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Animal rights, ecofeminism, and rooster rehab

by: mickeyz

Mon Jun 08, 2009 at 07:24:06 AM PDT


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Mickey Z. interviews pattrice jones

pattrice jones is an ecofeminist educator, activist, and writer. She is the author of Aftershock: Confronting Trauma in a Violent World: A Guide for Activists and Their Allies and co-founder of the Eastern Shore Sanctuary and Education Center.

Founded in a rural region of Maryland dominated by the poultry industry, the sanctuary provides a haven for hens, roosters and ducks who have escaped or been rescued from the meat and egg industries or other abusive circumstances, such as cockfighting. Not surprisingly, pattrice and company take things further than your average sanctuary. "We work within an ecofeminist understanding of the interconnection of all life and the intersection of all forms of oppression," she explains. "Thus we welcome and work to facilitate alliances among animal, environmental, and social justice activists."

As the sanctuary begins a move from Maryland to Springfield, Vermont, I thought it would be the perfect time ask pattrice a few questions, via e-mail:

MZ: What led you to such work? Why hens, roosters, and ducks?

pj: We found a chicken in a ditch. Seriously. Miriam Jones and I (then partners, and still family) were both experienced social justice activists when we inadvertently landed in poultry country, having moved "back to the land" with Green Acres dreams of going off grid. At the time, it was not uncommon for birds to flee to freedom by jumping from transport trucks, and "growers" for the poultry industry would sometimes let us rescue birds they were supposed to cull (the industry has since tightened its transport and security procedures.)  One bird became two then five then thirty-five... within six months of finding the first bird, we incorporated the sanctuary.

MZ: Fortunately, there are many animal sanctuaries but I'm curious to know more about what you call the 'gendered form of animal exploitation."

pj: That first chicken was a rooster we originally mistook for a hen. I had to work hard to feel the same way about him once I knew he was a rooster. He was the same tenderly friendly bird he'd always been, but all of those "rooster" ideas - cocky, aggressive, etc. - were interfering with my ability to see him clearly. That got me thinking about the ways that people project gender stereotypes on animals and then read them back as evidence that traditional sex roles are natural, a process I have come to call the social construction of gender by way of animals. So, when we got an urgent call about 24 roosters who had been living together peacefully but all other sanctuaries had turned away under the theory that so many roosters cannot possibly get along, we said yes. Besides livening up the place, that colorful crew inspired us to try to figure out a way to rehabilitate roosters used in cockfighting, which we have done.

MZ: What do you mean when you say "rehabilitate roosters"?

pj: Roosters confiscated from cockfighting operations used to be automatically euthanized, on the presumption that they were too aggressive to ever live peacefully with other birds. But that's the propaganda of cockfighting enthusiasts, who argue that they are just watching roosters doing what comes naturally. In fact, chickens - like the wild jungle fowl from which they descended and to whom the birds used in cockfighting are very nearly genetically identical - naturally live in flocks in which multiple roosters coexist peacefully. Roosters in the wild fight to the death only against predators, not against each other! They sometimes will have highly stylized fights with each other, but these are not the pitched battles to the death that we see in cockfighting.

MZ: Why do fighting roosters fight?

pj: Raised in isolation and constant frustration, they never learn the social signals by which roosters resolve their conflicts and figure out their places in flocks. Prior to cockfighting bouts, they are often injected with testosterone and methamphetamines. In the bouts, they face opponents who, like themselves, have had their combs shaved (so they look more like a hawk than another chicken) and their spurs augmented by sharp blades. It's kill or be killed. What we do is give former fighters the chance to learn, by observation and gradual participation, the social skills they need to coexist peacefully with other birds. We give them a safe space from which to do this and, over time, recover from the trauma to which they have been subjected.

MZ: Your approach with the roosters sounds like a logical, compassionate strategy for any living thing that has undergone trauma.

pj: Right. We all - or at least all social species - need the same things when we've been traumatized, including safety or sanctuary and the chance to restore the relationships (with others and within ourselves) that have been strained or severed by trauma. I talk about that, for people, in my book Aftershock. In relation to animals, I'm happy to be working with Gay Bradshaw of the Kerulos Center and other members of the new International Association for Animal Trauma and Recovery; we've all been thinking hard about how to apply what we know about trauma and recovery among people to the task of helping animals who have suffered human-engendered trauma.

MZ: So now you're bringing this approach to a new location?

pj: Our move to a larger property in Vermont, a small state with 33 factory farms serving the dairy industry and adjacent to Maine (the home of the infamous DeCoster egg factory) will allow us to expand our bird rescue capacities and also expand our activism to include dairy, which - like cockfighting - is a gendered form of animal exploitation.

MZ: How can readers help and get involved?

pj: Because we were founded in one rural agricultural area and are now moving to another, we depend entirely on support from afar to fund our programs. Because we are a small and chronically underfunded sanctuary, even small donations make a big difference. And we fall all over ourselves with gratitude for those who can afford to give more and do. Folks can find donation information on our website (http://www.bravebirds.org).

If you live in a big city, another way to help out with money is to hold a vegan pot luck fundraiser at your house. Eat, watch a movie like Peaceable Kingdom or Chicken Run, and then pass the hat for the sanctuary.

In terms of volunteering, folks who live near our new location in Springfield, Vermont might want to pitch in on coop cleaning and grounds maintenance. We need folks in our original locale, on the Delmarva Peninsula, to occasionally help out by driving local birds to sanctuaries in Maryland and Virginia. As we expand our rooster rehab program, we'll be needing folks up and down the east coast to sign up to sometimes drive birds to us from wherever they might be confiscated by authorities after a cockfighting bust.

We need everybody to have a look at the information and ideas on our website and then subscribe to our blog so that they will receive action alerts as we continue and expand our efforts to fundamentally reform food and agriculture while building bridges among social justice, environmental, and animal liberation activists. We're going to be coordinating a new, explicitly feminist, campaign concerning dairy later this year. Watch for it!

You can e-mail pattrice at: sanctuary@bravebirds.org
Website: http://www.bravebirds.org

Until the laws are changed or the power runs out, Mickey Z. can be found on the Web at http://www.mickeyz.net

mickeyz :: Animal rights, ecofeminism, and rooster rehab
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Interesting (4.00 / 4)
her perspective on the rooster issues. We have 3 roosters right now, down from 5. All of our roosters get along because they have enough room to get away from each other when there's conflict. Generally, unless you have two animals that are equally dominant, there will be sparing and one animal will yield and move off a certain distance. If an animal like a rooster is cooped up with another bird, even if he yields, the fight will still continue because the submissive bird can't get out of the space of the dominant bird, which will result in the fight continuing even if the submissive bird is running around and around the cage.

Generally, in the wild or in a range environment, animals have elaborate systems of communicating through vocalizations, body posture and behaviors with each other before they actually come to blows, and even after coming to blows, they're usually careful not to take things too far, lest someone die.

Generally the only time you have problems is with two animals that are very closely physically matched who each want to be dominant. Then you'll have fighting and fighting and fighting forever because no one will ever really yield the field, they just take breaks between fights.

I used to have a mare that was a dominant mare. I boarded her one winter at a local stable so I could work with her through the cold and the wet of winter. The barn turned all the horses out each day, either in runs or at pasture. Don, my mare, had her little band she was turned out with, but there was another mare who had lived at the stable for quite a while, was just as domnant at Don, and because she was there first and established, considered all the stable property and buildings as her territory. The first time the two were turned out in the pasture there was the battle royale, and they were seperated before anyone got hurt. But even if there was a fence between the two, they'd stand there litterally all day and bitch at each other, trot up and down the fencline, display, and just make idiots out of themselves. The final solution was to seperate the two with a 3 acre pasture. A third group of horses was put in between the two groups with the dominant mares, and the dominant mares having someone to display to and intimidate who would back down from it finally got them to drop the constant fighting.  

Regarding locavores as elitists - explain to me how supporting local business is elitist....


Nice looking website and organization (4.00 / 3)
the vegan thing isn't for me, but I like the animal sanctuary and the other activism. The pictures are great I especially like this one...!

Thanks for this post Mickeyz and what you do pattrice and others at the Eastern Shore Sanctuary & Education Center.


What a great post! (4.00 / 3)
Thanks, Mickey Z.!

In my area, there are (probably illegal) vacant lots that are used to raise chickens. One day I spotted one in a tiny urban park (the kind that's just a triangle between a couple of criss-crossing roads) that had gotten loose and looked very skinny and unhappy, and called the local animal welfare people to let them know about it.

A week went by and the chicken was still there, so I called again. This time I got a call saying that they didn't understand where exactly the location was. They wanted an address but of course a tiny triangular park doesn't have an address. I tried to explain, they said they'd come, and a week or so went by before I passed the park again and saw the chicken. I must have called 4 or 5 times, all told. That chicken kept getting skinnier and skinnier and was losing feathers at an alarming rate.

As far as I know, animal welfare never came. I suspect the chicken died of starvation or was hit by a car.

Pattrice Jones is doing good work.

I wish I knew half what the flock of them know
Of where all the berries and other things grow,
Cranberries in bogs and raspberries on top
Of the boulder-strewn mountain, and when they will crop.
--"Blueberries" by Robert Frost


Cockfighting is a federal felony (3.83 / 6)
Don't let anyone tell you it's not a crime.

And it's certainly not a treasured cultural tradition of any particular ethnic group (although that excuse is often used in my home state). Wayne Pacelle of the Humane Society of the United States has done a lot of good work to set the record straight on that.

pattrice is a hero!


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