LEARN
HOW EASY IT IS TO MAKE A DIFFERENCE FOR ANIMAL
MY STORY BEGINS IN ZIMBABWE WITH A BRAVE
PARK RANGER NAMED ORPHEUS AND AN INJURED BUFFALO.And Orpheus looked at the
buffalo on the ground,and he looked at me,and as our eyes met,there was an
unspoken grief between the there of us she was a beautiful wild and innocent
creature and Orpheus lifted the muzzle of his rifle to her ear and at that
moment she started to give birth. As life slipped from the premature calf we
examined the injuries.her back leg had been caught in an eight-strand wire
snare,she’d fought for freedomfor so hard and so long that she’d ripped her
pelvis in half . Well,she was finally free.
Ladies and gentlemen,today I feel a
great sense of responsibility in speaking to you on behalf of those that never
could. Their suffering is my grief,is my motivation. Martin Luther king best
summarises my call to arms here today. He said,”there comes a time when one
must take a position that’s neither safe,nor political,nor popular. But he must
take that position because his consiscience teels him that its’s right”.
Because his conscience teels him it is right. At the end of this talk I’m gonna
ask you all a question. That question is the only reason I traveled here today
all the way from the African savanna. That question for me has cleansed my
soul. How you answer that question will alaways be yours. I remember watching
the movie the wizard of OZ as a young kid and I was never scared of the witch
or flying monkeys. My greatest fear was that I’d grow up like the lion,without
courage and grew up always asking myself if I thought I’d be brave? Well ,years
after Dorothy had made hetr way back to Kansas,and the lion had found his
courage, I walked into a tattoo parior and had the words ‘seek & destroy’,
tattoo across my chest and I thought that’d make me big and brave.
But it’d take me almost a decade to grow
into those words. By the age of 20 i’d become a clearance diver in the navy. By
25, as a special operations sniper,I knew exactly how many clicks of elevation
a needed on the scope if my rifle to take a headshot on a moving target from
700m away. I knew exacly how many grams of high explosives it takes to blast
through a steel plate door from only a few meters away,without blowing myself,or
my team, up behind me. And I knew that Baghdad was a shilty place,and when
things go bang,well,people die. Now back then,I’d no ideas what a
conservationistdid,other than hug trees and piss off large corporations. I knew
they had dreadlocks. I knew they smoked dope. I didn’t really give a shit about
the anvironment,and why should i? I was the idiot that used to speed up in his
car just trying to hit birds on the road. My life was a world away from
conservation. I’d just spent nine years doing things in real life most people
wouldn’t dream of trying on a playstation. Well, after 12 tours to Iraq as a so
called ‘mercenary’, the skills I had were good for one thing: I was programmed
to destroy. When I finally left Iraq behind me I was lost. Yeah I felt-ahh…
I just had no idea where I was going in
life or where I was meant to be and I arrived in Africa at the beginning of
2009. And we were patrolling along,and the vultures circled in the air and as
we got closer the stench of death hung there,in the air like a thick,dark
veil,and a sucked the oxygen out of your lungs. And as we got closer,there was
a great bull elephant. Resting on its side,with its face cut away. And the
world around me stopped. I was consumed by a deep and overhelming sadness.
Seing innocent creatures killed like this hit me ia way like nothing before.
I’d actually poached as a teenager and they’re memories I’ll take to the grave.
Time hd changed me though, something inside wasn’t the same. And it’s never
gonna be again. I asked myself,”does that elephant need its face more some guy
in Asia needs a tusk on his desk”. Well of course it bloody does,the was
irrelevant. All that mattered there and the was: would be brave enough to give
up everything in my life to try and stop the suffering of animals? This was the
one true defining moment of my life: yes or no? I contacted my family the next
day and began selling all my houses. My life savings have since been used to
found and grow the international Anti-Poacing Foundation(IAPF). A few years
after a saw that elephant I woke up very early one morning. I already knew the
answer to the question I was about to ask myself, but it was the first time I’d
put it into words: does a cow value its life more than I enjoy barbecue? The
relisation of the flexible morality I’d used to suit my everyday conveniences
made me sick in the stomach. See I’d loved blaming parts of asia for their
insatiable demand of ivory and rhino horn, and the way the region’s booming
economic growth is dramatically increasing the illegal wildlife trade.
When I woke up that morning thought I
realized, even though I‘d dedicated my life saving animals, in my mind I was no
better than a poacher, or the guy in asia with a tusk on his desk. As this
‘overconsumptive meat eater’ I’d referred to some animals as ‘beasts’. When in
reality I’d been the beast: destructively obedient.a slave to my habits,a cold
shoulder to my conscience. We’ve all had contact with pets or other animals in
our lives. We can’t deny our understanding of the fellings that each animal
has. The ability to suffer pain or loneliness.and to fear like us also,each
animal has the ability to express contentment,to build family structures,and
want of satisfying basic instincts and desires. 800o animal in their lifetime
ocean pollution,global warming and deforestation are drving us towards the next
great mass extinction and the meat industry is the greatest negative factor in
all of these phenomena.
My reason for being here is my question
for you: next time you have an opportunity to make a difference for
animals,will you be brave enough?yes or no? thank you very much.
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