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Ingrid Newkirk

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Trayvon Martin Case Reminds Us: Never Be Silent

Posted: 04/17/2012 8:33 am

With George Zimmerman's upcoming trial in the shooting death of Trayvon Martin, the role that racism may have played in this incident will continue to be a heated topic of debate. And while these discussions may be uncomfortable, they should be welcomed since only by bringing prejudices to light do we have any hope of ending them.

We all have prejudices to dispel: the need to get away from thinking that "I" am important and special and "you" are not, and the frightened mindset that tells us that certain "others" are of no consequence. And homophobia, racism, sexism, speciesism, ageism, anti-Semitism, and other "-isms" not only separate us from one another but also can lead from words to weapons. To read the news is to see a world awash with examples. For this to change, we must ask ourselves whether we can take the uncomfortable responsibility for standing against all violence and oppression, regardless of the victim's neatly compartmentalized "identity." It sounds simple, but is it? A mighty fight is ahead.

PETA's new campaign, "Never Be Silent," is inspired by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., who said, "Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter." It encourages everyone to speak up for others whose pain is often casually ignored and sometimes even laughed at, to speak up for anyone, regardless of how hard it is for us to relate to them or how alien their behavior, culture, or looks seem to us, including the individuals gunned down for a millionaire's casual amusement, the chimpanzees poisoned in experiments, the elephants beaten to make them perform in circuses, and the foxes caught in steel-jaw traps for their fur.

The temptation not to defend members of other groups is strong and always has been. When Dr. King protested the Vietnam War, many of his most powerful supporters warned him to stay out of it, that it was a different issue. Dr. King replied, "Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere." One form of prejudice often begets another; for instance, people who commit vicious acts of cruelty toward animals frequently move on to abuse their fellow humans as we see when we examine the personal histories of serial killers, many of whom have in common such practices as hunting and decapitating neighborhood cats. But it is the "casual cruelty" and the everyday disrespect that requires our attention if we are to be decent to all.

PETA's campaign should be included in school curricula. If we can open children's hearts and minds to animals' needs, teach them to treat a dog or a chicken as if they feel fear and love and pain -- as they do -- then they will grow up to understand that we are all worthy of respect. Without that, we are doomed to a world in which those who find us alien, who fear us, can hurt us because we are different from them in some way, and we can do the same to them.

When I was 8, my family moved from England to Asia. The culture in which I had been raised was completely different from that of the other children, as was my clothing, my skin color, my language, and much of my behavior. One boy, who was afraid of me, came up and poked my skin with a stick, in much the same way that many humans still treat other animals. We do not comprehend these other animals' languages, cultures, and behavior, and they look "funny," so they get poked with a lot of sticks, figuratively or literally. It isn't fair to them, any more than it was fair for that boy to do it to me.

Much of our bias is born of misunderstanding, of ignorance. In the days of institutionalized slavery in America, many educated people honestly believed that Africans could not feel pain nor experience parental love as white people do, so it was acceptable to brand slaves and to auction off their children. Not too long ago, well-respected physicians rejected the idea that any woman could ever "be allowed" to go to medical school and earnestly believed that women would faint at the sight of blood. People also genuinely thought that it was acceptable to allow children to work in mills and factories. Although we have, in theory, abolished human slavery, recognized women's rights, and stopped child labor, we continue to enslave other species who, if we simply pay attention, show quite clearly that they experience parental love, pain, and the desire for freedom, just as we do.

It takes some effort and nerve at first to risk mockery and disapproval for going against entrenched prejudices -- even when those prejudices are repulsive and wrong--but we must if we are to have any hope of achieving a just world. Recognizing the fundamental right of every individual to be respected rather than ridiculed and treated as a resource for "our own kind" is deserving of our energy if we believe in social justice. All tyranny, bigotry, aggression, and cruelty are wrong, and whenever we see it, we must never be silent.

 
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07:47 PM on 04/29/2012
I'm not even going to go into detail about all the stupidity I see here. All of you who think PETA (and Ms. Newkirk, by extension) are the saviors of the world really ought to look at figures on the amount of animals that PETA euthanizes each year. If you can still sing praises then, I'd be surprised.
10:23 AM on 04/25/2012
You are an inspiration! Don't ever feel like you don't make a difference. You do wonders for many!
02:28 PM on 04/21/2012
Thank you Ms. Newkirk for a very insightful and compassionate piece. Thank you for the fantastic work you do to make the world a better place.

Brian Field
09:35 AM on 04/18/2012
This is such a great article! Injustice is not discriminatory. Victims come in all shapes and sizes. This is why I'm involved in animal rights, human rights, and environmentalism. They're all connected.

I just saw an interesting and upsetting film called Racism: A History - http://topdocumentaryfilms.com/racism-history/. I highly recommend it.

There are a lot of references to people being treated like animals. Well, we shouldn't treat any living being like the way we do. Difference in gender, race, sexual orientation, culture, or species doesn't give anyone a right to treat those in a different way from ourselves. As diverse as we are, we are also the same. I appreciate and enjoy the diversity and recognize the similarities.

The truth is, all life comes from one seed that grew into a variety of life forms. Modern man is a decedent of beings from the sea and then most recently, ape. Not only do we come from animals, but the first known man is from Africa.

So the question is, since all life is connected to one another, and that connection makes us family, why do we treat family in this way?

Something to think about.

Peace:)!
08:55 AM on 04/18/2012
Beautifully written Ingrid! I do not feel that Ms. Newkirk is comparing the life of a young MAN to an animal. Why does everything have to be black and white? For me it goes back to how a person is raised. This is where it all begins...with the parents! Do you EVERY hear the JEWISH or the INDIAN PEOPLE complaining all of the time, and look what happened to them?! So, have some damn compassion for EVERYBODY and ALL ANIMALS, and just educate yourself and your family. Animals feel just like we do, and they can teach you to be a better person.
08:53 AM on 04/18/2012
If we keep quiet about the cruelty inflicted upon animals then we are contributing to their deaths!!

I will always fight for animal rights and for justice to be done for the innocent ones!!!
01:01 AM on 04/18/2012
Beautiful article Ingrid Newkirk and so true. We need to start having empathy toward every living beings on this planet and that includes all humans and all types of animals.
12:37 AM on 04/18/2012
Speak up against cruelty towards all living beings including animals. We all deserve to be treated equally with respect and compassion
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elcerritan
My bio is not micro
12:37 AM on 04/18/2012
Newkirk and PETA have reached a new exploitative low.
07:39 AM on 04/19/2012
as has your comment.
12:14 AM on 04/18/2012
This is an important message, it's a beacon of brilliant hope for making this a kinder world for all. Please share it with everyone you know - and don't know!
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FaunaAndFlora
Daughter of Pan
12:11 AM on 04/18/2012
Just when I thought Newkirk and her organization couldn't sink to new lows, she exploits the tragic death of a black adolescent boy to further her cause and in doing so compares the life of this young man to the lives of chimpanzees, cattle, chickens and other beasts. I wonder why Newkirk doesn't use the murder of white adolescent girls in this way. Perhaps there's a bit of racism involved?

Shame on Newkirk, shame on PeTA and shame on HP for publishing this piece.
04:35 AM on 04/18/2012
Please read the article carefully.She doesn't compare the life or death of this boy to those of animals - what she does is compare a belief that the deaths or suffering of "others" is less important than the death or suffering of "us", which is one of the key features of racism and almost all the great social injustices. To compare racism with speciesism isn't to say that animals and humans are the same but is to make the clear and necessary point that when those in power dismiss or diminish the value of others - others without power - the reasons and effects are often the same, even if the victims aren't. Animals are the benchmark of exploitation: voiceless, powerless and treated as no more than commodities, despite recognition of their desire to live and capacity to suffer. It is our tragedy and our shame that some humans have been, and continue to be, treated just as terribly but it never diminishes the dignity of victims to recognise that their oppressors rarely confine their oppression to one group.
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SusanElizabeth1949
My micro-bio may be empty but my head isn't.
09:12 AM on 04/18/2012
The only place 'speciesism' exists is in the minds of the Animal Rights crowd. It will only have currency when we find another SAPIENT species.
08:59 PM on 04/17/2012
Beautiful, Love this article!!!
07:42 PM on 04/17/2012
Problem is ... you are silent ... except in a few selective instances .. 100+ Black youth dead in Chicago and Progressives say nothing .. focus on one instance in FL...

Mexican Gangs target Blacks:
http://www.nctimes.com/news/local/escondido/exclusive-mexican-mafia-member-ordered-gangs-to-target-blacks-police/article_b8e44164-eec6-5b5c-ad33-7581093eac04.html

3 Black Men murder White College Student:
http://www.cdispatch.com/news/article.asp?aid=16252

100+ Black Youth killed in Chicago..
http://homicides.redeyechicago.com/
05:20 PM on 04/17/2012
So important so teach compassion for all living things. Thank you for posting this article.
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sabelmouse
i love to tumble , ask me why .
03:08 PM on 04/17/2012
Wow, some really great points here, Ms. Newkirk! This should be required reading especially for parents, school teachers and kids.