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LATEST NEWS UPDATES | Unaffordable sacredness of our cattle -Himanshu Upadhyaya

Unaffordable sacredness of our cattle -Himanshu Upadhyaya

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published Published on Jul 5, 2017   modified Modified on Jul 5, 2017
-GovernanceNow.com

The cost of maintaining our 5.3 million stray cattle comes to about Rs 30,115 core per year

A lot of debate that we witness in the media on the cattle question these days suffer from the disease of speculative utopian imagination of a ‘cow-nation’ and relentless abuses for those beef-eating ‘others’.
 
Political debates over the question of our bovine stock has mostly been heavily polarising and mindlessly simplistic, notwithstanding exceptions like veteran Meghalaya MP Prof GG Swell's speech in parliament in 1996 when he appealed all to not divide the nation between ‘cow-belt’ and ‘non-cow-belt’. The way that this debate gets conducted creates an echo chamber of cacophony, which should upset serious researchers. For if we sincerely read up the District Gazetteer on Rajputana, it tells us that even in this so called ‘cow-belt’ state, certain communities had practised no taboo against beef-eating.
 
Banning cattle slaughter, like demonetisation, may deliver political gains but will hit the rural economy hard
 
So let’s list a few important questions that are not being raised, let alone be answered with all sincerity.
 
The first question is: Agreed that the so-called ‘cow-protection’ sloganeering has been around for 150 years now, but the question that self-appointed Gau Rakhshaks must answer is: are Hindu attitudes of ascribing ‘sacredness’ to animals static? There was a time when bulls were revered and donated to local temples. In the 1870s, they were so many in numbers and so all over the place that an agricultural expert, who toured the length and breadth of India, had called them “standing religious menace”. During the first livestock census (1919-20) their number was a whopping 5.1 million out of 113 million cattle in British India. In the decade of the 1890s, the cow protection movement had protested against a court judgment that declined to grant ‘sacred’ status to scrub bulls. At the turn of the century, veterinary science experts in the colonial establishment were facing resistance to their castration-of-scrub-bulls programme.
 
However, by the 1930s, the attitudes were changing. NC Wright in his ‘Report on the Development of Cattle Industries and Dairying’ shows that “the number of animals castrated at veterinary hospitals and dispensaries and on tour have more than doubled during the last decade”. However, the progress was varied from province to province and Wright was concerned that “two-thirds of total number of castrations” were reported from just three provinces, with remaining provinces “showing very small returns”. Thus, sacredness being ascribed to breeding bulls had become a lot more elastic within four decades of the first all India Livestock Census. So, in 1966 there were only 0.4 million breeding bulls in a much larger cattle population of 176 million in Indian union. Has anyone who is espousing the cause of ‘cow protection’ ever wondered what ‘standing religious menace’ would have been posed by the so-called ‘sacred breeding bulls’ if their numbers had kept growing between 1919-20 and 1966?
 
Second important question is: Can institutions that emerged out of a notion of ‘kindness towards sacred cow’ (namely, ‘Gau-shala’) or as a municipal governance response to the nuisance caused by ‘stray cattle’ (namely, Pinjrapole) be modernised and would be allies in making our dairying shed away cruelty against milch animals? Firstly, those imagining the horrors practised by an Indian peasant who is rearing a ‘sacred cow’ not in ‘gau-shala’ but as a part of his farming household make ahistorical and myopic arguments when they accuse a small dairy farmer of cruelty against milch animals. Have they ever bothered to check what tabelas operating right in the heart of the cities such as Calcutta, Bombay and Madras were doing to the ‘sacred cow’ and her less fortunate buffalo sister in the 1920s? They seem to give no credence to the giants of our milk revolution story, Dara Khurody and Varghese Kurien, who rescued the milk production model by imagining rehabilitation of city milch stables and creating the Anand pattern of millions of small-scale milk producers keeping less than 10 cows.
 
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GovernanceNow.com, 23 June, 2017, http://www.governancenow.com/news/regular-story/-unaffordable-sacredness-of-our-cattle


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