Ep. 32 – Gene Baur on changing hearts, minds and laws about farm animals

“The sanctuary is a place where people can meet these animals, hear their stories, learn where they come from, and learn more about the food system,” Gene Baur, co-founder and president of Farm Sanctuary, says. “[People] recognize they can make choices that do not support this violent, cruel system and that they can relate to animals in a more friendly positive way. This is good for the animals and is also good for the people.” Photo courtesy of Farm Sanctuary.

A few weeks before Charlotte’s Web was to be published, author E.B. White’s editor asked him to explain why he wrote the book about a livestock pig, Wilbur, who becomes friends with a heroic spider named Charlotte. In the now beloved novel, Charlotte saves Wilbur from slaughter by weaving messages — “SOME PIG,” “RADIANT,” “TERRIFIC,” and “HUMBLE” — into her web in the doorway of Wilbur’s stall. In doing so, she draws attention to Wilbur as an individual pig full of personality, and ensures that Wilbur is saved and cherished thereafter.

In response to his publisher’s request for explanation, White wrote: “A farm is a peculiar problem for a man who likes animals, because the fate of most livestock is that they are murdered by their benefactors. I have kept several pigs, starting them in spring as weanlings and carrying trays to them all through summer and fall. Day by day I became better acquainted with my pig, and he with me, and the fact that the whole adventure pointed toward an eventual piece of double-dealing on my part lent an eerie quality to the thing. I do not like to betray a person or a creature, and I tend to agree … that in these times the duty of a man, above all else, is to be reliable. Anyway, the theme of “Charlotte’s Web” is that a pig shall be saved, and I have an idea that somewhere deep inside me there was a wish to that effect.” 

That wish is also deep inside our guest today. For over 30 years, Gene Baur has been a heroic, real-life, highly strategic, two-legged “Charlotte” for thousands of farm animals, changing millions of hearts and minds about animals and food. Baur is the co-founder and president of Farm Sanctuary, one of the nation’s largest animal rescue organizations that provides refuge for animals who had been abused, confined, and commodified as part of the U.S. factory farm system. Compared to Farm Sanctuary’s rescues, Wilbur lived a great life. White published Charlotte’s Web in 1952, just as factory farming was being invented and a decade before it began to rapidly spread – first with poultry, then pigs and cows. Today, 99% of U.S. farm animals spend their lives in large-scale industrial animal factories. Baur has made it his life’s work to try to change this. 

“Our food system and what we eat is one of the most intimate ways we interact with the earth,” Baur says. “Right now, I would sadly call that a largely toxic system biologically. But I would say also psychologically, emotionally, it’s a system that does enormous harm.” Photo by Jo-Anne McArthur/ WeAnimals.

With two locations — Los Angeles and upstate New York — Farm Sanctuary allows these rescued animals to once again live as animals. They receive the kindness and affection they had been denied in their lives in factory farms, and are cared for and celebrated as individuals, not parts in an assembly line. Pigs spend their days lounging outside and rooting in the dirt, while cows roam the pastures and chickens are truly free range. These animals, from Hilda the sheep to Marmelade the chicken, have, in turn, become ambassadors for their species and help in Farm Sanctuary’s mission of elevating questions about how we treat animals in our modern factory farm economy.  Under Gene’s leadership and vision, Farm Sanctuary has also grown into a major political advocacy organization and powerful storytelling force, advocating for laws and policies that prevent farm animal suffering and educating millions of people about the plight of farm animals and the impacts of factory farming.

In this episode, we speak with Baur about the origins and evolution of Farm Sanctuary, how animals who have suffered transform when they are treated with gentleness for the first time, and the globe wave of farm animal sanctuaries that his work inspired. From spur-of-the-moment calf rescues with celebrity supporters like Joaquin Phoenix to lawsuits against companies and government agencies, Baur has fought tirelessly to protect farm animals from cruelty and to promote a more compassionate world.

“Profit is commonly obtained by extracting value from others, whether it’s property and resources or labor,” Baur says. “Its not a relationship based in mutuality. To me, that’s fundamentally what we need to create — relationships based in mutuality with other animals, with other people, with the earth. I think agriculture can do that. I don’t think multinationals are positioned to do that.” Photo by Jo-Anne McArthur/ WeAnimals.

Recommendation:

Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind by Yuval Noah Harari


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