Religious leaders gather in Kenya with a message: stop animal poaching
NAIROBI, Kenya — Standing before a pile of charred elephant ivory as
dusk covered the surrounding savannah, Christian, Muslim and Hindu
religious leaders grasped hands and prayed. Let religion, they asked,
help "God's creatures" to survive.
Poachers are escalating their
assault on Africa's elephants and rhinos, and conservationists warn that
the animals cannot survive Asia's high-dollar demand for ivory tusks
and rhino horn powder. Some wildlife agents, customs officials and
government leaders are being paid off by what is viewed as a
well-organized crime group moving animal parts from Africa to Asia,
charge the conservationists.
Seeing a dire situation grow worse,
the World Wildlife Fund, the animal conservation group, is enlisting
religious leaders to take up the cause in the hopes that religion can
help save some of the world's most majestic animals.
"We are the
ones who are driving God's creatures to extinction," said Martin Palmer,
secretary-general of the Britain-based Alliance of Religions and
Conservation.
Palmer spoke during Thursday evening's prayer at a
site in Nairobi National Park where Kenyan officials burned hundreds of
ivory tusks in 1989 to draw attention to the slaughter of elephants.
Although the park has no elephants, it hosts 221 rhinos.
"We are the ones who can change the way Africa works," Palmer said.
Dekila
Chungyalpa, the director of WWF's Sacred Earth program, argues that the
killing of elephants, rhinos and Asian tigers — the three animals WWF
is most concerned about — is a moral issue. She said that
conservationists are not doing well enough getting the anti-poaching
message across, and that new strategies — such as religion — must be
tried.
"Faith leaders are the heart and backbone of local
communities. They guide and direct the way we think, behave and live our
lives," she said, adding later: "I think this is the missing piece in
conservation strategies. . .. WWF can yell as much as we want and no one
will listen to us, but a religious leader can say 'This is not a part
of our values. This is immoral.' "
Three dozen religious leaders
from nine African countries toured Nairobi National Park on Thursday,
where they saw rhinos, zebras, buffalo and ostriches all within site of
the skyline of Kenya's capital city.
One of the safari vans held a
Christian, a Hindu, a Muslim and a Buddhist, which spawned efforts to
create some sort of wildlife-themed religious joke. During a more
serious conversation, Hamza Mutunu, a Muslim leader from Tanzania,
argued for the animals.
"The general message is that taking care
of the wildlife is part and parcel with our religion," he said. "We have
a duty from the Prophet Mohammed. . . . Taking care of wildlife is
within our religion."
Preetika Bhanderi, who is with the Hindu
Council of Africa, said: "Hindu's backbone is nonviolence toward
everything that has life. That means animals, and people, of course."
Charles
Odira, a Catholic priest from Kenya, said religious leaders can help
spread the message effectively given the moral authority and standing
they have in African communities.
"Just as when we talk about
Jesus Christ, when we say (from the pulpit) that animals are part of
God's community, an impact will be made," he said.
Odira
acknowledged the uphill fight even religious leaders have. Poachers can
earn hundreds or even thousands of dollars for a rhino horn or elephant
tusk. That money represents far more than they could earn after years of
labor in a typical village job.
Mutunu, though, said that
religious leaders of all faiths came together in Loliondo, Tanzania,
last year to fight against poaching. He said the effort has yielded
dividends.
The poaching numbers are grim. The number of rhinos
killed by poachers in South Africa has risen from 13 in 2007 to 448 last
year, WWF reports. Last year saw more large-scale ivory seizures than
any year in the last two decades, it said. Tens of thousands of
elephants are being killed by poachers each year.
It's not known
what kind of impact religious leaders may be able to make, but Mike
Watson, chief executive of Kenya's Lewa Wildlife Conservancy, said he
and other conservationists will take any help they can get. Lewa saw one
of its rhinos killed by poachers earlier this month. The park had never
suffered a rhino poaching death before 2009; it's had five of its
rhinos killed since then.
"We know for a fact that one of the
demands for ivory is religious icons in the Far East, and if pressure
can be brought to bear to reduce that demand both locally here in Kenya
through assistance by religious leaders, and overseas, it can only be a
good step," Watson said. "It might take generations. If religious
leaders can some way speed that process up, all well and good, but all
efforts need to be on the table."
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