Ravi Palihawadana's Response to RAR that the Newspapers Didn't Publish
-
Upload
ravi-palihawadana -
Category
Documents
-
view
218 -
download
0
Transcript of Ravi Palihawadana's Response to RAR that the Newspapers Didn't Publish
8/4/2019 Ravi Palihawadana's Response to RAR that the Newspapers Didn't Publish
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ravi-palihawadanas-response-to-rar-that-the-newspapers-didnt-publish 1/4
Ravi Palihawadana’s Response to Mr. R.A. Ratwatte that the
Newspapers Did Not Publish
While calling me a ‘greenie’ (Domesticating elephants, Opinion, ‘The Island’, 13th
Sept), Mr. R. A.
Ratwatte (RAR) of Kandy tries to romanticize the taming of elephants, conveniently glossing over the
objectionable aspects of the practice. But to the discerning reader who reads between the lines, this
other aspect is patently evident.
RAR: "We picked a coconut estate …, in a fairly remote area with good access to a river.”
RP: This is exactly one point that we animal lovers keep harping on. Elephants in the wild are free
roaming and wide ranging animals. They cannot and should not be kept in confined places. How many
of the elephant-keeping aristocrats and the nouveau riche who would do anything to obtain one to keep
as a status symbol, let alone city temples, have enough space in their premises to keep an elephant
nowadays?
8/4/2019 Ravi Palihawadana's Response to RAR that the Newspapers Didn't Publish
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ravi-palihawadanas-response-to-rar-that-the-newspapers-didnt-publish 2/4
RAR: “We also fed her treacle and jaggery"
RP: While this may endear Mr. Ratwatte to some readers, he is in fact doing a disservice to “Kiri”.
Treacle and jaggery are not part of the natural diet of elephants. Captive elephants are often fed with
diets that lack variety and are nutritionally inadequate and well-meaning but misguided “elephant lovers”
often treat elephants with the wrong kind of food that is detrimental to their long term health.
RAR: “Having Rani was also very helpful because she was able to communicate with Kiri … Rani
started lactating and decided that this calf was hers.”
RP: Yes, elephants are social animals that cannot and should not be kept in solitary confinement.
That Rani started lactating dramatises this fact. However, most elephant keepers and city temples
neither have the space nor can afford the expense of keeping more than one elephant. So they have to
be kept in solitary confinement in chains stunting them emotionally and making them either aggressive or
resort to stereotypical behavior of nodding, body swaying, swinging of the trunk etc.
8/4/2019 Ravi Palihawadana's Response to RAR that the Newspapers Didn't Publish
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ravi-palihawadanas-response-to-rar-that-the-newspapers-didnt-publish 3/4
RAR: “Initially Kiri was tied to Khadira ... This meant that Kiri was compelled to do everything Khadira
did”
RP: We believe nature and evolution have bestowed elephants with all the training they require and
they do not need the avuncular help of the likes of RAR and Khadira in terms of training in life skills.
RAR: “ As you may have gathered sometimes has to be cruel to be kind"
RP: How cruel you have to be to be kind?
RAR: “ Appeals for rationality and good sense from all those who are genuinely interested in the well
being and survival of our very own Elephas Maximus Maximus. Rationality that ensures the wild
elephants live with dignity and relative comfort and the age old art of domesticating elephants is not
forgotten as an alternative to culling.”
RP: According to RAR, “Kiri” was so weak that when she lay down she needed help to get up again.”
Marauding elephants who come to villages in search of food are generally the most aggressive ones. If
they are caught in order to be “trained” they will resist violently and get themselves cut badly by the
restraining ropes that will result in horrific injuries and death. The solution elephant experts suggest to
alleviate Human Elephant conflict (HEC) is to refrain from encroaching on land where elephants live, to
leave wide corridors for elephants to roam, and to put up electric fences to deter them from wandering
into villages.
RAR: “Watch the majestic Nadungamuwe Raja … walking in the perehera with his mahout well to the
rear .”
RP: As an animal lover, my idea of a majestic elephant is not one who stands still when it is asked to,
who does banal, boring and dangerous work day after day, hauling logs with its mouth damaging its
teeth and being paraded few times a year in religious pageants. My idea of a majestic beast is one who
roams the wild with its herd and who passes on its superior genes to the coming generations.
Ganga of Gangarama Temple, 61, Sri Jinaratana Road, Colombo 2, Sri Lanka (e-mail: [email protected]) Sleeping on its
urine and feces (Picture Credit: Ms. Laurene Knowles)
8/4/2019 Ravi Palihawadana's Response to RAR that the Newspapers Didn't Publish
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/ravi-palihawadanas-response-to-rar-that-the-newspapers-didnt-publish 4/4
RAR: “The "Bull hook" is custom manufactured …This was the practice but I am sure it has died out
now as has the art of a genuine elephant keeper.”
RP: Not only there is a dearth of genuine elephant keepers nowadays, there is a dearth of good
mahouts and people who know the art of manufacturing the implements of cruelty needed for the
practice. Keeping elephants in captivity is a practice that is dying a natural death. Trying to revive this
vile practice is not only an ill-informed scheme but one that will ultimately result in the death of many
magnificent beasts that are peacefully roaming the wild at present.
It is far easier to wake up somebody in deep slumber than someone who is pretending to be asleep. Mr.
Ratwatte knows very well the cruelties involved with elephant keeping but steadfastly refuses to
acknowledge them.
I’d rather a greenie be
Than an elephant keeper airy
Who tamed little ‘Kiri’
Feeding her treacle and jag’ry
While keeping her away from ‘Aunt Rani’
- Ravi Palihawadana