animal voice - december 2012 issue

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ANIM AL V OICE ANIM AL V OICE Postal Address Animal Voice PO Box 825 Somerset West 7129 RSA International: +27 21 852 8160 Tel: 021 852 8160 Fax: 021-413-1297 Official mouthpiece in South Africa for Compassion in World Farming December 2012 Read more i nsi de Angus McIntosh wins first-ever for his Good Earth Keeper Award o f Exce ll ence humane treatment of farmed animals . Angus McIntosh wins first-ever Good Earth Keeper Award o f Exce ll ence for his humane treatment of farmed animals .

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Animal Voice is published by The Humane Education Trust, a registered charitable organisation dedicated to rekindling the spirit of care and respect for all life. We are the South African representatives of Compassion in World Farming.

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Page 1: Animal Voice - December 2012 Issue

ANIMALVOICEANIMALVOICE

Postal AddressAnimal Voice PO Box 825 Somerset West 7129 RSAInternational: +27 21 852 8160Tel: 021 852 8160Fax: 021-413-1297

Official mouthpiece in South Africa for Compassion in World Farming

December 2012

Read more inside

Angus McIntosh wins first-ever

for his Good Earth Keeper Award of Exce llence

humane tre a tment o f f armed animals .

Angus McIntosh wins first-ever Good Earth Keeper Award of Exce llence for his humane tre a tment o f f armed animals .

Page 2: Animal Voice - December 2012 Issue

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Angus McIntosh, biodynamic farmer at Spier Wine Estate, Stellenbosch, has been awarded Compassion in World Farming's first-ever Good Earth Keeper Award for his humane treatment of farmed animals. The award was presented to him at a Green Tie fund-raising dinner-dance/ auction event in Klein Constantia, Cape Town on 20th October.

Organised by Compassion in World Farming in partnership with Soil for Life, with famous Xhosa-speaking Jewish comedian Nik Rabinowitz as Master of Ceremonies, the event was part of the United Nation's World Food Day commemorations.

Said Tozie Zokufa, co-representative in South Africa for the international NGO Compassion in World Farming: “Angus McIntosh puts commercial farming with animals into a class of its own. He has demonstrated that giving farmed animals lives worth living can be done at a competitive price. “This event puts the spotlight on the suffering of the tens of millions of animals in factory farms throughout South Africa and focuses on an urgency for us to come to the table, literally, and relieve their suffering by making humane choices at the supermarkets.”

Accepting his award, Angus McIntosh said:

“It is really an indictment on society that we have an organisation called Compassion in World Farming. One would

assume that compassion is a given in farming. But it's not.

“We don't realise it, but we are all farmers by proxy. Proxy is basically the right to participate — and we are all farmers by proxy because every time we lift a fork, we vote - and we can choose an agricultural system that either exercises compassion, or doesn't.

“In South Africa, about 97% of eggs, for example, are produced in factories. These are called battery eggs. The chicken lives on a space allowance that is the size of an A4 page. The chicken is debeaked, declawed, and she is stimulated by light to lay.

“Alternatively,” said Angus, amid much laughter from the audience, “you can buy my eggs! My chickens are not debeaked, not declawed. I am one of only two people in the country who doesn't have debeaked chickens. We open our egg-mobiles in the mornings and the chickens range on the pastures and then at night they go back into the mobiles for protection from the Rooikat.

“What you buy is a choice that you make. Nobody's forcing you to make that choice. You make it for yourselves.”

See Angus delivering his acceptance speech at: http://www.animal-voice.org

Angus’s eggs

World Food Day... Compassion in World Farming SA

Page 3: Animal Voice - December 2012 Issue

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Right: Angus McIntosh is pictured here with well-known Professor Tim Noakes, Director of the UCT/MRC Research Unit for Exercise Science and Sports Medicine. Prof Noakes believes that factory farmed meat, eggs and milk contribute to the incidence of human disease. He explaines: “In industrialised farming where animals are fed grain, the composition of fats in their bodies changes, increasing the polyunsaturated omega 6 content, at a significant cost to our health. But grass fed animals produce meat, eggs and milk with a high omega 3 content and this is what we, as humans, need and thrive upon.”

Above: Die Burger journalist Carryn-Ann Nel interviews Angus on becoming the first farmer to win Compassion's Good Earth Keeper Award of Excellence.

Above: TV personality, extreme sportsman and conservationist Braam Malherbe and his partner Hedda Inderthal, a zoologist and micro-biologist. Braam recently received the prestigious Eco-Warrior Award for 2012. Braam booked an entire table for the event.

Above: Long-standing Compassion supporter Mea Lashbrooke (right) raised funds to book an entire table for the event. With her is Raquel Gianotti, wife of the Spanish Consul to SA.

Above: South African environmental campaigner, maritime lawyer and endurance swimmer Lewis Pugh. He is the first person in the world to complete a long distance swim in every ocean of the world.

Above: Pat Featherstone, founder and Operations Director of Soil for Life, is greening and feeding townships around the Cape with food gardens. See Soil for Life and Compassion in World Farming (SA) jointly hosted the event.

http://soilforlife.co.za/

Right: Food and wine journalist Norman McFarlane received a Good Earth Keeper Award for his systematic promotion of ethical eating in the Press.

and Soil for Life host a fund-raising event

Page 4: Animal Voice - December 2012 Issue

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Thank you to all the wonderful people and businesses that gave us items to auction for this

event. In total Soil for life and Compassion in World Farming netted R100 000 to share.

La Petite Ferme Restaurant Cellar tour, meal for 2, in-house cookery book

Avatara Guest House 2-night stay for two

Cameo Media – Professional portrait on DVD

Sumi Bezuidenhout – double-bed hand-made quilt

MSC Starlight Cruises – four day cruise Cape Town – Walvis Bay – Cape Town.

Rudi Liebenberg - Cookery lesson on the art of the slow-cooked egg

Zen Point Hammocks – luxury hammock

SARU – two free tickets to the Curry Cup

Artwork by

Mandy Brockbank

Artwork by

Hevan Huysteen

in

The Green Tie event was one of the most enjoyable outings we’ve had in a long time.— Lynn StaceyThe Villa Rosa GuesthouseSea Point

Spier – 120 bottles of wine

To: THE EDITOR

Dr Greg Simpson

– Two-day job shadowing this animal doctor in the heart of the bushveld

Page 5: Animal Voice - December 2012 Issue

SA Businesswomen say 'Enough'!

Eile en ChapmanPrincipal of Jedd Rea lty, Johannesburg, asks:

“Who is going to ensure that the horrendous plight of our calves at the hands of the dairy industry is halted! Who is going to take responsibility to bring about the change?

“I have written to CEO's of large dairy farms and large retailers (the latter having the power to place pressure upon their suppliers) with no constructive conclusion and all the while the truth of the matter continues to be deliberately hidden from the public – even twisted into a fairytale where consumers are led to believe that dairy cows are ‘happy’ cows.

“Clearly, profits in business should always be built on sound moral principles or does this not apply to industries where animals are merely considered a commodity? I do not believe that it can be moral to consistently impregnate any sentient animal with the deliberate intention of her giving birth to young, and then to disregard the welfare of the young because he happens to be a boy. It is barbaric! One needs only to visit a dairy farm where calves have been separated from their mothers to realize the enormous emotional trauma the mother suffers, and to be haunted by her desperate bellowing for her young.

“If there are dairy farmers or retailers who have the ethical fibre to stand up against inhumane practices, I appeal to them to come forward and make themselves known. Let them vouch that their boy calves are not killed at birth, are not sent to feedlots while they are too fragile to survive, are not auctioned or sold to the poorest of the poor where they often die of starvation or the winter cold.”

Fiona AllenbergAdvertising and Marketing specialist, Johannesburg, says:

“I have always known that if only animals could plead their own cases, with their own voices, then factory farming would have ended long ago.

And that is why I love the Animal Australia TV commercial “Make It Possible” showing the cruel and desperate conditions of pig factory farming and the little piglet that learns to fly away. Please take the time to view this wonderful ad – google “Somewhere” by FSM - Animals Australia- Pigs Fly or

.

“Here at home, Compassion in World Farming (South Africa) has even gone undercover to show us the realities of pig farming. I wish the South African consumer would take on this cause of animal cruelty like their Australian counterparts are doing. Let's lift the lid on an industry that thrives only because nobody knows what they are up to. We do have the ability to create real and lasting change, using the media and especially social media, for the most used and abused of animals – those in factory farms.Please support us on Facebook

and Twitter, and help wherever you can to send a message to the pork industry that gestation crates for pregnant pigs can be tolerated no longer.”

http://vimeo.com/51967590

www.facebook.com/compassion.za

Nicola Vernon , Event Organiser and Project Manager, lives among the magnificent rolling hills of the Boland. It is sheep-farming country.

“But,” says Nicola, “I've had it with watching lambs suffer in the fields

around me. I'm currently looking after some orphan lambs and I constantly wonder at how sheep are kept in this country.

“There don't seem to be any shepherds, or any real care given to the animals. I see ewes wandering around with lambs hanging out of their backsides and nobody brings a vet to them. I must have saved countless animals over the past few years. It usually doesn't take more than a few minutes to sort each crisis out and, even if one doesn't give the hardened farmer any hope of compassion for his animals, to help his sheep must make economic sense to him,

surely?

“Please join me in lobbying for better farming practices with regard to sheep - it's very difficult to live amidst these fields of sheep and to stand by and watch them suffer. We need shepherds.”

Factory Farming is a nightmare not a fa iryta le

C opyright CIW F(S A)

Express your concerns...Email:Tom McLaughlin, Good Business Journey Project Manager:

Suzanne Ackerman, Director Transformation:

Whitey Basson, CEO Shoprite Holdings

You could say:

Signed...

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected] depend on you to insist that your

suppliers achieve lives worth living for farmed animals as a matter of urgency. This means your suppliers must be:> Cage-free for laying hens; > Crate-free for breeding sows;> Responsible and humane in regard to boy calves;> Responsible for the humane treatment of chickens at live markets serving informal settlements; > In addition, I ask for trained shepherds to look after the flocks of sheep.

5

Auctioned a t four hours old , his umbilica l cord st il l dripping we t .Auctioned a t four hours old , his umbilica l cord st il l dripping we t .

Page 6: Animal Voice - December 2012 Issue

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Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutuleads a new era towardshumane farming.

Dr Mamphela Ramphele, world renowned human rights activist.“To the extent we brutaliseanimals, we brutalise our-selves.”

Zakes Mda, multi-award-winning novelist and playwright.

Lewis Pugh, environmental campaigner, maritime lawyer and endurance swimmer.

Angus McIntosh, Compassion’s award-winning farmer for humanity to animals.

Braam Malherbe, extreme conservationist and adventurer and 2012 recipient of the prestigious Eco-Warrior Award.

To read more about Compassion's Vision for Fair Food and Farming, got to www.ciwf.org.uk/vision/

Feeding the World – Africa's role in solving the globa l food crisis

Compassion in World Farming (SA)'s Tozie Zokufa spoke out in support of a world free of factory farming at an international conference in Johannesburg on November 15 & 16.

Organised by The Economist and held at the plush Hilton Sandton Hotel, the conference on Feeding the World – Africa's role in solving the global food crisis, was attended by some 200 international delegates.

Noteworthy facts included:The world is facing a food crisis with 1,2 billion people

being micro-nutrient deficientIn 2011, more people died as a result of obesity-related

diseases than from hunger

Both former First Lady Graca Machel and Sheila Sisulu, Deputy Executive Director of the UN's World Food Programme, told the conference that 80% of farmers in Africa were small scale farmers. About 500 million of them, mainly women - were already responsible for providing food to the African continent. Government and corporate support was vital for these farmers.

Dr Shenggen Fan, Director General of the International Food Policy Research Institute, suggested a tax be imposed on unsustainable, environmentally-unfriendly farming methods and this would include a tax on meat, particularly those rich in saturated fats and with negative health consequences.

During a panel discussion, Tozie pointed out that current research indicated the food from factory farming was micro-nutriently inferior. Only last week research by the South African Bureau of Standards (SABS) had shown that samples of battery eggs were inferior in folic acid content compared to samples of free range eggs.(see SABS report opp.)

Jay Naidoo, Chair of the Board for Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN), pictured with Tozie at right, told the conference that quality food was a right of impoverished people as well.

>

>

Prominent South Africans who have signed Compassion's Vision for Fa ir Food and Farming, are...

Rev. Siyabulela Gidi,Director of the SA Councilof Churches.

Richard Haigh, hailed byWorldwatch Institute andSlow Food Internationalfarms in KZN with indigenous breeds.

Page 7: Animal Voice - December 2012 Issue

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The world is facing a food crisis with 1,2 billion people being micro-nutrient deficient...

The Department of Hea lth issued a statement in October 2012 warning consumers that “a large number” of frozen chicken portions on the SA market have had brine injected into them. The statement added: “The Department is further concerned that in some instances the percentage of brine based mixtures /solutions added to chicken portions are as high as 30% of which 29% norma lly consists of water.” This negative ly affected the “qua lity characteristics from a nutritiona l perspective” as we ll as “increased the leve l of sa lt present” in these products. The Department of Hea lth sa id it fe lt compe lled to issue the statement so that consumers could make informed decisions regarding the purchasing of chicken portions. Disturbingly, porcine peptides (prote ins), derived from pork products, were sometimes included in the brine . For further information, please contact the Hea lth Department's F ide l Hadebe on 012 395 8493 .

Botox for chickens

The products of factory farming are often nutritionally inferior. In this SABS reprot (below) the ‘Nulaid’ were battery eggs while the Boschveldt were free-range.

Break ing News!Russia is proposing a t a x on ‘unhe a lthy’ me a t to tackle the problem of high-fat content and antibiotics in meat production. Fast foods such as burgers would be included in the proposed t a x . According to Globa lMeatnews.com of 27th November 2012, the Russian treasury will receive an additional US$3.3bn annually following the introduction of the new tax.

while more people now die of obesity-related diseases than of hunger

Deceptively similar on the outside! Warning!

FNB gets behind meat-free MondaysFirst National Bank has joined the expanding number of institutions and businesses adopting Meat-Free Monday. FNB CEO, M ichae l Jordaan, in a newsletter to company employees said: “If every South African had one meat-free day a week , the saving of carbon emissions would be the equiva lent of tak ing one million cars off the road for a year.”

Page 8: Animal Voice - December 2012 Issue

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When Compassion in World Farming (SA) started out as Humanity for Hens, 23 years ago, there was not a single free range egg (or free-range anything) to be found in any supermarket anywhere in the country.

Thanks to our endeavours and your support, today, annua lly, 780 000 laying hens and 20 million broiler chickens fee l the sun on the ir faces and the earth beneath the ir feet. In addition 40 000 sows are now out of crates and into loose housing.

Traceability from farm to forkConcerned consumers frequently telephone Compassion's office asking if we can guarantee that the eggs/milk/meat in the various supermarkets around the country, are genuinely what the box or label says they are. In other words, are they truly free range? Recently, a group of organic farmers met in Stellenbosch to discuss a new quality assurance label that will allow consumers access to farms, to see for themselves. Animal Voice Editor, Louise van der Merwe, attended the meeting.

Konrad Hauptfleisch, Academy Manager at the International Federation of Organic Agriculture Movements (IFOAM), led the meeting. “Consumers want traceability from farm to fork,” he said. “This is why IFOAM is introducing the new PGS label. PGS stands for Participatory Guarantee System and it is a label that will not only guarantee that the food is organic and complies with the highest animal welfare standards, but will also invite consumer participation.”

He said that consumer participation and scrutiny was the only way to ensure ‘product integrity’, with the consumer him or herself becoming the eyes and ears of the organic farm.

Mr Hauptfleisch said that the future of food security lay in farmers’ markets. “Farmers’ markets - not supermarkets - have fed society for thousands of years. We need to return to traditional agriculture and support the local farmers in our areas,” he said.

For more information, please email Liz Eglington on [email protected]

Get your ORGANIC FOOD ON-LINEAnimal Voice wishes to thank The Organic Emporium in Gauteng for matching each and every donation made to Compassion in World Farming (South Africa) by its customers.

Organic EmporiumTel: 011 706 1765Mobile: 083 255 0861E-mail: Website:

[email protected]

New label will provide...

The B iodynamic A gricultural A ssociation of Southern A frica , connects farmers with each other, and consumers with

the source of their food. For more information, please contact Liesl at info @ bdaasa .org .za / [email protected] / 021 8813628.Also see www.afrikara.co.za

Now on sale! R200Please contact

or [email protected] [email protected]

Page 9: Animal Voice - December 2012 Issue

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This week I drove into a local shopping centre to pick up some last-minute groceries. Parked next to me was an open bakkie with a flat cage balanced on the back. The cage was narrow, roughly made and crammed full of chickens. I walked closer and noticed about 40 roosters squashed against each other. They were in an appalling condition and a number of them were slowly dying or already dead. I stuck my finger through the wire and tried to rouse the rooster closest to me. His eyes were closed and he was barely breathing. There was no space, and the rest were a living or dying mass on top of him. The driver walked out of the shops with a drink in his hand.

“Baba,” I said, “these chickens are suffering.”

He grunted that they were fine and got into the cabin. I stood with my arms helplessly hanging next to my side, not knowing what to do. I tapped at the driver's darkened window to try and engage the owner again. I could see nothing inside except my own reflection. The driver quickly reversed and sped off, thus squashing the remaining chickens even tighter against the exposed cage.

I retreated into the shop, and almost vomited in the vegetable section.

With some distance, I speculated about the driver's response and what the black, working-class man thought of a white, middle-class

By MARLISE RICHTER Marlise has a BA (Hons) and LLM degree from Wits University. A Fulbright scholarship enabled her to study for a masters degree in Internationa l Peace Studies at the University of Notre Dame (USA). She worked as a researcher for the AIDS Law Project, Treatment Action Campa ign and the Reproductive Hea lth & HIV Research Unit. Her research interests lie in feminism and HIV/AIDS with a particular focus on sex work and gender based violence. Marlise is currently working towards a PhD in public health at the Internationa l Centre for Reproductive Hea lth at the University of Ghent, Belgium and is a visiting researcher at the African Centre for Migration & Society, Wits.

women trying to interfere with his evening, and his livelihood. I wondered if he thought I might harm or threaten him in any way. Whether I was officiously poking my nose into his business, where it did not belong. Perhaps that I was being hypocritical; I was possibly on my way to buy chicken nuggets, frozen chicken breasts or eggs myself – all those items displayed in the aisles, brightly packaged and neatly processed to shroud the fact that they had originated in conditions not dissimilar to those I had just seen on the bakkie.

Why should I single him out for questioning, when the multi-million rand poultry industry in South Africa – probably still mainly owned by white money while he is trying to make a living with a bakkie-full of caged chickens - continues to produce cruel food on a daily basis?

One of my research field trips to an utterly desolate and dirt-poor squatter camp clamped to the periphery of a Rustenburg mine in 2010 recurred to me. No running water, no electricity, no roads. We spent a day at the clinic conducting focus group discussions with sex workers.

Throughout the day, I could hear the terrible cries of a dog. Later in the afternoon, I followed the sound towards a shack.

A dog was chained to a pole – neck bleeding from the rope around it. No water, no food, no shelter.

Rustenburg winters – as its midday sun - can be brutal. I knocked at the shack door and asked if it would be possible that the

dog could be untied, or given some water and shade. I was met with a puzzled look and a disengaged response.

On returning to the clinic, I passed a few (unemployed?) men sitting

outside a makeshift cafe in the shade. They asked me what I was doing. I explained about the distressed dog and wanting to help.

One of the men looked at me intently and said “What about us? Why don't you help us?”

I had no answer ready.

How does one negotiate and re-negotiate the unmet needs and suffering of South Africa of 2012?

How legitimate is it to care about the pain and suffering of animals when a country is reeling from the brutality of Marikana? When the front page of one's daily newspaper is taken up by the bloody, beaten face of a young woman trying to escape from her ex-boyfriend? Wide-scale unemployment, the greatest inequality gap in the world,

(cont. overlea f)

How legitimate is it to care about the pa in and suffering of anima ls when a country is ree ling from the bruta lity of Marikana?

Page 10: Animal Voice - December 2012 Issue

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Help set the remaining 63 000 sows FREE!Please donate generously for our campaign to achieve a crate-free South Africa by 2015. Please identify your donation with the words 'crate-free SA’

Name of Account: The Humane Education TrustAccount Number: 9094070046Bank: ABSABranch No.: 632005Swift Code: ABSAZAJJ

A Better Life

With your support, Compassion's campa ign to have South Africa's breeding sows set free from the ir meta l stra ightjackets ca lled crates or sta lls, is ga ining ground! In the last year, 40 000 sows have started experiencing life on loose housing, as seen in the photograph on the right.

Page 11: Animal Voice - December 2012 Issue

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In mid-2012, the principal of Golden Grove Primary School, Mr Tony Austen, gave The Humane Education Trust an opportunity to bring

humane education to a class of Grade 7 learners.

After two terms of humane education, this is what he said:

“In the time that our learners in Grade 7HS received humane education, their marks for Life Orientation improved by a full 20%.

“It became apparent that humane education strongly improved their ability to express themselves, to read, write and discuss issues intelligently and to think creatively.

“What humane education achieved for these learners is remarkable.

“The Golden Grover learners are truly honoured to have the opportunity to interact and engage with Humane Education.”

What is Humane Educa tion?Humane Education widens our circle of compassion and respect to include each other, animals and the environment at large. Learners begin to consider a range of ethical issues using resources and lessons designed to generate creative and critical thinking, and, of course, empathy which is believed to be the critical element missing in society today.

Humane Education is about the development of core values beginning with our duty to care and take responsibility for ourselves and those in our care, namely our domestic animals. This is where it begins. As Humane Education progresses, the circle of our understanding becomes ever wider, like a ripple, and eventually we become Good Earth-Keepers.

As part of Humane Education, the learners of Golden Grove’s Grade 7HS class

authored and illustrated their own book of stories on animals. Humane Education has published this collection as a keep-sake for the learners to take with them on their life’s journey ahead.

Expert Drawing AnalysisInternationally accredited handwriting and drawing analyst, and behavioural therapist, Yossi Vissoker, was asked by Humane Education to take drawings from the learners before the start of the Humane Education programme, and again on completion of the programme a year later.

“What I could see in the drawings taken at the end of the programme compared to those taken at the beginning,” Yossi said, “was a lesser degree of 'attitude'.

“There were no miracles as such, but it was amazing to discover an impressive decrease in negativity, especially amongst those learners whose drawings had shown this tendency before the programme began. Although the drawings of the control class have not been assessed yet, this does not detract from the positive outcome as described above for Grade 7HS.”

Right: Becoming informed consumers!The learners in Grade 7HS were intrigued (and shocked) to learn about the different methods of egg production.They wrote extensively about this experience in their EARTH-KEEPERS book (mentioned above) and they also wrote to PnP’s Suzanne Ackerman-Berman, Transformation Director.

Learners’ marks improve by 20%! - School Principal gives the credit to Humane EducationLearners’ marks improve by 20%! - School Principal gives the credit to Humane Education

Page 12: Animal Voice - December 2012 Issue

Cape Town Businessman cha llenges Big Business to come on board for Humane Educa tion

NTT Volkswagen donates R3800 to Humane Education in Kayamandi

St e ll enbosch

Thanks to NTT Volkswagen Stellenbosch, all 79 learners at Kayamandi Primary School who took part in a colouring-in exercise to promote animal care and awareness, received pencil cases in November, complete with ruler, pencil, sharpener, pen and eraser.

“Since many of the learners are accustomed to breaking pencils in half in order to be able to write, the pencil cases were received with delight,” said Louise van der Merwe who is spear-heading Humane Education in several Cape Town schools.

Cape Town businessman Tony Gerrans, CEO of GROTTO Stainless Steel Tank Manufacturers, and his wife Lorraine donated R10 000 to Humane Education at Soil for Life /Compassion's fund-raising event on 20th October.

Said Tony: 'Education and social responsibility are two key foundations of our future society. All entities who care about the future should be investing in these foundations. I'd like to see more support for this very worthwhile initiative.'

4 Manchester Road, Airport Industria 2 Cape Town

+ 27 (0) 21 386 1555www.grotto.co.za [email protected]

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Stellenbosch VW Das A uto

1 Stoffel Smit Street, PlankenbrugStellenbosch 7600

+27 21 808 6000 www.ste llenboschvw.co.za [email protected]

Pictured with the learners is Kayamandi teacher Pamela Mantanga and Humane Education's Yossi Vissoker who gives workshops for teachers on understanding and effectively dealing with disruptive behaviour, bullying and abuse. The learners have also received readers and wall charts on animal care and Humane Education will continue its support in 2013.

Louise van der Merwe with Kayamandi teacher, Doreen Chiware and a learner. Said Doreen: “I am very excited to be part of this project.”

(P lease see Pondering Panda survey on page 15)

Page 13: Animal Voice - December 2012 Issue

C a ringC lassrooms

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“... Materia ls supplied, as we ll as interactive service are first class and we fee l privileged tobe associated with them (Humane Education).” – Dr Annelise Roos, EnviroVet CVC.

“... What a wonderful collection of stories. They give our disadvantaged learners the confidence to ta lk about the ir experiences at home . Humane Education Trust, you’ve done an outstanding job. You get an outstanding ovation.” – Klipheuwel Primary School.

“... I especia lly like the fact that the stories impart sound, humane va lues to the learners.” — Esme Solomon - remedia l teacher, Eerste River and Blackheath schools.

Acn ti i on no i at ta Kc lu ipd hE ee un wa em luH

In 2012, Humane Education donated 1771 readers on animal

care, totalling R80 758.00, to 12 schools in communities

where animal neglect and abuse is prevalent. THANK YOU to all

our individual donors who made this possible.

What you can do!Please email Premier Zille and request that she channels some of the multi-million-rand funding allocated to the mass sterilization of pets in the Western Cape, to Humane Education's programme in schools. Only with a mind-set change amongst our young people of today will the mass sterilization of pets become a long-term solution to pet over-population and misery. Mass sterilization on its own is nothing more than a quick-fix with a short-term prognosis. Premier Zille's email is: [email protected]

What te achers and ve terinarians say about Humane Educa tion ...“... Before you approached our school, my learners were unaware of the importance of anima ls in the community. They disregarded anima ls and the significance thereof. Our communities are infested with thoughts of using anima ls as a means to an end. Even I have come to rea lise how important they rea lly are . Thank you for a ll you have done and will still be doing.” - Mrs R. Allie, Grade 6A educator, Fa irview Primary School.

“... Our educators fee l that they are blessed with such a good resource in order for them to educate the learners on the caring of pets... The text is learner friendly. Vocabulary is on the learners' leve l. The stories are short. During an ora l lesson most learners indicated that they would love to become veterinarians or work with anima ls.” – Mrs Margot Kiewit, Principa l, Die Duine Primary School.

“I came across a ll your work for educating school children about anima l we lfare while I was at a meeting on the Kayamandi project. Wow, outstanding! We ll done!” – Dr Marc Wa lton, veterinary surgeon.

Page 14: Animal Voice - December 2012 Issue

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The Humane Educa tion Trust is chosen as the charity o f choice by leading Johannesburg preparatory school

One of South Africa's leading prep schools, The Ridge School in Westcliff, Johannesburg, has chosen Humane Education as its charity of choice for this year's donation of Task Money.

Explained Mandy Herold, the school's Head of Junior Prep: “Each term we choose a charity to donate our Task Money to. The boys are encouraged to do a task at home from clearing dinner plates, to loading/unloading the dish washer to feeding the pets and in return they earn the R2 (or more!). In other words they are 'working' not for themselves but for others.

Samantha Bouilliart, whose son attends The Ridge, said that whatever The Ridge donated, the Bouilliart family would double! “I have decided that as a family we will match the donation made by The Ridge to Humane Education when it is made at the end of term.

“In a world where there is so much evil, I sometimes get incredibly despondent and cynical by what I see and read, and it is only through awareness and education that this imbalance will shift.”

A training course in Humane Education is in the pipeline which will soon be available for South Africa. Thereafter, it will be adapted to become part of an internationally-available on-line certificate course.

The international course will be offered by World Animal Net (WAN), through the Cambridge e-Learning Institute (CEI). CEI, which is based in Cambridge in the UK, has a number of animal welfare courses on offer through the Internet, with a ‘virtual campus’ and down-loadable course materials. Their courses include subjects such as: General Concepts in Animal Welfare, Animal Behaviour and Welfare, Farm Animals, Animals in Research, Wild Animals, Working and Companion Animals, Animal Welfare Legislation and Animal Ethics.

“What’s missing,” says Janice Cox, Co-Founder and WAN Director, “is a course in Humane Education”.

“Because of her extensive experience in Humane Education (HE), WAN has invited Animal Voice editor Louise van der Merwe to develop teachers’ training courses in humane education in a South African context which can then be developed into an international course to meet the burgeoning demand by teachers and animal welfare personnel for courses in Humane Education.”

Janice added that the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) which held its third global conference in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, in November, reached an agreement that the development of animal welfare was a global issue that required action in terms of legislation, education and awareness. The conference was attended by over 300 delegates from 74 countries.

Course in Humane Educa tionsoon to be ava il able

WAN is an international network of animal welfare societies, with affiliates in more than 100 countries and consultative status at the United Nations.

To learn more about our Humane Education Programme or to participate, please contact Louise on 021 852 8160 or [email protected] . Also see the HE website at www.humane-education.org.za .

Page 15: Animal Voice - December 2012 Issue

15

There's a chapel that stands alone amid the rolling hills of the Free State. Albert Schweitzer's words are encrypted on a plaque in the pulpit. Roy Jankielsohn tells the story behind Astrid Chapel...

Note from Ed: Roy Jankielsohn is the leader of the DA in the Free State. He has openly expressed his disappointment that Mayor Patricia de Lille has scrapped the City of Cape Town's official meat-free day once a week.

See video clip of the City's 2010 official launch of one meat-free day, in the name of human health, mitigation of climate change and animal welfare, by clicking here:

. ”

Shah Jahan constructed the Taj Mahal for his third wife Mumtaz Mahal to illustrate his love for her in 1648. The Astrid Chapel is similarly a monument for a woman whose husband and son could not afford a monument as grand as the Taj Mahal but would have built it if they could.

Astrid Chapel is named after my wife. It is a monument to God's creation and our responsibility as humans to respect all of God's creatures This is what our son Tristan and I have learnt from Astrid.

http://www.animal-voice.org/category/quick-clips/

Astrid Chapel

This children’s book is a real little gem. I sat and read it in about half an hour one afternoon. It had been sent to me by our South African Representative – Anne Hemmings. If you want to give a book to a child with a real moral message about life from the perspective of a captive animal then this is the book for you! The foreword to the book is written by Jonathan Balcombe – animal scientist and behaviourist. As he says: 'Animals' lives matter to them. Their most precious possession is their freedom'.

The book sells for R65,70.Please order at [email protected]

Loca l children's book enjoys readership in the UK Book Review by Samantha Chandler, Secretary for the Anglican Society for the Welfare of Animals

http://www.aswa.org.uk/

Bullying still tops the ‘Problem List’ for SA’s learnersBullying remains the most significant cause for concern in

South African schools, according to a media release by Pondering Panda on 4 December 2012, with 13 to 14-year-olds feeling the most impact from this scourge.

In total, 7324 SA learners, their family members, and teachers were interviewed across the country and asked to identify the biggest problems at their schools. 28% identified bullying as the biggest problem while 25% said there was not enough parental involvement and 24% said lack of decent toilets.For more information, contact:Johan van der Merwe Cell: +2778 668 7872 | Office: +2721 888 7083

[email protected] | ponderingpanda.com

Page 16: Animal Voice - December 2012 Issue

Photo: A uke-B onne van der Weide