Rahat for Animals in India

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals - PETA
Many people believe that cows are sacred in India—that they spend their days lying in the sun and grazing on grass, worshipped by everyone around them. But if you take a closer look at the lives of draught cattle in India, you’ll see a very different reality.

Throughout India, thousands of bullocks, ponies, horses, and donkeys are treated as taxi cabs, forced to cart passengers around and pull overloaded, poorly balanced carts for miles in the sweltering heat. Many suffer from muscle strain and painful sores. The ill-fitting yokes they are forced to wear leave wounds that can lead to cancer and infection. The animals are disturbingly thin and dehydrated because they are not given enough food or water. They become lethargic and depressed; their eyes are sad and hopeless.

But there is hope for these animals. In 2003, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) established the Animal Rahat (“rahat” is the Hindi word for “relief”) program to alleviate the suffering of working animals in India.

The seven-person Animal Rahat staff educates the locals about basic animal welfare measures; they teach them the importance of providing animals with a nutritious diet and reducing and balancing the animals’ loads. Because of Animal Rahat, a growing number of people are moving away from practices that hurt animals. Fewer people now leave bullocks out in extreme heat or unprotected through the wet, rainy seasons, and, as a result, fewer animals are suffering from heat stress, cough, and pneumonia.

Animal Rahat employees have also installed concrete water tanks in and around the main town of Sangli and the nearby town of Miraj to provide water to thirsty, overheated animals. They’ve designed simple, portable shade screens that can be attached to individual carts and used as a shelter against the sun. The screens can also be used as blankets for the bullocks in the cold winter months.

In addition, Animal Rahat has developed a “stress kit” containing supplements and multivitamins to help the animals handle exhausting journeys. To date, Animal Rahat veterinarians have inoculated more than 800 bullocks against foot-and-mouth disease and vaccinated more than 800 horses and 300 donkeys against tetanus.

The Animal Rahat program pays the animals’ impoverished “owners” to rest the animals while still being able to feed their families. Owners receive a small subsidy for allowing animals who are too sick, injured, or old to work to retire and live out their lives in peace. If they are unable to care for their animals at home, the animals may live at the Animal Rahat retirement center, a shady, rented patch of land that is currently home to three retired bullocks, Lakshya, Raja 1, and Raja 2; a retired horse, also named Raja; and a rescued donkey named Paro.


Lakshya is 23, and he was being treated for a fractured shoulder when his owner agreed to retire him. Lakshya’s shoulder has healed nicely, and he will never again be treated as a “beast of burden.”

Raja, also 23, was used as a school bus to carry students from their homes to school for the last 20 years. Raja’s owner knew that the horse was too old to keep transporting students and planned to give him to a relative, but when the Animal Rahat veterinarians told the man about the retirement program, he agreed that Raja would be best cared for at the retirement home. Raja is still in good health, and he has been able to enjoy his retirement.

Paro, the donkey, was found lying in the road, injured and barely moving. Her nostrils had been slit with a knife because villagers believe that this makes animals able to endure more weight as their lungs take in more air. This “procedure” is groundless and extremely painful. Because of her injury, Paro was having trouble finding and eating food. She was very weak when Animal Rahat veterinarians took her in and helped nurse her wounds. Now her caregivers report that she is very naughty and that they have to keep a close eye on her so that she doesn’t get into trouble!

People from around the world can help working animals like Lakshya, Raja, and Paro by sponsoring Animal Rahat. Donations to Animal Rahat directly benefit needy donkeys, buffaloes, bullocks, and ponies, and enable PETA to sustain and expand its Animal Rahat efforts, offering relief to more and more animals.

Animal Rahat benefactors’ names are posted on the Animal Rahat Web site, and they receive a sponsorship certificate as well as updated news reports on Animal Rahat’s efforts. To become an Animal Rahat sponsor, visit www.PETACatalog.com or www.AnimalRahat.com. For more information about Animal Rahat, e-mail Info@animalrahat.com.

Heather Moore is a senior writer for People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), 501 Front St., Norfolk, VA, 23510; www.PETA.org.
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People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals - PETA

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), with more than 2 million members and supporters, is the largest animal rights organization in the world. Founded in 1980, PETA is dedicated to establishing and protecting the rights of all animals. PETA operates under the simple principle that animals are not ours to eat, wear, experiment on, or use for entertainment.

PETA focuses its attention on the four areas in which the largest numbers of animals suffer the most intensely for the longest periods of time: on factory farms, in laboratories, in the clothing trade, and in the entertainment industry. We also work on a variety of other issues, including the cruel killing of beavers, birds and other "pests," and the abuse of backyard dogs.

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