Guest guest Posted August 9, 2001 Report Share Posted August 9, 2001 bhakti-list, Mani Varadarajan <mani@a...> wrote: > > > What do you all think about this? Is it time to give up drinking > commercially produced milk? Is it not a violation of the > Vaishnava dharma to participate in such injury? > > It pains me to no end to read how we torture our fellow beings. > > "ahimsA prathamam pushpam ... > sarva-bhUta-dayA pushpam ... > vishnoH prItikaram bhavet" > > "Non-injury and compassion to all living creatures > are two of the flowers which truly please Vishnu." > > aDiyEn, > Mani I am deeply saddened and disillusioned by Sri Mani's posting. While I certainly cannot even begin to explain the enigma that is India, I would like to share a few thoughts as to what we in the West can do. Unlike much of the rest of the world, and contrary to popular belief, the USA offers many options to those who for spiritual, health, or environmentally conscious reasons, prefer alternative and wholistic diets. This is particularly so in the Rocky Mountain Region, which for years has been deeply influenced by Native American and Asian philosophy. As a result, there are several dairies and milk producing companies here that are advertising their products as being guaranteed to be the result of the "humane" treatment of animals. The cows in such dairies are fed no chemicals or animal by-products, and if I understand correctly, are allowed to graze and nurse their calves in a natural way. While most of these dairies are localized and generally provide door to door service, some, like Horizon Dairy, sells its products on the shelf in most leading grocery stores. The milk, of course, is pasteurized in order to meet FDA codes prior to being packaged. And to meet a larger demographic, it can also be purchased in low-fat and non-fat varieties, as well as whole milk. My wife and I have been purchasing the milk of what some dairies call "happy cows" for several years. While it costs a little more, the health and spiritual benefits are well worth it, what to speak of the priceless value of being able to offer our perumAl milk that is produced in a way that makes Him happy. While I have so far spoken only about Colorado, I am certain that many states have similar facilities. I would like to suggest that we make a concerted effort to put together a list of these "animal- friendly" dairies and share them in this forum. If we gather together with the larger Hindu communities in a concerted effort to purchase such milk, it could potentially create enough of an impact to get the mainstream dairies to start thinking about their own methods of milk production. adiyEn rAmAnuja dAsan Mohan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2001 Report Share Posted August 9, 2001 Dear All - I thank Sri Mani Varadarajan for bringing up this important topic of cow's milk. Most Vaishnavas take to cow's milk because it has been done traditionally - erumai paal is a later day addition. It is a good idea to stop them but we have to do it after a proper research in to health impacts. Some of the vaishnava food habits like giving up onion, garlic etc. deprive the body of necessary hormones and enzymes leading to lack of energy, virility etc. It is important to find sattvic & vegetarian alternative so that the body remains healthy. I met a PETA activist who is a vegan vegetarian. She said she does not even take milk! But as a dancer she is able to maintain very good health - better than non-vegetarians who face obesity, cancer threat and other problems. If we give good diet alternatives - yes we all can follow. If we can maintain a healthy body with strong muscles and have high stamina levels by eating vegetarian food, we can apply peer pressure on others also who constantly fight their fat. I am positive that it is possible. Yours humbly Rajaram Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2001 Report Share Posted August 9, 2001 Thanks to Sri Mani for bringing these facts to our attention. It saddens me to read about the cows beings mistreated - this when we know how much Sree Krishna loved and respected these animals. One alternative that we have chosen for the past few months is try alternative "milk" products that offer equivalent amounts of nutrients like soymilk, almond milk, rice milk. etc. I admit that they are definately nowhere close to the taste and fulfillment we get from actual cow milk and perhaps never will be. The consequences of giving up milk on a large scale by the population might be slaughtering of the cows for their meat, skin etc - which even the thought of is unbearable. -Sandhya Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2001 Report Share Posted August 9, 2001 I thank Sri Mani for showcasing this cruelty. Traditionally Vaishnavaite families living in villages used to maintain cows in order to procure milk from them directly. I vividly remember my family treating the cows in our backyard as one of our own family members treating them with utmost love and attention. Infact, I still remember the day when our beloved cow died !!eventhough it was about 13 years back. It certainly pains some one like me who was raised to treat cows as if one of our own to be exposed to the facts. Make international calls for as low as $.04/minute with Messenger http://phonecard./ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 9, 2001 Report Share Posted August 9, 2001 Srimathe Ramanujaya Nama: Like everyone, I am also pained to read what Mani has written about treatment of cows. I have a suggestion. At least some us who can afford some space at our present/future homes should consider creating a 'Goshala' and nurture atleast one cow at home. This may need a small change in the mindset and yet we can try to maintain a decent and a neat 'Ghoshala' at our homes. Instead of constructing a spa or swimming pool at our backyard, constructing a clean 'ghoshala' is welcome. As Sri.Mohan has said, we can offer fresh milk to Our Lord and par take them as prasadam. These ideas are not invented by me . I remember in Kooram village, My aunt used to have a lot cows and she always used to distribute milk to others free of cost!! (Remember Brahmins are not suppose to sell Food stuff esp Milk) She had so much of reverence towards them and every cow is called as' Laskhmi' I am inspired by Amul director Kurien's( instrumental in Sucess of 'Operation Flood' movement in India which resulted in India being no. in world in Milk production ) emotions towards Milk production, ,co operative dairies and care of cattle. I am also inspired by one article in India today on our Sri.M A Alwar's father on living peacefully with nature. I think it is right time for us to get all the 'good' ideas of eco friendliness of olden days. For Information, Last year,, Swami Shankaracharya of Kanchi had launched a cow protection campaign in India to create awareness among people on sacredness of Cow and to stop of some vested interests act of driving off cows and other cattle to border Kerala state from TN where Slaughter of Cattle is allowed by Govt.. I am hearing that even today, many cows were driven from TN to Kerala to be just slaughtered..... Painful... Regards KM Narayanan The information transmitted is intended only for the person or entity to which it is addressed and may contain confidential and/or privileged material. Any review, retransmission, dissemination or other use of, or taking of any action in reliance upon, this information by persons or entities other than the intended recipient is prohibited. If you received this in error, please contact the sender and delete the material from any computer. ============================================================================== Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 10, 2001 Report Share Posted August 10, 2001 Sri Krishna parabhramhane namaha Thanks Sri Mani Varadharajan for making us aware of this bitter truth. Also all other vaishnavas for echoing the same and giving us tips on how to overcome. Adeyen has another suggestion to add (nothing new) Most of us are probably are already practising. We will also have to give up using leather and fur products like shoes, bags as far as possible. Dasan Srivatsa Kadambi Make international calls for as low as $.04/minute with Messenger http://phonecard./ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 10, 2001 Report Share Posted August 10, 2001 Dear Sri Vaishnavas While we are discussing this, I would like to remind you all of a posting adiyen made a few weeks back. Adiyen and a friend have put up a web page describing the inhuman treatment meted out to the animals (esp Cow) in India. The site also has a signature campaign against slaughter and illtreatment of cows. Most unfortunately, the response to our requests for others to visit, read the info there and sign the petition (incl one in this list) have elicited minimal response. We have become so discouraged by the abysmal reaction that we were even considering taking down the site. I would like to fervently appeal to you all to go visit the site and sign the campaign. As Sri. Mani has pointed out, you could even consider it a pushpam placed at His lotus feet. The site address is http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/~ramakris/cow Adiyen Ramanuja Dasan Ramakrishnan -- -------------------------------- -------------------------------- Ramakrishnan Kazhiyur-Mannar Room 474, Dreese Labs | #30 E Lane Avenue 2015, Neil Avenue | Apartment 304 Columbus, OH - 43210 | Columbus, OH - 43201 Ph: 614-292-8578 | Ph: 614-294-6219 ================================================================= Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 10, 2001 Report Share Posted August 10, 2001 Dear all, Recently there was an article in a leading Tamil weekly about how the foils (supposed to be silver) used in sweets are prepared in India. It seems they are prepared in leather tanneries mixing beef and things like that . They also published gory pictures of the tanneries. since then i've avoided taking sweets with silver foils. In this case could anyone suggest alternatives? Soya milk etc. could substitute for milk. But what abt yogurt,ghee etc? urs humbly, karthik Quote of the week: Chance favors the prepared mind. Louis Pasteur _______ Get your free @ address at Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 10, 2001 Report Share Posted August 10, 2001 Dear Members, Sri. Mani's post highlighting the cruelty to cows and buffaloes should be extremely painful to all of us. Beginning with worms and all the way up to elephants, man ill-treats almost every creature in the animal kingdom on some pretext or the other. Ironically, for all their derided instincts, animals themselves generally co-exist peacefully and don't trouble each other except when hungry or trespassed. And some of the strongest animals are predominantly vegetarians! It is sad we with so much knowledge and resourcefulness resort to such savagery against these wonderful creatures. If nothing else, Bhagavan's Matsya, Koorma, VarAha, Narasimha, and Hayavadana incarnations should remind us of our bonds with animals. As we learned from another thread, being a Sri Vaishnava involves showing kindness to all life forms. There are plenty of examples in our purAnAs. Ramayana and Mahabharatha alone is enough. The bovines probably get the worst treatment from us, dead or alive. Perhaps, it is time we did something about it. Though consuming milk per se is not an act of crime, we carry it to such senseless proportions that it ends up being one. I am not sure if we can completely avoid milk-based products, but we can definitely reduce the quantity consumed, and keep it to the absolute minimum. Excessive consumption and senseless misuse is not restricted to the West or the rich. Today, life on earth stands a good chance of being destroyed by over-consumption. Our consumption pattern determines the scale of mass production and resource depletion. Aside from eschewing over consumption, what needs to change is our attitude. We should be driven by conservation and not consumption. We need to educate our kids and foster a kind and respectful attitude towards animals and plants. Worldwide de-forestation in just the last decade has wiped out green-cover the size of Brazil. When was the last time we spoke to our kids about kindness to animals and saving trees? With a burgeoning population, the value or respect for 'life' continues to decline steadily and precipitously. Cynical as it may sound, it is unfortunately today's harsh reality, especially in India /Third World. "Aping" the West culture, has led to more problems than we imagined. Rather than learn from their mistakes, we simply follow suit with even more impunity, trying to play catch-up. We do the same with plants and trees, and now we are beginning to mess with human lives as well! Tinkering with nature to unethical proportions, we completely ignore the negative consequences. True, genetic engineering has helped us grow better varieties of disease-resistant, high-yield crops and eradicate many human and animal diseases as well, but we need to adopt a more balanced, holistic approach. Basically, we simply do not (and should) know when to stop. Let us not forget the maxim, "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it". Reverently, Sriram Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 11, 2001 Report Share Posted August 11, 2001 [ Posted on behalf of Sri Asuri Bharath of Bangalore <asurib ] Dear Sri Mani, I greatly appreciated your posting . God bless you . I have been interested in animal rights issues for long , and it always disturbed me that the orthodoxy didnt seem concerned enough , apart from paying lip service to cows being sacred . I am happy that you have created awareness on the subject . I would like to add a few words on the cow issue and hope you will post it on my behalf . thanks . The treatment of cows in India is in many ways worse than in the west ..cows are poorly fed , are subject to famine and drought , dont have sufficient pasture , and are exposed to grazing infected with pesticide and plastic garbage.while many families take affectionate care of their cows practically none give them retirement benefits.(Normally the cow would live for at least 20 years . Even if retirement benefits are given to cows as some few people do , all males calves are sold as draught animals where they have a lousy life for about 10 years and then as they go past their prime are sold to the butchers.) .After the age of about 12 years when milk yields begin to drop the cows are sold , they change two or three hands and then the are put on the Death March . Due to laws in diff states prohibiting slaughter, the cows actually suffer more .Either they are forced to march often over a hundred km to a state where slaughter is allowed ,without sufficient water , or are piled into trucks where the often break their legs due to crowding and injure each other with their horns . they are not fed because that leads to them defecating at the slaughterhouse out of stress and fear ,and then they are butchered by the most painful halal way where they die a slow bleeding death. They are not stunned before slaughter , since that is supposed to be against halal. All these cows are bred only to supply the demand for milk in the first place. over 200 million of them .Unlike the west India does not breed cattle for beef . Sothe primary responsibility for the suffering of these cows is with consumers of milk. Since the year 2000 India overtook the USA as the world's largest producer of milk. Beef and leather are only by products of the dairy industry just like goat leather is a by product of the mutton industry .Incidentally cows belonging to temples in Tamilnadu under the HR&CE dept are auctioned to butchers as soon as the milk yield begins to drop. The prev HRCE minister told poeple who volunteered to adopt the cows that " if you care about the cows so much , participate in the auction and buy them." While it may be very difficult to give up milk and curds suddenly , one can at least reduce it gradually .Milk is not necessary for adults . any ordinary balanced diet is sufficient . With growing children also one can avoid milk but the diet has to be more carefully framed so as not to affect the growth of the child .Mammals produce milk for their own young , not to feed adults of another species.Some of the largest mammals like elephants , hippos and rhinos are vegans , and gorillas and chimps are primarily vegetarians . So one can get strong on a vegan diet too .Adult vegans over 50 may however need to take some calcium pills if they give up milk , to be on the safe side. regards to all Bharath Asuri alias Asuri Venkatanarasimhan. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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