Please
Help!
Donations and
Homes needed for over 200 Yom Kippur chickens seized from Brooklyn
Live Market
Last Sunday the ASPCA seized more than 200 chickens from a
Brooklyn lot.
These chickens were on sale
as part of the Jewish kapparah rite by vendors camped out at a
construction site at Coney Island Ave. and Avenue L in Midwood. The
ritual is observed on Yom Kippur. A birds is waved in a circle above
the head while saying a prayer; the idea is that the sins of the
person go into the bird, who is then sacrificed.
The chickens were crammed into crates,
stacked on top of one another and left out in the rain for days. These
birds were encrusted with dried feces, urine and blood. Many suffered
from severed toes, plucked out eyes and severe dehydration.
ASPCA agents, sifted through the pile of discarded chickens and
rescued the remaining live ones. An investigation into their death is
underway.
Help Needed
On October 17th, Activists and ASPCA agents transported the
200-plus survivors to temporary housing at the Catskill Animal
Sanctuary. With the help of Woodstock Animal Sanctuary, all the birds
have been given an initial health examination. The ASPCA is currently
performing blood tests to check for disease.
Some birds will be going to
Eastern Shore Sanctuary and United Poultry Concerns but more homes on
the east coast are desperately needed for these sweet broiler hens and
roosters. Monetary donations are also needed to help activists
transport the birds in rented trucks.
PLEASE CONTACT: Kymberlie Adams Matthews at
kymb...@satyamag.com or 718-928-8495.
--
The animals of the world exist for
their own reasons. They were not made for humans any more than black
people were made for whites or women for men-Alice
Walker
Kymberlie Adams
Matthews
Managing
Editor
Satya Magazine
539 1st Street, Brooklyn, NY 11215
Tel. 718
832-9556
Fax. 718
832-9558
Satya is a monthly
magazine focusing on animal advocacy, environmentalism, social justice
and vegetarianism. "Satya" means "truth" in
Sanskrit, and is derived from and inspired by Mohandas Gandhi's
nonviolent Satyagraha or "truth action" movement for social
change.
Satya is
distributed free-of-charge in the New York City area, and
has an international subscriber base. Annual subscriptions are
available for U.S.$20 ($40 non-U.S.).