PAMPLONA: WHERE BULLS
ARE RUN TO THEIR DEATHS
www.huffingtonpost.co.uk - Written by Abi Izzard for PETA UK.
Over the next few days, travellers will head to Pamplona, Spain, to
participate in the annual Running of the Bulls. Some will lose their
nerve; others may be gored. But one thing is for certain: by the end of
the festival, every single bull will be dead. In 2006 and 2007, I ran
naked through the streets of Pamplona to draw attention to the suffering
of bulls used in this festival. I saw for myself how cruelly people
treated the bulls, and although the streets were crowded with members of
the media, there was hardly any coverage of the ugly truth behind the
sound bites. The 30-second snippets never show the bulls as they are
whipped and goaded to get them to race out of their holding pens.
Pamplona's narrow cobblestone streets are slippery and slick with
spilled beer, and the bulls frequently lose their footing and fall,
breaking their horns and bones and sustaining cuts and bruises, and
drunken revellers hit them with sticks and rolled-up newspapers. At the
end of each day, the exhausted bulls are led one by one into the
bullfighting arena to fight for their lives, except that it will never
be a fair 'fight': from the moment they enter the ring, the bulls have
no chance of winning.
Men
on horses run them in circles while repeatedly piercing them with
spears called banderillas until they are dizzy, weakened from blood loss
and in agonising pain. The horses, who are blindfolded, can also
sustain serious injuries when they can't avoid a charging bull. Some
will have their vocal cords cut so that the crowds can't hear their
screams of terror. The matador (Spanish for 'killer') takes over only
when the exhausted bull is already near death. After blundered attempts
to severe their spinal cord, bulls are often still conscious as their
ears and tail are cut off as 'trophies' and as they are dragged from the
ring on chains. Then another bull enters the arena, and the horrific
cycle starts again. Activists from the animal rights organizations
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) and AnimaNaturalis
staged a protest against bullfighting in Pamplona Sunday as the city
prepared for its annual San Fermin Festival. They spell out the words
"Stop Bullfights" with their paint-covered bodies. Most Spaniards are
appalled that this archaic blood 'sport' continues in the new millennium
and are calling for an end to the carnage. Only sadists will leave a
bullfight having enjoyed themselves, but every pound spent means that
more bulls will be doomed to die. Bullfighting in Spain is a dying
industry which is currently heavily subsidised by the EU.
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Each
morning for seven days, six fighting bulls tear through the narrow
streets and runners sprint alongside them to test their skills and
courage. However, each afternoon, the same fighting bulls are ritually
slaughtered by Matadors in a stadium of 20,000 people. Curious to see
for themselves what a bullfight is really like, travellers buy a ticket
or go to one because it's part of their package itinerary. ¡There are so
many different kinds of people, when the bull is killed by fighting,
the activists say "How horrible" while other are taking pleasure and say
"How nice"!
WHAT DO THE VEDIC TEACHINGS TELL US?
Rāmesvara:
It was their sport to see men fight each other until one of them was
killed. Their wrestling was based on fighting until someone was killed.
Gargamuni: They would take Christians and put them in the arena.
Rāmesvara: That was their sport, entertainment, just like wrestling in
India, but in the Middle East in Roman times the wrestling was fought
until somebody had to be killed. That was their entertainment. They
wanted to see them die. Even today, actually, all the entertainment in
America and the Western world is based on violence. They have bull
fighting. They want to see the bull tortured and killed. And they have
chicken fighting and they have...
Prabhupāda: Dog fighting.
Rāmesvara: And even the most popular sport in America now is football.
It is more popular than baseball, and it’s based on men jumping on each
other. While one team is carrying the ball, every... A very violent
sport.
Hari-sauri: And boxing also. So many different sports.
Rāmesvara: They are fascinated by pain and fighting.
Prabhupāda: Torture. They like to see that somebody is tortured by another.
Śrīla A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupāda :
“Room Conversation”
January 21, 1977, Bhubaneswar
Conversations - 770121r3.bhu
Complete Works of Śrīla Prabhupāda
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