NARN Northwest Animal Rights
Network
July 2017
Kris stands with the “Animals Are Not Property” sign alongside Ryan and
Shannon Hill of Sky’s The Limit Sanctuary, Paul and Maggie Bowen, and Dave
Roers outside the Enunclaw Live Animal Auction in June.
Kristina Giovanetti is the founder of Seattle Farmed Animal Save, a nonprofit that’s part of The Save Movement, a global effort that started in December 2010 with Toronto Pig Save. The idea is to bear witness to animals sent to slaughter in our own communities. Kris has been holding personal vigils at the Enumclaw Sales Pavilion’s live animal auction for about a year and invites everyone to join her.
The next vigil is from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday, July 15. As the
Facebook invitation says, “We are a grassroots, love-based, and peaceful
organization. We believe in non-violence and the transformational power of
compassion. We follow a Tolstoyian perspective in that we do not believe in
turning away from suffering, but instead moving closer to it.” It’s a
heart-wrenching experience to watch roosters, geese, rabbits and others
struggle and cry out as they are auctioned. There are almost always day-old
dairy calves, piglets, lambs and baby goats — and once a month, they auction
horses that are sold for slaughter.
It’s also powerful to stand on the road outside the pavilion with signs
reminding people that animals don’t belong to us, encouraging them to go
vegan, and to honk for the pigs. A surprising number of people honk! A lot
yell for us to “get a job,” too, which is puzzling and good for a laugh.
Here’s a Q&A with Kris about The Save Movement in
Seattle
Q: What moved you to start a branch of The Save Movement here?
In June 2016, I attended an all-day vigil in Toronto with Anita, the founder
of The Save Movement. We spent 16 hours bearing witness outside pig, cow,
and chicken slaughterhouses. The pigs deeply affected me – looking into
their eyes, you can really see the fear, you can sense their suffering in a
profound way.
A: Pigs are very much like dogs and to lock eyes with them,
to reach out and stroke them in an attempt to provide a moment of comfort
and then watch the truck turn into the slaughterhouse where you know they
will be brutally killed just moments later is a life changing event.
That day in Toronto I became an activist.
Q: When did you start going to the Enumclaw Live Animal Auction?
What have you seen there?
A: When I returned home, I immediately started looking
for places near me to connect with the animals and share their stories. My
first trip to the auction barn in Enumclaw was in July 2016.
I’ve seen so many horrible things there – the chickens are transported in
cardboard boxes with a few air holes punched in the sides. There is a
stone-faced woman who always works the birds. She reaches in, pins their
wings behind their back and yanks them out of the box. The birds are
screaming, literally screaming as she holds them high and waves them around
in the air for a few seconds as the auctioneer works the crowd and finally
sells them for 3 to maybe 9 dollars. Then the woman shoves the screaming and
terrified bird back into the box, head first.
The day-old male dairy calves always stay with me, in my mind, for days
after I see them. They still have umbilical cords dangling from their
bellies and look absolutely bewildered. They have no idea they are being
sold to become veal calves and will spend the next few weeks chained to a
crate and will then be killed.
This place sells lambs and baby goats, too. The babies are always very hard
to see. But I think the spent dairy cows are the most heartbreaking of all.
They are absolutely skin and bones – it looks like they haven’t been fed for
weeks. Their bodies are emaciated and they have large, swollen udders. But
it’s the look in their eyes and the way they hang their head that just rips
my heart out. These sweet, gentle beings have been impregnated over and over
again, and have had their calves stolen from them every single time. Their
bodies have been exploited and pushed absolutely to the breaking point. And
when their milk production begins to wane, the farmers stop feeding them,
then sell them to slaughter to become cheap hamburger meat. It’s absolutely
gut-wrenching to see them.
Q: What does it mean to you to bear witness as these animals are
sold? What is the power of bearing witness?
A: Bearing witness is being present in the face of
injustice and trying to help. When we bear witness we become the situation –
we connect with our entire body and mind. And from that, action arises. The
purpose of bearing witness is to provide love and compassion to these
animals, to share their stories, to show the reality of animal agriculture,
raising awareness to the public, and helping people make the connection.
People need to understand what goes on so they will make the decision to
stop supporting it.
Q: How do people react to the protest? What do you think of the
calls to “get a job”?
A: We get about an equal number of supportive people and
angry people, and a lot of people just pass by with no visible or audible
reaction. The supportive people will honk in a friendly manner and give a
thumbs up. The angry people show us their middle finger and yell at us. The
comment to “get a job” is so curious to me because we hear it all the time,
and I’ve heard it at vigils all over the world. I think what they are really
saying is that we should do something constructive with our time.
Q: Are there also slaughterhouses near Seattle? Where are they, and
what do you know about them?
A: Yes, there are two slaughterhouses within an hour of
Seattle that we have investigated and will be holding vigils at. Both of
them are north of the city, around Stanwood and Mt Vernon. The Draper Valley
chicken slaughterhouse kills more than 800,000 chickens each week.
Q: Do you plan to have vigils at the slaughterhouses, too?
A: Absolutely! We are learning the truck schedules and will
be starting vigils up there very soon.
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