This Easter I hope you will remember the gentle lamb and the mother hen. If you still eat them, it will be an opportunity for you to reflect on the cruelty involved getting them to your plate, and to begin your transition to a harmless diet.
This weekend, families across the country and around the world will
celebrate Easter with leg of lamb dinners and egg hunts. The tradition of
eating lamb at Easter has old testament roots, and was part of Jewish
Passover observances before the birth of Christianity. Similarly, eggs have
been a symbol of rebirth and new life since ancient times, but it was
Mesopotamian Christians who first adopted them as an Easter food. [Please
also read
The 'Easter' Chick – A Lost Soul]
While eating lamb and eggs at Easter reaches back to antiquity we should not
in this, or in any other case, accept tradition blindly. While traditions
are well and good – they give us a sense of comfort, pride and belonging –
they must always be revised and adapted in light of an ever-changing
society. If a particular tradition is cruel or harmful to sentient beings
(as in many that involve other animals) then it is immoral to continue with
it, and it should be stopped. As celebrated Animal Rights Activist Maneka
Gandhi wrote in the article ‘Tradition is no excuse for Cruelty’, about a
barbaric Indian rite of passage ritual (Ukweshwama) where a group of youths
torment and slaughter a terrified bull with their bare hands:
“While I respect culture, this bull-killing ritual causes extreme suffering
to an innocent creature and has no place in the modern world. Tradition is
not an excuse for cruelty, and many societies have ended or are working to
end ‘traditional’ practices—such as slavery, cannibalism, infanticide,
female circumcision, foot-binding, bullfighting, and fox hunting—that cause
animals or humans to suffer”.
Is it acceptable now to eat the flesh of baby animals to commemorate the
birth and death of Christ, himself called The Lamb of God because he
submitted meekly to his persecutors ‘like a lamb led to the slaughter’.?
Isaiah 53:7:
Is it acceptable now to eat the eggs of mother hens who are confined to tiny
cages on factory farms for their entire wretched lives? Even free range eggs
involve cruelty such as killing one day old roosters by shredding or
suffocation. I think the answer is clear. The tradition of eating chocolate
eggs can stay, but the practise of consuming eggs that involve extreme
cruelty to sentient beings has no place in a progressive, compassionate
society.
This Easter I hope you will remember the gentle lamb and the mother hen. If you still eat them, it will be an opportunity for you to reflect on the cruelty involved getting them to your plate, and to begin your transition to a harmless diet.