Jallikattu
is not Bull Fight
At the outset, let me affirm that I am not in favour
of either, the jallikattu as practised mainly in the southern districts
of Tamil Nadu and the bull fight in Spain. Yet, were I to be forced to choose
between the two, I would choose jallikattu. The reason for my choice is
that it is the sport (?) festival owned by a region in the state I belong to,
Tamil Nadu. This does not make me parochial, far be it. My choice is my
assessment of the level of cruelty visited upon the animal.
I am not a card carrying member of PETA (People for
Ethical Treatment of Animals), yet I carry an intense level of empathy for
animals (not for insects!). This write-up is to make the distinction crystal
clear.
For the substantive issue, the statement explaining
the photo got it precisely right – a “gutsy tamer”, and not a fighter as in
Spain’s bull fights (a choreographed dance, it actually is, with three matadors,
each taking on two bulls, culminating in the bulls’ death). In Jallikattu,
the bull will be repeatedly irritated before being let out into the ring (an
annual “celebration”). On this count I am not as much in favour of Jallikattu
as this too is annual torture, not clearly more humane than clear-cut
once-and-for all execution.
I am trying to be consistent across issues with a
number of ifs and bu s. There can be no consistent morality for a human being,
unsullied by her sensibilities. I will not thik twice before crushing a
cockroach or a spider. I live with this cognitive dissonance.
Raghuram Ekambaram
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