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Nepal now sees blood drinking festival

 

http://beta.thehindu.com/news/article234326.ece

Four months after Nepal

came under fire from animal lovers worldwide for holding the biggest animal

sacrifice fair in its southern plains, hundreds of people are now flocking

to the west to participate in a festival to drink yak’s blood.

 

Men, women and even children have been heading for Myagdi, a remote district

in western Nepal, to take part in the khun khane ritual, which literally

means drinking blood.

 

The festival sees the local yak herders making money by selling the blood of

live yaks to people who queue up in hundreds to drink it, in the belief

their illnesses will be cured.

 

While lactating female yaks are spared, other yaks above the age of two are

chosen for the ritual.

 

Pinned down by people who hold their tails and horns and their legs tied,

the yaks are then bled by a professional bleeder, known as the aamji.

 

The aamji pierces the jugular vein of the hapless animal and the streaming

blood is collected in cups that are then passed among the crowd, who drink

the warm, frothy liquid unwaveringly.

 

Each yak is bled to collect between 20 to 40 cups of blood.

 

The ritual is believed to be an old Tibetan one that originated in Mustang

in northern Nepal, once part of an ancient Tibetan kingdom.

 

The participants are mostly people suffering from chronic diseases who have

given up hope of being cured by modern medicine.

 

An American researcher, Zorina Curry, who studied the khun khane festival,

correlates the ritual to the belief in witchcraft and the superstition that

blood is effective as medicine as well as an aphrodisiac.

 

However, Curry also warned that since the yaks were not inoculated, some had

TB and the blood—drinking could infect the human drinker.

 

The festival has been condemned by Nepal’s animal rights activists who last

year urged the government to stop the slaughter of tens of thousands of

animals and birds at the five—yearly Gadhimai Festival but to no avail.

 

The Animal Welfare Network Nepal (AWNN) has termed the khun khane practice

barbaric.

 

“Can you think how painful it must be for these innocent creatures to have

their necks and bodies pierced and to be drained of blood?” AWNN had said in

an earlier statement.

 

“Humanity as a whole must speak out against cruelty against living beings in

the name of religion, culture or health.”

 

Though Nepal prides itself on being the birthplace of the Buddha, the

founder of Buddhism, the religion that preaches non-violence, local rituals

abound in rank cruelty to animals without being banned by a succession of

weak governments for fear of a backlash.

 

Another local practice is the deer hunt in which the hunters wound the

victim and then tear out its palpitating heart while it is still alive.

 

Keywords: Nepal <http://beta.thehindu.com/news/article234326.ece#>, blood

drinking festival <http://beta.thehindu.com/news/article234326.ece#>, animal

sacrifice fair <http://beta.thehindu.com/news/article234326.ece#>, illness

cure belief <http://beta.thehindu.com/news/article234326.ece#>, chronic

disease sufferers <http://beta.thehindu.com/news/article234326.ece#>, deer

hunt <http://beta.thehindu.com/news/article234326.ece#>,

 

--

Lucia de Vries

Freelance Journalist

Nepal - Netherlands

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