We cannot escape this violence if we aren’t willing to acknowledge all of its victims, including nonhuman animals. The dairy industry is based on sexual violence, which we already know is unacceptable. We all deserve the right to our bodies, and to our lives. Yet, every year in the United States, more than 9 million female cows are sexually violated so that they can be robbed of the milk they produce for their babies.
Source: yan McGuire, Pixabay free download
When I was seventeen years old, I woke up to find a man on top of me. I was in my bed laying on my stomach, so I couldn’t even see who was touching me, but as I struggled to get up, this stranger pinned me down. My only hope at that moment was that someone would open the door, come in and help me. Nobody did.
I was taken back to this moment last October, when I visited a dairy farm
in Stanislaus County, California. The farm is called RayMar Ranches, a
supplier of In-N-Out Burger and Costco. I was one of nearly one hundred
individuals in attendance for a peaceful vigil to bear witness to the
thousands of baby cows confined on this farm, in hutches barely bigger than
their own bodies. Investigators with Direct Action Everywhere, the nonprofit
animal rights organization where I am a volunteer, had previously documented
horrific conditions on the farm, including a mass graveyard of dead cows
festering with maggots.
From the road, you could already see row after row of baby calves and hear
them crying out for their mothers, but I knew that further in, there was
worse to be seen. Still, I couldn’t have imagined what we ended up finding.
Where the grave zone had previously been documented, there was now only one
dead cow, thrown out like garbage and likely soon to be piled above with
more of the dead. The three of us who found her walked closer to her body,
and as we neared her, she made the tiniest movement, just enough to reveal
that she was still alive. She had been thrown out like garbage, left to
suffer alone as she was dying.
Any feeling person who saw her, laying there half-dead in the scorching
heat, would have felt pity for her, but I felt the kind of empathy that
comes from knowing all too well what someone is feeling, the desperation and
the hopelessness that she must have felt.
With this calf, in her most vulnerable moment, we had come just in time. We
opened a water bottle and poured water into her mouth. My friends lifted her
up in their arms and carried her toward the road as I got out my phone and
called for help. This baby was dying; the farm saw no more value in her
life, but we could save her. And I was so full of hope in that frenzied
moment that when I saw the police approaching us with their arms
outstretched, I felt relief. The police were going to help. This baby would
be okay.
But when we got to them, the police used their hands to stop us. They forced
the cow out of our arms and threw her back to the ground. They handcuffed us
and sat us down where we could only watch as the calf got closer and closer
to dying. We couldn’t provide her any comfort in those final moments.
Instead, we were arrested and brought to jail on charges of felony grand
theft. For trying to save a dying baby cow. It was surreal sitting in jail
for doing something so intrinsic to our nature, for helping an animal in
need.
The rough arrest had led my skirt to rise up and my shirt to expose more of
my body, and I couldn’t cover myself because my hands were cuffed.2. One
officer gawked at me and said, “That’s not an outfit for jail, honey.” They
laughed at me while I was sitting exposed, like I was an object for their
amusement, and at that moment, I understood how I could be in jail for doing
the right thing. When society sees you as an object, they can do anything to
you. I was just an object of pleasure to the person who violated me when I
was seventeen, and this calf, who we named Angel, was just an object to the
people who violated her rights.
I was born in India, which has been called “the most dangerous country to be
a woman.” This is one of the reasons why my parents and I migrated to the
United States when I was just 11 years old, hoping to escape the violence.
But when I came here, I saw violence against women happening everywhere.
Sexual assault exists in our schools, in our workplaces and in our homes.
But it doesn’t stop there: Sexual assault is also present all around us in
our food system. I came to the U.S. to escape a country that is overwhelmed
with cases of violent rape but found myself the victim of exactly what I
wanted to escape.
We cannot escape this violence if we aren’t willing to acknowledge all of
its victims, including nonhuman animals. The dairy industry is based on
sexual violence, which we already know is unacceptable. We all deserve the
right to our bodies, and to our lives. Yet, every year in the United States,
more than 9 million female cows are sexually violated so that they can be
robbed of the milk they produce for their babies. And the vast majority are
robbed of their babies as well. With the rising public awareness of sexual
violence and harassment, I hope society will soon make the connection to
other species whose systemic exploitation is a feminist issue—and whose
liberation is intrinsically connected to our own.
Notes and references:
1. Priya Sawhney is an organizer and investigator with
Direct Action
Everywhere. Follow her on Twitter @priyadxe27. This original essay was
produced by
Earth | Food | Life, a project of the Independent Media
Institute. It raises many topics about which numerous people remain unaware
and about about which I've previously written, including essays on cow
sentience, their cognitive and emotional lives, and how they're objectified
and treated as unfeeling objects and breeding machines.
2. Being arrested can be very traumatic. Professor William (Bill) Crain's
stories about his being arrested for protesting bear hunting in New Jersey
ring true for me, based on many years of teaching a course on animal
behavior, behavioral ecology, and compassionate conservation at the Boulder
(Colorado) County Jail.
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