Kitty Jones,
Direct Action
Everywhere (DxE)
August 2016
In this speciesist world, his life meant nothing.
In memory of a fun-loving skunk whose life was cut drastically short...
I've been wanting to share this story for a long time.
When I was in middle school, I visited my father and his then-girlfriend in
Vermont. I had just gone vegan. While I was there, someone who had been
working in the woods had found a baby skunk. I do not know what happened to
the skunk's family; I assume that his mother had been killed because it is
extremely unlikely for a mother skunk, or any mother of any species, to
abandon her baby. Everyone knew how much I love wildlife, so they gave me
the baby to care for.
This is the only photo I have of him. He was giving me kisses...
I had been volunteering at a ferret shelter and rescue in Seattle at that
time, and I had been learning a lot about skunks, so I was beyond thrilled
to have a new friend to play and learn with. We had so much fun – he was so
playful and spunky. He was small enough to hold in the palm of my hand but
had so much energy and curiosity about the world. We played for hours; he
would romp around on the bed, attacking my hands and gently nibbling my
fingers, then run off again. Sometimes he would get all excited and lift his
little butt in the air as if to spray me (which he couldn't because he
hadn't yet developed his scent glands), and then he would quickly turn
around and grab my fingers with his tiny paws.
I will never forget the playfulness and curiosity in his eyes.
The next day, I came back to the house to discover that my friend had been
killed. I was absolutely crushed. They had taken him away while I was gone
during the day, and I never got to see him again. I never saw his body, and
he was never given a respectful burial. All I could think about was how
happy he had been the day before when we were playing together. The
innocence in his eyes, the softness of his fur, his bounciness and joy...
What happened was that a parent had called animal control complaining that
her young child had interacted with a wild animal and demanded to have the
animal tested for rabies.
My skunk friend did not bite this child. He had no sign of rabies.
But the only way to test for rabies is to get a sample of brain tissue, and
the only way to do that is to kill the animal. In this speciesist
world, his life meant nothing.
The results were negative.
I gave myself a stick-and-poke tattoo of a skunk paw print in his honor.
To this day, the memory weighs on my mind. He did not have a name. The
cows, pigs, turkeys, goats and other sensitive beings I have met on "farms"
also did not have names. And I will never forget them either.
I know that we will achieve animal liberation; I know that someday, animals
will not be murdered for being "pests"; someday, we will not steal their
eggs or their breast milk; and someday, we will have sanctuaries instead of
slaughterhouses.
Fight for them with me.
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