Featured Article - September 2006

In The Shadow of Equus
By Margaret Evans

The Legacy of Ignorance
Cultures at the Crossroads of Care

Kalu was in pain. He was a working horse in India. But he was black. And being black meant a life of pain was inevitable. In India, where superstition and folklore have always been the driving force of many rural business practices, the shoes from black horses were powerful good luck charms. So Kalu was shod over and over and over again by his owner, who sought his fortune in the “lucky” horseshoe trade. The trouble was that the owner had no skills as a farrier and Kalu suffered immensely as a result of overgrown, cracked, and deformed hooves. His painful feet caused joint problems. The owner, following his own
cultural superstitions, treated the joints by firing, causing the horse even greater suffering.

But in a rare stroke of luck, Kalu found himself being taken to the
Turkmangate shade shelter in Delhi. It was run by the Brooke Hospital for Animals, a renowned equine aid agency based in London, England that provides free veterinary care for working horses in developing
countries, and offers education on equine care to animal owners.

Kalu was given regular pain medication for his joints and the Brooke’s

Dr. Mini and her team treated the wounds caused by firing. Bhoora,
Kalu’s owner, was given farrier lessons so that he could understand the
structure of the hoof and the sensitive parts of the heel and frog.

Since 1934 when an extraordinary and compassionate Englishwoman,

Dorothy Brooke, founded The Old Warhorse Memorial Hospital in Egypt to
save ex-cavalry horses abandoned in North Africa after World War I, the
Brooke Hospital for Animals (renamed in her honour) has grown into an
international lifesaver, reaching over 500,000 working equine animals
annually with a network of field clinics and mobile veterinary vehicles in Egypt, Jordan, India, and Pakistan and through partnerships in Afghanistan, Kenya, Guatemala, and Israel. Every suffering working equine that becomes healthy and fit benefits an entire family, providing a means of transportation, work, and stature in the community.

In so many developing countries, deep-rooted superstitions and ancient

cultural beliefs passed down from father to son through the generations
force incredible pain on donkeys, mules, and horses.

Donkeys’ nostrils are slit with knives in the belief that if they inhale more air they will work harder. Egyptian folklore claims that horses and donkeys work better if their ears are cut or removed altogether.
To treat infection with a practice called “threading,” flesh is cut and stuffed with cloth which is sewn into the wound. Pus from the resulting abscess leaks through the cloth, confirming the belief that the
infection is “draining away.”

To cure wounds or lameness, the skin is burned with a red hot iron or
knife in an ancient practice called “firing.” Blistering, a traditional lameness “remedy” is done using corrosive chemicals that burn the skin and cause intense pain and permanent disability.

“Such beliefs make sense to poor, uneducated people,” said Bill Swan,

the Brooke’s Director of International Development. “In Jaipur, India, we discovered that, horrifyingly, owners were pouring sulphuric acid up the noses of horses with coughs believing it would unclog the lungs. The masses of mucus and blood that poured from their noses for days afterwards ‘proved’ it worked. But once we explained it was the acid
burning away the nose lining causing terrible pain, they stopped doing
it.”

The Brooke is working really hard to end the scourge of harmful folk
remedies. As well as educating animal owners in good welfare and providing effective treatments, it is recruiting and re-training local healers as Brooke advocates to pass on effective welfare to their communities rather than the harmful traditional remedies.

“Our policy of winning hearts and minds is having a big impact,” said
Mike Baker, Chief Executive. “Firing and blistering have been greatly reduced, and in Petra, Jordan eradicated completely. Our Petra-based Brooke Jordan team has also ended [the] local tradition of killing of
newborn colts. Previously they were slaughtered at birth because of a
legend that they drank their mothers’ blood. And in Egypt our vets have
worked hard to explode the myths behind water deprivation (based on a belief that water taken during a working day prevents breathing and causes digestive problems), and supply buckets and troughs to working animal owners.”

But the Brooke still has a long way to go and plans for the coming
decade include reaching five million more horses, donkeys and mules suffering around the world. The Brooke depends entirely on donor support. If you would like to help the donkeys, mules, and horses of families in developing countries, The Brooke Hospital for Animals needs, and would deeply appreciate, your donation. Their address is:
The Brooke Hospital for Animals
21 Panton Street, London, UK, SW1Y 4DR
Or visit them on-line and donate at www.thebrooke.org.





Read Margaret Evans' column "In The Shadow Of Equus" each month in  Pacific & Prairie Horse Journal






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