Sunday 28 October 2012

قطرس جزيرة ميدواي والنفايات - Midway island's albatross & waste




في جزيرة ميدواي المرجانية التي تبعد ٢٠٠٠ ميل عن اقرب قارة 
تظهر آثآر استهلاكنا في مكان مدهش، في أمعاء الآلاف من صغار طيور القطرس الميتة، آباء الطيور الصغيرة يطعمون صغارهم كميات قاتلة من البلاستيك لأنهم لا يستطيعون معرفة الفرق ما إذا كان البلاستيك الذي يطفو فوق المياه الملوثة للمحيط الهادي هو غذاء لهم أم لا


بالنسبة لي، النظر إلى جثثها أشبه بالنظر إلى مرآة عاكسة 
تعكس هذه الطيور نتيجة رمزية مروعة عن النزعة الاستهلاكية لدينا والنمو الصناعي المتسارع 
مثل طيور القطرس، نحن، بشر العالم الأول نجد أن أنفسنا تفتقر إلى القدرة على التمييز بين ما هو المغذي عما هو السام لحياتنا وأرواحنا
بإختناقه حتى الموت في نفاياتنا ، طيور القطرس تدعونا للاعتراف بأن التحدي الأكبر لدينا لا يكمن هناك، ولكن هنا

- كريس جوردان 




On Midway Atoll, a remote cluster of islands more than 2000 miles from the nearest continent, the detritus of our mass consumption surfaces in an astonishing place: inside the stomachs of thousands of dead baby albatrosses. The nesting chicks are fed lethal quantities of plastic by their parents, who mistake the floating trash for food as they forage over the vast polluted Pacific Ocean.
For me, kneeling over their carcasses is like looking into a macabre mirror. These birds reflect back an appallingly emblematic result of the collective trance of our consumerism and runaway industrial growth. Like the albatross, we first-world humans find ourselves lacking the ability to discern anymore what is nourishing from what is toxic to our lives and our spirits. Choked to death on our waste, the mythical albatross calls upon us to recognize that our greatest challenge lies not out there, but in here.
~cj, Seattle, February 2011



LINK to Trailer - الرابط لجزء من الفيلم :



A Dream of a dying Albatross - حلم قطرس في عداد الموت :


















Wednesday 26 September 2012

Animal Exploitation



Innocence was never enough.
Those calls and pleas were nothing but noise, 
To those that saw nothing but their own interest in them.

They were, like everything else ..consumed by those who believed in their own superiority. 
That hierarchy that objectified the souls of the less powerful.
Be they with a soul or not mattered not so long as they are able to be of use to the superiors.

I saw death in the eyes of creatures, I prayed for mercy upon their souls.
I saw torture in the eyes of beings, I prayed for death to all in agony.

And what are humans that inflict intentional pain onto other beings?
What are humans that perform no act of mercy toward the innocent?
What are humans that depart with their sense of empathy?
What are humans without their humanity?

What are they but empty shells filled by what is more abominable than self-loathing? 


Leather Industry




Dog-Farming Industry




Animal Experimentation




Animal Experimentation


" If we are going to care about the suffering of other humans then logically we should care about the suffering of non-humans too.
It is the heartless exploiter of animals, not the animal protectionist, who is being irrational, showing a sentimental tendency to put his own species on a pedestal.
We all, thank goodness, feel a natural spark of sympathy for the sufferings of others. We need to catch that spark and fan it into a fire of rational and universal compassion." -Dr Richard Ryder

Saturday 4 August 2012

All beings that feel pain deserve human rights - Equality of the species is the logical conclusion of post-Darwin morality.


The word speciesism came to me while I was lying in a bath in Oxford some 35 years ago. It was like racism or sexism - a prejudice based upon morally irrelevant physical differences. Since Darwin we have known we are human animals related to all the other animals through evolution; how, then, can we justify our almost total oppression of all the other species? All animal species can suffer pain and distress. Animals scream and writhe like us; their nervous systems are similar and contain the same biochemicals that we know are associated with the experience of pain in ourselves. 


Our concern for the pain and distress of others should be extended to any "painient" - pain-feeling - being regardless of his or her sex, class, race, religion, nationality or species. Indeed, if aliens from outer space turn out to be painient, or if we ever manufacture machines who are painient, then we must widen the moral circle to include them. Painience is the only convincing basis for attributing rights or, indeed, interests to others. Many other qualities, such as "inherent value", have been suggested. But value cannot exist in the absence of consciousness or potential consciousness. Thus, rocks and rivers and houses have no interests and no rights of their own. This does not mean, of course, that they are not of value to us, and to many other painients, including those who need them as habitats and who would suffer without them. 

Many moral principles and ideals have been proposed over the centuries - justice, freedom, equality, brotherhood, for example. But these are mere stepping stones to the ultimate good, which is happiness; and happiness is made easier by freedom from all forms of pain and suffering (using the words "pain" and "suffering" interchangeably). Indeed, if you think about it carefully you can see that the reason why these other ideals are considered important is that people have believed that they are essential to the banishment of suffering. In fact they do sometimes have this result, but not always. 

Why emphasise pain and other forms of suffering rather than pleasure and happiness? One answer is that pain is much more powerful than pleasure. Would you not rather avoid an hour's torture than gain an hour's bliss? Pain is the one and only true evil. What, then, about the masochist? The answer is that pain gives him pleasure that is greater than his pain! 

One of the important tenets of painism (the name I give to my moral approach) is that we should concentrate upon the individual because it is the individual - not the race, the nation or the species - who does the actual suffering. For this reason, the pains and pleasures of several individuals cannot meaningfully be aggregated, as occurs in utilitarianism and most moral theories. One of the problems with the utilitarian view is that, for example, the sufferings of a gang-rape victim can be justified if the rape gives a greater sum total of pleasure to the rapists. But consciousness, surely, is bounded by the boundaries of the individual. My pain and the pain of others are thus in separate categories; you cannot add or subtract them from each other. They are worlds apart. 

Without directly experiencing pains and pleasures they are not really there - we are counting merely their husks. Thus, for example, inflicting 100 units of pain on one individual is, I would argue, far worse than inflicting a single unit of pain on a thousand or a million individuals, even though the total of pain in the latter case is far greater. In any situation we should thus concern ourselves primarily with the pain of the individual who is the maximum sufferer. It does not matter, morally speaking, who or what the maximum sufferer is - whether human, non-human or machine. Pain is pain regardless of its host. 

Of course, each species is different in its needs and in its reactions. What is painful for some is not necessarily so for others. So we can treat different species differently, but we should always treat equal suffering equally. In the case of non-humans, we see them mercilessly exploited in factory farms, in laboratories and in the wild. A whale may take 20 minutes to die after being harpooned. A lynx may suffer for a week with her broken leg held in a steel-toothed trap. A battery hen lives all her life unable to even stretch her wings. An animal in a toxicity test, poisoned with a household product, may linger in agony for hours or days before dying. 

These are major abuses causing great suffering. Yet they are still justified on the grounds that these painients are not of the same species as ourselves. It is almost as if some people had not heard of Darwin! We treat the other animals not as relatives but as unfeeling things. We would not dream of treating our babies, or mentally handicapped adults, in these ways - yet these humans are sometimes less intelligent and less able to communicate with us than are some exploited nonhumans. 

The simple truth is that we exploit the other animals and cause them suffering because we are more powerful than they are. Does this mean that if those aforementioned aliens landed on Earth and turned out to be far more powerful than us we would let them - without argument - chase and kill us for sport, experiment on us or breed us in factory farms, and turn us into tasty humanburgers? Would we accept their explanation that it was perfectly moral for them to do all these things as we were not of their species? 

Basically, it boils down to cold logic. If we are going to care about the suffering of other humans then logically we should care about the suffering of non-humans too. It is the heartless exploiter of animals, not the animal protectionist, who is being irrational, showing a sentimental tendency to put his own species on a pedestal. We all, thank goodness, feel a natural spark of sympathy for the sufferings of others. We need to catch that spark and fan it into a fire of rational and universal compassion. 

All of this has implications, of course. If we gradually bring non-humans into the same moral and legal circle as ourselves then we will not be able to exploit them as our slaves. Much progress has been made with sensible new European legislation in recent decades, but there is still a very long way to go. Some international recognition of the moral status of animals is long overdue. There are various conservation treaties, but nothing at UN level, for example, that recognises the rights, interests or welfare of the animals themselves. That must, and I believe will, change. 

Richard Ryder, 
The Guardian (Saturday August 6, 2005) 



Dr Richard Ryder was Mellon Professor at Tulane University, New Orleans, and has been chairman of the RSPCA council; he is the author of Painism: A Modern Morality, and his new book, Putting Morality Back into Politics, will be published by Academic Imprint in 2006

Tuesday 15 May 2012

أنا، و من غيري؟! أنا الانسان!


في يوم من الايام، كنت أؤمن انني افضل من غيري من المخلوقات 
إيماني بذلك، برر لي استغلال تلك المخلوقات التي من حولي لخدمة نفسي في الضرورة و في الرفاهية.
 
إيماني بذلك اثر على نظرتي ، فسلب من كل المخلوقات الاخرى نفسياتهم و جعلهم في نظري ليس اكثر من "أشياء " سخرت لخدمتي، أنا الانسان، بحكمتي و هيبتي، بقدرتي العقلية التي وهبني الله إياها.

فبذلك، علمت انني قد سَلَبتُ نفسي انسانيتها و ان إيماني بذلك ما هو الّا  لاشباع غروري بنفسي مما جعلني في الحقيقة اقل درجة من جميع مخلوقات الله الطاهرة.





Friday 20 April 2012

The Spiritual Liberation

Just when we believe that the physical body is a barrier to our spiritual liberation, we understand that through a renewed perspective, the body becomes an asset in understanding that spiritual liberation.

The body's existence though burdens the spiritual existence ,in time, it's mortality disciplines the spirit's ego, and so, assists the process of the spiritual liberation through it's interconnectedness, equality with all other beings and it's constant un-achieved desire for a higher spiritual state attained through the spirit's humility and immortality.
An immortality sought by the possession of a universal perspective.

Tuesday 17 April 2012

Napping cat and the prophet peace be upon him

" There was a story of  the Prophet cutting off his shirt sleeve rather than disturbing his sleeping cat when it was time for prayers. When people at the mosque noticed him wearing a torn sleeved robe, they asked "Holy Prophet, why is your garment torn?"

The Prophet simply replied that his cat is sleeping soundly upon the sleeve of his robe and rather than disturbing the cat, he cut the sleeve and put on what remained of his garment. The Prophet is so kind to animals that he would not pull the garment or awaken the cat, instead he rather cut his robe and let the cat sleep undisturbed.

It is a well-known fact that the Prophet is a cat lover and respect animals.  Muslims are taught to follow his exemplary behaviour on kindness to animals."




Singapore Community Cats

Tuesday 10 April 2012

URGENT plea for the safe and immediate return of confiscated wildlife (WFFT) & (ENP)


I am seriously concerned for the welfare of both animals and staff at the Wildlife Friends Foundation in Thailand, who are currently being intimidated by Thai officials.

Both Wildlife Friends Foundation Thailand (WFFT) and Elephant Nature Park (ENP) were raided by armed officials of the Department of National Parks (DNP) and police units. The officials claim they received an anonymous phone call.

Both WFFT and ENP feel they have been targeted for speaking out on the recent elephant killings at Kaengkrachan National Park and Kuiburi National Park, and the involvement of officials, politicians and wealthy businessmen.

The ENP was founded by Sangduen (Lek) Chailert who has won numerous conservation awards including Hero of the Planet by the Ford Foundation, Hero of Asia by Time Magazine in 2005 and the Earth Day Award. Her work has been featured in National Geographic, Discovery Channel, Animal Planet, BBC and in print media throughout the world. The ENP and WFFT both have an international reputation as having the the best animal rescue facilities, setting the standard in Thailand for elephant care and wildlife rescue. http://www.wfft.org/

The Department of National Parks have forcibly removed 100 animals from WFFT for which they claim the organisation does not have relevant paperwork. This is untrue. The 'confiscation' has been inhumane and included the use of sticks, some animals were left bleeding, the kicking of unconscious animals, nearly drowning one, and forcing them into cramped rusty cages often without anaesthesia.

This is blatant corruption and bullying in an attempt to silence the organisation's leaders from being outspoken against the illegal wildlife trade and recent finds of slaughtered elephants in nearby national parks, for which corruption amongst Thai authorities is suspected.

We petition to see the immediate and safe return of all 100 animals. 
 
 
 
 
VIDEO:
 

PLEASE SIGN :
 
http://www.thepetitionsite.com/2/urgent-plea-for-rescued-thai-wildlife/



  SITE:


http://www.wix.com/anoelle45/wffthelp





Thursday 5 April 2012

Passion: let me not beg for the stilling of my pain 

Let me not pray to be sheltered from dangers,
but to be fearless in facing them.
Let me not beg for the stilling of my pain,
but for the heart to conquer it.
Let me not look for allies in life’s battlefield,
but to my own strength.
Let me not crave in anxious fear to be saved,
but hope for the patience to win my freedom.
Grant that I may not be a coward,
feeling Your mercy in my success alone;
But let me find the grasp of Your hand in my failure.”
 
 
by Rabindranath Tagore

Monday 2 April 2012

Epitaph to a Dog ...



Near this spot
Are deposited the Remains of one
Who possessed Beauty
Without Vanity,
Strength without Insolence,
Courage without Ferocity,
And all the Virtues of Man
Without his Vices.
This Praise, which would be unmeaning flattery
If inscribed over Human Ashes,
Is but a just tribute to the Memory of
"Boatswain," a Dog
Who was born at Newfoundland, May, 1803,
And died at Newstead Abbey Nov. 18, 1808.

Lord Byron
 









 

Perceptional Palisade




In the perfection you seek, 
There is a mis-direction that reeks.

Along the way of a broken road,
Lies nothing more than dying toads.

In a realm of dreams and hopeful mystics,
Appeared no fairy tale but a world of misfits.

That mind ignited by the slightest of pleasures,
Faced its suppression in the fraction of a second.

When all time had remained going clockwise,
None but yourself had started walking backwards.

In the pain of your illusions that never faced existence,
You lost yourself in the fight of your resistance.

As you were surrounded in a place full of barriers,
That toad came along with the hopes of a savior.

At a moment of ease when your mind fell asleep,
the toad was there, a charm you should keep.

Taken Off guard, your mind was liberated,
When All it's barriers vanished and faded.

That love of a toad was more than any man's claim,
And so you found yourself, carrying a stout-hearted's name.




Friday 30 March 2012

This is the trailer for the first feature-length documentary film to explore the 4,000-year history of the greyhound breed. Second only to the cheetah in speed and acceleration, these regal hot rods are one of nature's near perfect creations. A work in progress with a planned release in June 2013, the film will also feature an evenhanded examination of the history and inner workings of the highly controversial greyhound racing industry in the U.S. It will include on-camera commentary from greyhound racing's most vocal opponents, racing greyhound breeders, kennel and track owners, racing officials, professional gamblers, bookies, veterinarians, greyhound adoption group leaders, greyhound pet owners, and others. To learn more, please visit www.greyhoundmovie.com







Link to Trailer:




Wednesday 28 March 2012

الحياة الاجتماعية لدى الدلافين اكثر تعقيداً مما نتوقّع!




الحياة الاجتماعية لدى الدلافين اكثر تعقيداً مما نتوقّع!
حيث تقوم مجموعات الدلافين بالاتحاد ضد المجموعات
 الاكثر قوة او الاكثر تهديدا لها ( بوجود عدو مشترك) 



اكتشف بعض الباحثون ان مجتمع الدلافين يتقسم الي ٣ اجزاء،
جزء يتكون بين ٢-٣ دلافين لتذهب لجمع الإناث ، جزء مخصص
من ٤- ١٤ دلفين لحماية المجموعة او العائلة من اي هجمات قد تقع
من دلافين اخرى او أعداء و مجموعة متخصصة في توطيد علاقة
مجموعة تلك الدلافين مع المجموعات الاخرى في حال كانت
المجموعات الاخرى بحاجة للدعم ( مثل العلاقات العامة) . 

Thursday 16 February 2012

The Kinship between all "Earthlings"



"Granted these animals do not have all the desires we humans have, granted they do not comprehend everything we humans comprehend, nevertheless, we and they still have some of the same desires and we do comprehend some of the same things, the desires for food and water, shelter and companionship,freedom of movement and avoidance of pain. These desires are shared by non-human animals and human beings.




... As for comprehension, like humans, many non-human animals understand the world in which they live and move, otherwise they could not survive, so beneath the many differences there is sameness, like us, these animals embody the mystery and wonder of consciousness . Like us, they are not only in the world, they are aware of it. Like us, the are the psychological Centers of a life that is uniquely their own. In these fundamental respects, humans stand on all fours so to speak, with hogs and cows, chickens and turkeys, what these animals do for us, how we morally treat them, are questions who's answers begin with the recognition of our psychological kinship with them."-Earthlings



Saturday 14 January 2012

غداً

غداً 
حين تكبرين 
ينحني ظهركِ قليلاً 
التجاعيد حول عينيك تمسي واضحة 
مثل أوشام دهرية ..
يطلُ البياض من ليلِ شعركِ
ينبتُ العشب بين مفاصل ذكرياتكِ
يتكاثرُ النمش في سفوح ظهركِ
على مهلٍ تنهضين من سرير الوقت
متكوّرةً مثل نون الحنان
ثمة أدوية على المنضدة ..
سُعال في الاروقة 
زينة ً أقل 
زياراتك الى المزين نادرة جداً 
الى الطبيب أكثر 
زُجاج نظارتك يزداد سماكة
بصيرتك أقوى من بصرك 
الواحة في أعماقك أكثر نخيلاً
من الجسد
ما عشناه معاً أشد بريقاً من الذهب
غداً ،
حين تكبرين 
سوف أحبك أكثر 
لن أفتقد القامة الرمحية
لن أطلب ماضياً مضى 
كل رجوع يُضمر خيبته
كل عودة مشوبة بالنقصان 
سوف أحب الشقوق في باطن قدميك 
أمسك يدك على كورنيش المنارة 
كمن يمسك موجة من مشيب البحر
كل يشيخ إلاّ الماء 
وأنت جميلة 
في الستين والسبعين في عمرٍ يطول 
وروح لا تعرف الذبول 
أنوثتك ليست شكلاً ولا فستان سهرة 
أنوثتك قلب يفيض 
وضحكة تجري من تحتها الأنهار .....

زاهي وهبي