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- Path: sparky!uunet!pipex!bnr.co.uk!uknet!mcsun!julienas!sophia!marais.inria.fr!chandy
- From: chandy@marais.inria.fr (Chandra SHEKHAR)
- Newsgroups: rec.food.veg
- Subject: Re: Limited vegetarianism of India
- Message-ID: <36822@sophia.inria.fr>
- Date: 21 Dec 92 10:29:11 GMT
- References: <1992Dec20.081129.6411@abo.fi> <shenoy.724867912@pv0260.vincent.iastate.edu>
- Sender: news@sophia.inria.fr
- Organization: INRIA, Sophia-Antipolis (Fr)
- Lines: 39
-
- In article <shenoy.724867912@pv0260.vincent.iastate.edu>, shenoy@iastate.edu
- (Shiva Shenoy) writes:
- |> In <1992Dec20.081129.6411@abo.fi> abulsari@abo.fi (Abhay Bulsari VT)
- |> writes:
- |>
- |> >well. One argument given to me was that cows would not give milk
- |> >before they fed the calves. This does change my stand, even if it is
- |> >true, and I don't think that is true.
- |>
- |> There is some truth to that especially in villages where a family owns a
- |> few
- |> heads of cattle. People do respect the animals even today. This is
- |> obviously
- |> not true in urban areas which are in a minority anyway. After giving birth,
- |> the mother does produce an excessive amount of milk and there is a limit to
- |> how much a calf can feed same as any human being.
-
- In 99.99 % of the cases, all male calves are killed soon after birth.
- To persuade the cow to keep giving milk, the dead calf is stuffed
- with straw and placed near its mother. I have seen this done in
- some of the most orthodox Brahmin households in Southern India.
- Can't say I am greatly impressed by the humanitarian values displayed
- here ...
-
- |> As far as changing food habits when they go abroad, a lot of it because of
- |> the inavailability of vegetarian food. Your only choice is to cook it
- |> yourself. People are only human. Try and come to Iowa sometime. They are
- |> still 25 years behind in the times. This place is the leading pork
- |> producer.
- |> People associate vegetarianism with eating raw vegetables and bland salads.
- |>
-
- Abhay's basic point is still true. Indian vegetarianism is a matter of
- habit and compulsion, and not of conscious choice. Indians therefore do
- not deserve much credit it. Concern for the plight of animals is usually
- just a post facto explanation, rather than a real motive for vegetarianism.
-
-
- Chandy
-