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The
Texas Massacre:
Horse Slaughter in America
Laura
Moretti,
Founder,
The Animals Voice
There
has been no rest for the incredibly, terribly weary. They
arrive utterly exhausted, frantically falling over themselves
as they dangerously slip on the feces- and urine-slicked
floors of the two-tier cattle truck that has brought them
here. They are pushed forward with electric prods into
the temporary holding pens outside the killing plant. From
California to Texas, they arrive bearing the scars of their
strenuous 30-hour trek across state lines from other
states, the journey has been nearly 2,000 miles. They arrive
injured, emaciated, pregnant. And they have come a long
way; all of them: registered thoroughbreds, purebred Arabians,
former wild ponies, speckled appaloosas, draft horses,
donkeys, old-timers and newly born foals. Not a horse is
safe from the Texas massacres.
A
number of the horses in the 45-head-packed truck arrive
too injured to walk from the transport themselves; like
any downed animal arriving at slaughter, they are dragged
by their legs to the killing floor. Dead horses are trashed fallen
and trampled victims of transport in a truck designed for
animals half their size.
They
arrive hungry. Thirsty. Terrified. But it matters not.
In just a few hours' time, they will be forced through
kill chutes, shot in their heads with captive-bolt pistols,
butchered, packaged, refrigerated and shipped abroad by
air and by sea to countries where dining on horse flesh
has become a reborn fashion.
These
images circle through my mind as I climb to the top rail
and survey horses mulling about in the manure and fly-infested
confines of the killer pen their last stop here
in California before the long and torturous journey to
Texas. These hapless creatures a mere unwanted hundred
or two of the more than 300,000 butchered in the United
States have become statistics in the yearly export
trade in horse flesh: the little Arabian, back from her
lease to the U.S.-based Mexican "Charro" rodeo,
badly banged and bruised; the big white blind mare who
circles nervously in her so-called protective enclosure;
a rose-grey Arabian with swollen, runny eyes whose "owner" fell
from her and then branded her wild, dooming her to the
kill pen; the seal-bay thoroughbred filly who walks with
an unacceptable twist of her right rear pastern; the cancer-afflicted
Welsh pony; the unmanageable pinto stallion who relentlessly
expresses his dissatisfaction over this unusual confinement;
they're all here: the emaciated backyard abuse cases, the "excess" racing
stock, the lame, the injured, and the ill. Alone, by herself,
an appaloosa mare lies colic-stricken beneath the rain-threatening
sky. She was unloaded here due to an intestinal stone too
painful to pass; if the condition doesn't kill her, the
slaughterman will.
But
these unfortunate animals are only the exception, not the
rule. Fully trained, young, sound, well-groomed horses
pack the dusty, stench-wreaking pens, competing with one
another for impoverished food and muddy-colored water.
I
spy a young dapple-grey Arabian gelding. A long black
forelock falls across his face; the wind picks up his thick
mane and tosses it over an arched neck. He dances, paws
the ground for a moment and then stares across the roadway
to where the mountains meet the sky. A friend climbs
onto the fence beside me. "Nice horse," she whispers,
and I agree. He epitomizes the spirit of one of the most
noble animals on Earth.
Fifty
million years ago, horses began their remarkable evolutionary
ascent but as
recently as the Ice Age, human beings have been preying
upon them for food, forcing wild herds over cliff edges
as a means of slaughter. At the dawn of the New Stone Age a
mere 6,000 years ago humans found ways to tame this
flighty beast, raise it, as it were, for food, hides and
then for transportation.
The
horse had become the most important animal known to human
beings and was believed to be fit for the gods so much so that it was sacrificed in
religious ceremonies, enabling believing consumers of its
flesh to acquire its strength. With the advent of Christianity,
however, old religious practices were discarded and in
732 A.D., Pope Gregory III passed a papal law forbidding
the eating of horses. Before long, only pagans ate horses;
overall, consuming its flesh had become taboo.
Instead,
we found other uses for its strength and
speed.During World War I, more than one million horses
died for the human cause; in one day alone, 7,000 equines
poured their innocent blood onto the smokey battlefields.
They plowed our fields, transported human belongings as
well as human beings, moved covered wagons and stagecoaches
across the West, provided the Pony Express and sheriffs'
posses, built our cities, and helped to fight our wars.
In short, it was the horse who raised Western civilization.
Today,
the Edinburgh School of Agriculture in England has estimated
the worldwide horse population at more than 65 million,
10 million of whom live in the United States. Each year
alone, horse sports draw 110 million spectators; in dollars,
horse care draws: $15 billion; investment and maintenance:
$13 billion; and rodeos: $110 million.
And
the trade in their flesh is estimated at $150 million.
It is a hidden industry, dating back to age-old taboos.
Even the "Society for the Propagation
of Horse Flesh as an Article of Food" failed to encourage
consumers to develop a taste for horse. This time, the
failure was a result of a 20th century move toward respect
for animal life and a growing worldwide vegetarian population.
Still, the slaughter continues, supplying the demand for
pockets of horse-eaters in France, Belgium and Japan. In
the United States though legal the idea of
eating horses is so offensive that killer buyers prefer
to be called "horsetraders," slaughterhouses
become "meat packing plants," and the byproduct
of their industry is hidden in pet food cans and, more
largely about 90% of it is shipped abroad
where it remains mostly out of our sight and out of mind.
The
dapple-grey Arabian steps forward.
He is curious about me and nuzzles my foot. I'm told he's
perfectly trained and has been in the killer pen but a
day so he is still healthy and strong, his spirit unbroken.
In Texas, he'll fetch about $800 in horse steaks. For $50
more, to encourage the killer buyer to relinquish him to
me instead, I can take him home.
Horses
are now being slaughtered for human consumption as rapidly
as one every two minutes. Prized for being leaner and healthier
than hormone-injected beef or poultry, more than 65 million
pounds of horsemeat were exported in 1985; three years
ago, the figure had more than doubled; currently, the U.S.
ships 125 million pounds to Europe and Japan where they are divided into
steaks, sausage and other cuts making the U.S. the
leading country in the horse flesh trade. The economy,
the horse breeding craze, and the market for horse flesh,
is fast making horses more valuable dead than alive. At
horse and livestock auctions, where most of these horses
are sold, animals are being bought anywhere from 50¢ to
90¢ per pound; rendering for pet food only pays about
10¢.
So
methods for obtaining slaughter-bound horses vary. There
are the auctions where most horse sellers are assuming
they're selling animals to horse lovers not horse
killers. Unlike other livestock auctions, not many suspect
that the pound on the hoof is the target.
There
are killer buyers, like dog and cat USDA "B" dealers in
vivisection circles, who promise a family's backyard
horse a life of leisure on non-existent farms and coax
below-market sales, turning profits by herding the animals
onto double-decked cattle trucks bound for one of the
11 foreign-owned killing plants in the U.S.
Why
the secrecy? "It's
an industry that involves killing pets," explains
Jim Weems, [former] Administrative Vice President of
Great Western Meat Co. in Morton, Texas ["Meat's
Hidden Industry," Jane Kelly; Meat & Poultry,
Sept 1991]. "Of course, horsemeat companies are
publicity shy. Our buyers go at these auctions to bid
against people who are interested in buying a pony for
their child."
Great
Western Meat Co. sends a special chill along my spine.
Last year, 60,000 horses were trucked to that slaughterhouse,
eight percent of them right here from California and 60 were dead on arrival, from
who knows what. I stroke the dapple-grey Arabian's dished
face and his ears and look into his liquid brown eyes
as he shoves his head against me to ask for a scratch.
Great Western Meat Co., I think again. That's exactly
where he's headed.
It
isn't that people haven't tried to protect horses from
slaughter in the United States. Try they do. Still, both
federal and state legislation fails. Horses have not
yet been officially classed as either companion animals
or livestock, so, when in doubt, they fall under guidelines
issued by the Department of Agriculture. But, like most
livestock animals in the United States, whatever laws
exist governing their protection, they are seldom, if
ever, enforced.
In
a sworn statement before Cook County, State of Illinois,
a former employee [name withheld] of Cavel International,
a horse slaughtering plant, testified the following:
In
July 1991, they were unloading one of the double-decker
trucks. A horse got his leg caught in the side of the
truck so the driver pulled the rig up and and the horse's
leg popped off. The horse was still living, and it was
shaking. [Another employee] popped it on the head and
we hung it up and split it open. ... Sometimes we would
kill near 390, 370 a day. Each double-decker might have
up to 100 on it. We would pull off the dead ones with
chains. Ones that were down on the truck, we would drag
them off with chains and maybe put them in a pen or we
might drag them with an automatic chain to the knockbox.
Sometimes we would use an electric shocker to try to
make them stand. To get them into the knockbox, you have
to shock them ... sometimes run them up the [anus] with
the shocker. ... When we killed a pregnant mare, we would
take the guts out and I would take the bag out and open
it and cut the cord and put it in the trash and sometimes
the baby would still be living, and its heart would be
beating, but we would put it in the trashcan.
"The
horse industry is accountable for these atrocities," says
Linda Moss, co-founder of Equus Horse Rescue organization. "But
to stop the slaughter, we need to change the nature of
our industry. Breeders are going to have to cut back.
Trainers won't be able to unload horses they've wrecked.
If we're going to race horses, we should have more races
for slower and older horses. You can't just throw away
these animals; you have to find the right place for them
to be" [Ride! Magazine].
Day
is turning to dusk and an almost cold wind picks up.
I leave the kill pen for the car, hoping to find a sweater
or jacket into which I'll crawl. Along the way, I pass
the kill buyer. He's leaning in the barn's breezeway,
on a payphone, and he smiles a little at me as I walk
by. Despite his friendliness, I can tell, by the tone
in his voice, that he is irritated. "This
isn't right," he keeps saying into the receiver.
Seems cattle are more on the move this week and he's
having a great deal of trouble finding a truck for this
week's load of horses. He can't keep the horses here
for long; they're costing him to feed and he has more
than enough for one more truckload this month. "This
isn't right," I hear him say again, and I can't
help but agree with him from a slightly different
perspective.
Still,
I find the irony. He's merely the middleman. He is not
the enemy. The enemy is the bigger picture: the breeders
of horses, the people who acquire them and then abandon
them to any fate.
I
pull the collar around me, lean onto the fence again
to watch the dapple-grey Arabian. He sees me and shifts
his weight; I know he's going to turn in my direction
now, to approach and stand by me, perhaps in his horsey
way, to ask me to free him.
I
scratch his neck and he loves it, but in the middle of
our momentary liberation from the doom around us, headlights
shatter the encroaching darkness. I turn my head and
watch the truck make its slow journey across the pot-holed
dirt driveway. It is coming for him. There are tiny lights
along every edge of the trailer, and it is lit
up like a Christmas tree. It is empty now, too, but it
is a different kind of truck. There is ample room for
horses in it, partitioned stalls that separate the animals
from each other to prevent injury; there are padded walls
and rubber mats on the floors; there is hay and sweet
grain in the feed troughs.
The
truck stops and Linda Moss gets out. "Is
he ready?" she asks. I scratch the dapple-grey Arabian
one more time and feel my heart warm. "He's come
to the gate," I said. "I think he's ready."
So
was the big, white blind mare. And two of the
Charros' "toys." Then
we squeezed in an Arabian filly just for good measure.
It
was nightfall when we arrived at the temporary
sanctuary (we're looking for something permanent). Barn
lights shattered the darkness, horses whinnied a welcome,
and a volunteer crew emerged to help unload our cargo.
It
is a wonderful feeling, a feeling beyond words,
to actually remove other living beings from the jaws
of death, and in
this case to prepare them a room of their own
with fresh water and alfalfa hay, wood shavings for bedding,
and a bucket of sweet grain.
It
is a wonderful feeling for the horses, too. The dapple-grey
Arabian called to me when I left the barn to observe
the outside activities. He knew so soon that I had come
to save him. He KNEW it even before I did, I think. I named him "Shilo" after
Neil Diamond's song, the one he wrote about his only
dependable friend.
I
thought about my brand new friendship with Shilo that rare kind of bonding you have
only with an animal as I leaned in the barn's
doorway and watched him grab a bite of alfalfa and molasses
then check to see if I was still there. Outside in the
lit night, the irony of it all had shadowed us. It is
all we can afford: The Equus Horse Rescue Sanctuary is
shared by a group of Charro cowboys.
They
drink beer, smoke cigarettes, and sit on the fence; they
train their rodeo horses in the arena and practice their
lassoing techniques. If the cowboys are at all amused
or annoyed with us, it's hard to tell. They feed carrots
to the wounded ponies who had once been chased and injured
in one of their rodeos; they offer to hold a filly for
a volunteer while she medicates her; they unload a bag
of grain from the truck bed for us.
I
do not understand the human race ... and for now that
would have to suffice; inside the barn, bedded and fed
and groomed, a dozen horses prepare for a long and enriched
life that only a few hours earlier had been doomed to
the slaughterhouse. For a few, it would be a good night.
For
more essays by Laura Moretti, visit her web
site.
For more information on this issue, visit ORGANIZATIONS,
IMAGE GALLERY, FACT SHEETS, ETC., and BOOKS.
All are projects of The Animals Voice

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