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Jill's own words from the Web Site
The rescue begins ... 28 bears arrive
Monday, March 31, 2008, 11:04 PM
It is so hard to know how to start. Yesterday when we knew more bears were on
their way to our China sanctuary, we were realistic enough to know that some
would be in very poor shape and in urgent need of medical attention, but we also
allowed ourselves to feel some excitement and hope. We had to.
Nothing had prepared us for what we were about to witness. The anguish and
despair on the faces of these poor souls will haunt me forever. The terror, the
agony in the harrowing looks that greeted us as the team gently lifted their
cages from the backs of the trucks. These majestic animals had been drained of
all hope, their lives lived in the absence of all decency…
I watched as the bear workers poured their grief and horror into their physical
labour. These fine Sichuan men, eight to a cage, with eyes straight ahead and
metal lifting-bars grinding into their shoulders, are the pall-bearers of the
living dead. I watched as the vet and bear team bravely blank out their pain,
clearly stunned by the level of atrocity, but determinedly professional, focused
totally on the job of saving these bears from any further injustice. The three
trucks carrying the bears arrived at 8pm last night (Monday, China time). The
stench coming from the cages gave us some warning of what lay ahead. One poor
bear was dead on arrival, his rake-thin body, still warm, grotesquely disfigured
by smouldering wounds that had rotted down to the bone. We named him “Peace”
and instinctively reached to hold his skeletal paw.
By midnight, all the bears had been unloaded and settled into two long
poly-tunnels, the start of a long night.
Sadly eleven of the Bears are dead, one was dead on arrival, one died over
night and the others either died or had to be put to sleep, because of
inoperable cancerous tumours found from ultra sound tests.
The pictures of these latest bears show the
total barbaric way in which these bears are kept and they call it humane.
There are still around 7000 bears out
there being treated like this ! |