SUITE ET SOURCE
" UNE JOURNÉE DANS UN ABATTOIR M' A RENDU VÉGÉTARIEN."
UNE PAGE DE PHOTOS
Italian photographer Francesco Scipioni conducted a day-long photoshoot in an Italian slaughterhouse and, as a result, became a vegetarian, he reports. Here is his collection.
ET AUSSI CE LIEN
VOUS AVEZ SANS DOUTE VU A QUEL POINT UN VEAU OU UNE VACHE SONT DES ANIMAUX JOYEUX, ILS SONT FACÉTIEUX, S' AMUSANT D' UN RIEN, GAMBADENT, QUÉMANDENT DES CARESSES..
ICI C' EST L' HISTOIRE D' UNE JEUNE VACHE DONT LE CARACTÈRE TOUT A COUP CHANGE LORSQUE LES TRAITES ONT AUGMENTÉ
EXTRAITS DE L' HISTOIRE DE LILLY QUI N' EST PAS... "UNE VACHE HEUREUSE" ..... SUITE ICI
This piece is part of a series on Wagner Farm, a real working farm outside of Chicago that is part of the Glenview Park District’s taxpayer funded property.
On the surface, everything looks “normal.” The beautiful red barn, the soft rolling pasture dotted with cows grazing and reclining in the grass and kids brushing a cow in the stall. It’s the warm and fuzzy image we have of the bucolic family farm where farmers take pride in their hard work and animal husbandry. Beyond the surface, however, is a far more sinister reality that has long been ignored and denied.
Beyond the surface lies the animal’s experience. If they could talk, these dairy cows would tell a tale of physical and psychological suffering they have endured from today’s standard dairy farming practices: artificial impregnation and manipulation of their reproductive systems, destruction of their family and social units, six-month isolation of newborn calves, painful bouts of mastitis due to overmilking and, ultimately, the undignified and unforgiving end at the slaughterhouse at just a fraction of their natural lifespan.
Debby Rubenstein, director of Wagner Farm Rescue Fund, is determined to tell the animals’ side of the story, interpreting their experience through close observation of their complex behavior and social interaction. Rubenstein has developed an intimate understanding of their individual personalities — their desires, interests, emotions, likes and dislikes — that most of us would never see."
... ET LORSQU' ELLE RECONNAIT LA VOIX DE SON VEAU QUI ÉTAIT ENCORE DANS LA FERME..
"Rubenstein describes one day arriving at WF and greeted with the frightful bellowing sounds coming from behind the barn. She rushed over to find Lilly running back and forth in distress. Then she saw Daisy standing at the pasture fence, mooing in response (even though she could not see Lilly). This was perhaps the first time since Daisy’s birth that Lilly realized that her daughter had not been taken away and was still in the barn area. It was clear to Rubenstein that Lilly recognized her daughter’s vocalizations.
On the surface, everything looks “normal.” The beautiful red barn, the soft rolling pasture dotted with cows grazing and reclining in the grass and kids brushing a cow in the stall. It’s the warm and fuzzy image we have of the bucolic family farm where farmers take pride in their hard work and animal husbandry. Beyond the surface, however, is a far more sinister reality that has long been ignored and denied.
Beyond the surface lies the animal’s experience. If they could talk, these dairy cows would tell a tale of physical and psychological suffering they have endured from today’s standard dairy farming practices: artificial impregnation and manipulation of their reproductive systems, destruction of their family and social units, six-month isolation of newborn calves, painful bouts of mastitis due to overmilking and, ultimately, the undignified and unforgiving end at the slaughterhouse at just a fraction of their natural lifespan.
Debby Rubenstein, director of Wagner Farm Rescue Fund, is determined to tell the animals’ side of the story, interpreting their experience through close observation of their complex behavior and social interaction. Rubenstein has developed an intimate understanding of their individual personalities — their desires, interests, emotions, likes and dislikes — that most of us would never see."
... ET LORSQU' ELLE RECONNAIT LA VOIX DE SON VEAU QUI ÉTAIT ENCORE DANS LA FERME..
"Rubenstein describes one day arriving at WF and greeted with the frightful bellowing sounds coming from behind the barn. She rushed over to find Lilly running back and forth in distress. Then she saw Daisy standing at the pasture fence, mooing in response (even though she could not see Lilly). This was perhaps the first time since Daisy’s birth that Lilly realized that her daughter had not been taken away and was still in the barn area. It was clear to Rubenstein that Lilly recognized her daughter’s vocalizations.
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