Launch of HSI India Draws Big Names and Big Goals for Animals
I have enduring recollections of
my guest appearances on Oprah and Ellen, partly because their very public
affirmations of animal protection made me feel our cause was ascendant. I had
that same feeling today in Mumbai, as Humane Society International launched its
India office at a jam-packed event keynoted by His Holiness the Dalai Lama at
the Grand Hyatt. He was joined by several major cultural and entertainment
personalities from India, including “Slumdog Millionaire” star Anil Kapoor and
poet and film producer Pritish Nandy.
This was the Dalai Lama’s
first-ever event focused on the issue of animal protection, and he gave a
wide-ranging 42-minute talk. “Animals deserve our compassion,” His Holiness
said. “We must know their pain. We should nurture this compassion through
education. Showing concern about animal rights is respecting their life.”
I opened the event with a speech
about our responsibilities to animals and our efforts in India to help street
dogs, to ban animal testing for cosmetics, and to turn around the growing
factory farming problem in the nation with the lowest per capita meat
consumption in the world. In a crowd that included business leaders, journalists,
and others, I picked up a general resolve to put our principles into action and
to gain ground in the world’s second largest nation.
His Holiness the Dalai Lama, sporting the Humane Society International hat. You can see more photos from my trip here.
The Dalai Lama is a transcendent personality – he’s a citizen of the world, having fled persecution in Tibet
decades ago, taken up residence in northern India, and now traveling the world
to spread a message of compassion and tolerance. Today, in his extended public
remarks on animal issues, he mentioned that he’s been back and forth on his
vegetarianism through his eight decades, and is not a vegetarian now. But he
condemned factory farming, and specifically the rearing of hens in battery
cages. He said that being vegetarian is better for us and better for animals,
and that South Indian vegetarian food is his favorite cuisine. Throughout his
entire speech and in the question and answer session that followed, he wore a
Humane Society International baseball cap, which delighted me even though it
clashed with his Buddhist monastic robe.
Kapoor, best known to American
audiences for his roles in “Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol” and the
Oscar-winning “Slumdog Millionaire,” gave a fiery address about animal
protection and also food and agriculture: “No one needs to sleep hungry, let
alone die of starvation. Yet tens of thousands of children sleep hungry each
night because the grains that could nourish these children [go] not into their
bellies, but the bellies of the cows, pigs and chickens that form an essential
part of a non-vegetarian diet….Our prosperity, enjoyment and progress are only
deeply valued when they do not come at the expense of others.”
With journalists representing
more than 100 press outlets at the event, it was a turbo-charged launch
for Humane Society International – India. We hope it gives us momentum to grow
our projects and to enhance our prospects for success. The Dalai Lama’s warm
embrace and his reminder that all life matters helps root our cause even more
solidly, especially in Asia where animal problems are so acute and action is so
desperately needed.



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