
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Oct 2009: Our Amma Sanctuary
land was obtained in Podigai Hills & the overgrowth
cleared. The master plan unfolds:








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