Newsletter

Society and Animals Forum

Newsletter / Spring 2000
Volume 20

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Ask Not What Animals Can Do for You

"I can find humor in almost anything, but one thing I never laugh about is cruelty to animals.  In this wonderful book, Mary Lou Randour reminds us that animals were not put here to endure pain based on our whims."
-- Bill Maher, Politically Incorrect

Mary Lou Randour, Ph.D., PSYETA's program director, is the author of a new book on relationships among human beings and other-than-human animals.
Animal Grace: Entering a Spiritual Relationship with Our Fellow Creatures
packs an enormous amount of thought, anecdote, and careful documentation into
its 167 pages.  Building on such compelling and informative books as Gary Kowalski's The Souls of Animals, Susan McElroy's Animals as Teachers and Healers (Susan provided a foreword to Animal Grace), and other writing about animals' minds, emotions, and  spirituality and on thousands of years of religious and philosophical traditions, Mary Lou's book takes readers an important step further.
 

Ask What You Can Do for Animals 

Authors have previously done their best to explain other-than-human animals' inner lives; some have described benefits to human beings of relationships with animals; and some have revealed scriptural and philosophical bases for humane rather than abusive or  tyrannical treatment of animals.  Mary Lou delves into those matters and explains them clearly and succinctly, but her main point is how entering into spiritual relationships with animals can benefit animals and humans and, ultimately, life itself.  Thus, her book is not only about awareness but action as a necessary part of spiritual development.

Awareness of animals as individual conscious beings with specific biological needs, mental processes, and souls brings responsibility for acting so as to nurture animals as total beings a la Homo sapiens sapiens.  So acting can involve personal practices like eating only foods not derived from animal exploitation or using only personal care products not tested on animals.  It can also involve publicly opposing the killing of deer in suburbs--one of Mary Lou's examples from her own life--or other acts of protest.  Entering into a spiritual relationship with other-than-human animals may or may not involve interacting with animals directly, but for many, personal relationships with animals open the door to further growth.

"I am hoping to accomplish two things with my book," says Mary Lou, "to awaken people who are 'spiritually inclined' but who haven't thought much about how their actions affect animals and to offer some source of--what?--solace to animal rights activists who, on too regular a basis, have to contend with all kinds of atrocities.  And they are atrocities, for the most part, which are not only sanctioned by society, but often paid for with our tax dollars.  I think we can get a kind of post-traumatic stress syndrome, too, and that it can wear out our souls.  My impetus for writing
the book was to try to develop some kind of internal resource so that I could deal with the grief and rage I regularly feel in this work."
 

Author's Awakening

Mary Lou's introduction to the book begins, "Until very recently I never quite understood what 'grace' meant, though I certainly heard it often used in the Episcopal church in which I was raised.   Grace seemed to be the key--perhaps not the only one, but certainly one of the most
important--to entering a spiritual life.  It was a key, however, I could not find."  She explains how learning about cruel animal testing in the cosmetics industry, cruel animal experiments in biomedical laboratories, and other abuses of animals throughout our society led her  to consider animals'
well-being much more often until doing so became her habit and her basis for many personal choices.

"As my awareness developed, the animals taught me that my decisions affected them."  This connection among perception, awareness, and action forms the basis of spirituality.  "When we divide ourselves by denying, avoiding, repressing, or disassociating, we weaken our psychological
capacity.  It takes psychic energy to not know, or to not care, or to not act.  When we allow ourselves to know, care, and act, we release energy, making it available for the growth and nurturance of our psychological and spiritual selves."
 

Beyond Perception and Awareness

Personal narrative doesn't make up the entire book, however.  In chapters titled "What Animals Can Teach Us about Spirituality" and "Entering a Spiritual Relationship with Animals," Mary Lou relates anecdotes involving other peopl's observations of and experiences with  animals--experiences that belie long-entrenched misconceptions minimizing animals' emotional and spiritual depth.  We see that our society's billions of animal victims are more than mere bodies and nervous systems unjustifiably made to suffer: They are complete beings, spiritual beings.  They "offer us a unique opportunity to transcend the boundaries of our human perspectives; they allow us to stretch our consciousness toward understanding what it is to be different. This stretching enables us to grow beyond our narrow viewpoint.  It allows us, I believe, to gain a spiritual advantage.  How can we possibly appreciate and move toward spiritual wholeness if we cannot see beyond our own species? How can we come to know God, or grasp the interconnectedness of all life, if
we limit ourselves to knowing only our own kind?"

After briefly summarizing how individual human beings grow through experience, especially through familial and other interpersonal relationships, she explains how animals, with their innocence and the suffering human beings inflict on them, enter into the spiritual picture. "We can redefine our relationship so as to end all of the needless suffering of animals who are used to test cosmetics or medicine, or who become antibiotic- and hormone-ridden food after unbearable confinement in the
endless crates of factory farms.  We can say 'no' to participating in that kind of relationship.  More than saying 'no' we are declaring an even more resounding yes!  It is a yes to life and to the incredible wonder of creation.  It is a yes to falling in love with the world around us--to becoming enchanted by the unity of existence."

Having touched on relevant aspects of major religions in the early chapters, in "The Peaceable Kindom" (a resonant play on the Peaceable Kingdom) Mary Lou illustrates, by detailing life at animal sanctuaries, current manifestations of spirituality extended to animals and many species
peacefully coexisting.  Poplar Springs, in Poolesville, Maryland, receives the most copy because Mary Lou visited that sanctuary in preparing the book. She also mentions the legendary Farm Sanctuary (Watkins Glen, New York, and Orland, California) and Pigs A Sanctuary (Charles Town, West Virginia).

Ancient Precedents
 

In "The New Kashrut: The Spiritual Depth of Vegetarianism" and "Ahimsa: Cultivating Nonviolence Toward Animals," the reader finds teachings of Judaism, Christianity, Jainism, and other religious systems exhorting us to treat animals compassionately.  Though this message is central to Jainism, in the Western religions it has too often been suppressed.  Dualistic thinking of recent centuries has heaped on layers of misinterpretation and denial.  Yet reading God's giving humans "dominion" over the other animals, in Genesis, as license to tyrannize and abuse them is inconsistent with the same book's menu for humans: "every herb, seed and green thing."  The book's engaging and succinct discussions of scripture should enable followers of established religions to open their hearts to animals.  If you think you should eat meat or shampoo your hair with an animal-tested gel, it isn't because the Bible tells you so.  The Bible says the opposite, as Mary Lou helps us to see.  Both text and endnotes should help even skeptics to see that many theologians and biblical scholars agree.
 

Animal Grace Manifest

Two highly original chapters of Animal Grace are the last two before the epilogue in which Mary Lou resumes her personal narrative, expanding on her own experience using material from the middle chapters to elaborate.  In "The Parallel Worlds of Human and Nonhuman Animals," "you will meet Eve, who like many of us strives to be good and spiritually responsible, and to instill meaning in her life.  For one short day we will observe Eve through the perspective of two parallel worlds: the one she occupies as she goes about her daily life, making many of the ordinary decisions all of us make; and the lesser known world of the animals whose lives are affected by her decisions."  Eve is "not aware of the animal world" when we first meet her.  She is 55 years old, has been married for 30 years, has two grown children and some grandchildren, and has weathered typical difficulties with her family over the years.

Soon we see Eve taking Premarin, the prescription menopause drug made with urine collected in containers irritatingly attached to thousands of mares kept standing on concrete in tiny stalls for months on end.  Then it's on to animal-tested toothpaste, soap, makeup, fur trim on the hood of her
parka, the flesh of a pig for dinner, and other cruelly obtained products that make up her day.  Mary Lou provides a description of the cruelty involved in producing each product.  Later, Eve finds herself disturbed but cannot yet understand why.  She is beginning to experience a spiritual
awakening such as Animal Grace suggests we all are capable of having if we will allow ourselves to become aware of other-than-human animals--not just of their presence or of their cuteness but of their beingness and the unnecessary suffering to which our species subjects them.
 

Animal Grace Can Be Yours

Lest we spoil your thrill of discovery, we won't disclose, in these pages, many fascinating and illuminating occurrences and ideas Mary Lou describes to illustrate the principle of animal grace and the desirability of entering into a spiritual relationship with animals.  It becomes more than
clear as one reads, however, that the benefits accrue, not only to individuals whose awareness, love, and compassionate action cross long-imagined boundaries between human and other-than-human beings, but also to animals directly or indirectly touched, other human beings, and an infinitely expanding universe of beings beyond the individual's direct knowledge.

One of this book's many accomplishments is that it makes concepts often considered abstract and esoteric comprehensible and even palpable to ordinary readers.  Experienced animal advocates are sure to find it informative and uplifting, and it is bound to remove many sets of earplugs we
might have thought had been permanently grafted into place.

You can order Animal Grace: Entering a Spiritual Relationship with Our Fellow Creatures from PSYETA.

 


Who We Are
 

Ken Shapiro, Executive Director
Mary Lou Randour, Program Director
Susie Burt, Development Director
Fran Albrecht, Copy Editor
David Cantor, PSYETA News Editor
Kadd Stephens, Administrative and Technical Asst.
Jeanie Freeman, Webmaster

Members of the Board

Sudhir P. Amembal, President
Lorin Lindner, Ph.D., Vice-President
Emmanuel Bernstein, Ph.D., Cofounder
Susan Curtiss, Ph.D.
Lynne Dow, Ph.D.
Deborah H. Fouts, M.S.
Carole Rayburn, Ph.D.
F. Barbara Orlans, Ph.D.
Aphrodite Clamar-Cohen, Ph.D.
Yale Wishnick, Ph.D.

Board of Advisors

Roger S. Fouts, Ph.D.
Jane Goodall, Ph.D.
Birute Galdikas, Ph.D.
Peter Singer, D.Phil.


Care for Chimpanzees

Between 1,500 and 2,000 chimpanzees are currently kept in U.S. laboratories.  Far more rats, mice, birds, dogs, and other animals are exploited in biomedical research, but chimpanzees' close similarities to human beings and the very high cost of caring for them--even in barren boxes,
hanging on to lives dull beyond imagining--have brought hope that they might get a "hands off" from the vivisection industry.  In recent years, laboratory personnel have not killed chimpanzees to limit their populations, despite their practice of killing other animals for that puspose.  Most have reduced or eliminated breeding programs.

Following a National Institutes of Health (NIH)-requested Institute for Laboratory Animal Research (ILAR) investigation of issues regarding laboratory uses of chimpanzees, the National Research Council (NRC) published ILAR's recommendations in July 1997.  In addition to not killing animals for population control, ILAR's recommendations include a five-year breeding moratorium on chimpanzees (1997 to 2001); assuring lifetime support and ownership by the federal government of a "core population" of about 1,000 chimpanzees; making capable sanctuaries part of a plan "to achieve the best and most cost-effective solution to the current dilemma"; establishing a Chimpanzee Management Program (ChiMP) in the Office of the Director of NIH with responsibility for "government-owned animals considered necessary to meet current and long-term national needs"; and creating an "appropriate advisory council of nongovernment experts" to establish ChiMP policies  including "implications for research use, breeding-colony size, demography,
genetics, and long-term care."

A key reason NIH asked ILAR to study the chimpanzees' situation and the NRC subsequently recommended a breeding moratorium was the NIH breeding program of the late 1980s to provide chimpanzees for human immunodeficiency virus research.  More were born than experimenters then chose to use, so a "surplus" came to exist.

Based on the NRC recommendations, NIH, through the National Center for Research Resources ("resources" here unfortunately means animals), established the above-mentioned ChiMP, which you can access  at  http://www.ncrr.nih.gov/compmed/916chimp.htm.   The NIH program may make it more difficult for chimpanzees to receive the lifelong care as fully entitled beings, with an absolute guarantee against exploitation and invasive experiments, that PSYETA and other animal advocates demand.
 

To Know Them Is To Love Them

Chimpanzees' reasoning and communication abilities and their genetic, anatomical, and behavioral closeness to Homo sapiens sapiens, and familiarity with and empathy for them thanks to public
education (especially the renowned work of Dr. Jane Goodall) help explain chimpanzees' being singled out.  So do a UK ban of experiments on them, reports from the Fauna Foundation and other sanctuaries about their personalities, expressiveness, social interactions, and problems due to
long-term isolation and other abuses in laboratories (see Chimpanzees Rehabilitated at the Fauna Foundation).  Some scientists' attachments to them and reluctance to euthanize them and In Defense of Animals' & Last Chance for Animals' reports of deeply troubling abuse and neglect causing the deaths of some chimpanzees at The Coulston Foundation--by far the largest U.S. facility conducting experiments on them, holding hundreds in its cages--add to the momentum toward lifelong care based on chimpanzees' individual needs rather than continued laboratory exploitation or warehousing as if they were objects and not beings.

The movement to provide such care for chimpanzees "retired" from laboratories has strengthened in recent years. The Chimpanzee Health Improvement, Maintenance, and Protection (CHIMP) Act, introduced by U.S. Representative James Greenwood (R-PA) and 21 cosponsors in 1999, a revised
version of the Postresearch Chimpanzee Care Act introduced in 1998 byGreenwood and Newt Gingrich (R-GA), has provided a specific legislative measure some advocates support.  The National Chimpanzee Task Force, a coalition of animal protection organizations, has promoted the bill.  The CHIMP Act would establish a private nonprofit organization to administer a retirement program,  standards for care, and a method for bringing chimpanzees into sanctuaries.
 

Serious Commitment Needed

Caring for chimpanzees properly is a very serious long-term undertaking.  They need large quantities of fresh fruit, adequate space to move about, play, socialize and find privacy, and health care--sometimes for serious emotional difficulties resulting from confinement, isolation, and other abuses and sometimes for injuries or HIV, hepatitis or other infectious diseases or conditions inflicted on them in experiments.  They live long lives--often into their 60s.

Nor can chimpanzees be shipped to Africa and  released.  It is widely agreed that chimpanzees who have lived much or all of their lives in captivity do not have the necessary knowledge, skills, mental and physical health, or family groups integrated into their natural habitat to thrive where they would have lived had human beings not captured them or their ancestors.  In addition, habitat destruction and the killing of chimpanzees and other apes for "bushmeat"--thousands  are expected to be killed this year--make the animals' native continent less safe than it used to be.

In 1999, the Humane Society of the United States organized meetings that included representatives of other animal protection organizations and of zoos, research facilities, and the NIH.  This diverse group agreed on the need to find economical chimpanzee housing and to obtain federal support for
new sanctuaries for chimpanzees.  There was disagreement on whether sanctuaries should allow research of any kind, whether they should give researchers biological samples and/or records, and what some sanctuary standards should be.
 

Toward the Future

U.S. researchers began studying chimpanzees early in the 20th century.  Their exploitation expanded to include a wide range of invasive experiments, and chimpanzees  were forced to proceed human beings into "outer space." PSYETA supports an end to all invasive research using animals.  We
believe that, should all "retired" chimpanzees receive the care they deserve from skilled and deeply committed sanctuary caregivers, the world will be that much better and the way will be paved for other animals to be treated with compassion, not maintained for human purposes.  It is PSYETA's hope that, by the time the 21st century has progressed far, we will be able to inform you
that chimpanzee exploitation is on the course of extinction and that the care of chimpanzees in captivity is strictly for their own individual well-being.


Chimpanzees Rehabilitated at the Fauna Foundation

by Arryn Ketter
 

Editor's Note: In Care for Chimpanzees,  we describe the current situation and possibilities for the future of chimpanzees in U.S. laboratories.  Here is a close-up account of a few individuals to illustrate how human choices affect the animals' lives.

At The Fauna Foundation sanctuary, founded in 1997 by Gloria Grow and Doctor Richard Allan and located in Quebec, Canada, we provide permanent, non-exploitative care for 15 chimpanzees formerly used in experiments and in some cases forced to entertain before being sent to laboratories.  The chimpanzees arrived to live with us in September and October 1997.  We do not
permit any biomedical experimentation on the animals, nor do we simply "warehouse" them or merely treat their diseases.  We enable them to live in peace.  We attend to their physical and emotional needs and give them the space and security they need to socialize and play.

We serve nutritious meals that acquaint the chimpanzees with the pleasure of eating they did not know on a laboratory diet of water and monkey chow.  We spend much time providing affection and comfort to those chimpanzees who, after so many years in research, have difficulty forming social bonds with other chimpanzees.  And we believe our efforts are working. The 15 "used-up" chimpanzees in our care are lively, active--dare we say contented?

This did not happen overnight.  The first few months following the chimpanzees' arrival from the Laboratory for Experimental Medicine and Surgery in Primates (LEMSIP) were particularly difficult.  Many of the animals were underweight.  Some had very little hair left on their arms and
chests.  Some suffered from diarrhea as a result of dietary changes.  There was constant fighting, and the din from the screaming in the building at times became unbearable.  Dinner time was an opportunity to try to grab the humans who were serving and to fight with each other over what they
eventually came to understand was a virtually limitless supply of food and drink.

In addition to their unique personalities, the chimpanzees arrived with individual emotional and physical problems.  The 15 were divided into two groups, HIV-infected and non-HIV-infected, at the urging of LEMSIP's director.  Based on that criterion, Annie, the oldest at 37, was placed with
the younger chimpanzees.  Annie was little prepared to manage six adolescents and juveniles after being used for entertainment, then for breeding (she was the first artificially inseminated chimpanzee in the U.S.) and experimentation.  Over the years, she had suffered perpetually from anorexia,
and she had pulled off most of the hair from her body.

Now living mostly with the older chimpanzees, Annie is the most sociable of the group and gets along with everyone with few difficulties. She spends her time grooming with other chimpanzees, foraging for food, and playing at cleaning utensils in buckets of soapy water--some of the many
objects we provide for the chimpanzees' psychological enrichment.  As a mother would in the wild, she shares her bed with younger females, and as a dominant female should, she gives reassurance to those in need during conflicts.

Some of the others endured more invasive laboratory procedures and other physical abuse than Annie.  Long series of biopsies, teeth knocked out, digits lost in fights or bitten off when anesthetized, and viral inoculations created problems with which we help them struggle.  In addition to learning that food and drink are not rationed, they have needed to learn that needles do not always mean something terrible is going to happen to them and that their new human friends really are friends and are not tricking them.

Jean arrived with the most severe emotional difficulties to overcome, so we have been inspired by the dignity with which she has gradually been recovering the ability to relate to others.  Considering her experiences, it is no wonder that should take some time.

Born in a laboratory owned by what was then Merck, Sharpe & Dohme in 1975, she was used in research for 22 years.  She suffered from anorexia and many times was treated for self-inflicted wounds.  In 1992, she was inoculated with HIV, and for two years afterwards she was used in intensive studies, during one of which she is said to have "snapped."  From that day on, she had seizures during which she would spin, scream, salivate, bite and hit herself, and urinate and defecate
uncontrollably.  Due to the frequency of her seizures--sometimes as many as several per day--she was medicated for her anxiety.  The medication sedated her but did not stop the seizures.

Jean was the first chimpanzee Fauna Foundation founder Gloria Grow met.  From the moment Gloria met her, she understood Jean needed to leave the laboratory environment if she was ever to find some peace of mind.  LEMSIP personnel made efforts to socialize the chimpanzees before the animals came to the Fauna Foundation, but Jean was incapable of socializing with the other
chimpanzees.  In fact, her behavior made it nearly impossible for the other chimpanzees in her group to socialize with each other.  So it appeared Jean would not come to the sanctuary because her deep emotional problems would prevent her from coping with group housing.  However, the LEMSIP director was persuaded to release Jean provided that an enclosure be built in which she could live on her own.

Although the LEMSIP staff expressed their belief that Jean was "finished" and could never possibly live peacefully with other chimpanzees, Jean has now made the most progress of any of the chimpanzees at the Fauna Foundation.  Although she still experiences twitches and spasms, she has only had a few seizures and has not taken any medication in more than 18 months. She lives mostly alone but shares two rooms and the outdoor enclosure with two male chimpanzees, Tom and Pablo.  She enjoys visits from the other female chimpanzees and will even spend an entire afternoon sitting with one of them, Sue Ellen, grooming and sharing food.

Nevertheless, Jean relies mostly on her human caretakers for enrichment.  She does not seem very interested in most objects the other chimpanzees enjoy playing with, but when a swing was put in her room, she immediately began to play with it.  When the outdoor enclosure was first built, Jean refused to go outside.  Now she spends many mornings enjoying the cool, fresh air beyond her enclosure.

We will be glad to answer any questions you may have and can be reached at  fauna.found@sympatico.ca or 450-658-1844.  At our Website, www.faunafoundation.org, you can find more about the Fauna Foundation, the animals, and our twice-monthly (May to October) Chimposiums, where you can learn about chimpanzees firsthand.

Arryn Ketter is a devoted volunteer helping to care for the chimpanzees at the Fauna Foundation.  Currently a master's degree candidate at McGill  University's Center for Medicine, Ethics and Law, she is developing a thesis on her primary goal: the emancipation of chimpanzees and other animals from biomedical research.


Welcome!

PSYETA is pleased to welcome two new Board members:  Aphrodite Clamar-Cohen, Ph.D., and Yale Wishnick, Ph.D.

Aphrodite Clamar-Cohen, of New York City, is a clinical psychologist who, until recently, operated a public relations firm that counted some animal advocacy groups among its clients.  She has observed, in her psychology practice, the importance of the treatement of animals as a marker of emotional health in human beings.

Yale Wishnick, of Elk Grove, California, is an organizational development specialist for the California Teachers Association.  He has organized school-community conferences focusing on the human animal violence connection and is particularly concerned to help end the suffering of animals used in education.  He and his wife operate a shelter for cats.


Making Strides

Program Director Gives Law Enforcement Tips ...

In the Fall 1999 issue of PSYETA News, we told you about PSYETA Program Director Mary Lou Randour's October 1999 presentations on "Beyond Violence: The Human-Animal Connection" to prosecuting attorneys, police officers, and judges of the Anne Arundel County (Maryland) Criminal Justice Coordinating Council and the Police Department's command staff.  These well-received sessions led to additional invitations to speak.

In December, Mary Lou's audiences were the Child Abuse Unit of the Anne Arundel Police Department, made up of police officers, prosecuting attorneys, and mental health professionals, and the command staff of the Howard County (Maryland) Police Department.  In January, she began an
in-service training for the Annapolis Police Department.  The training--with all members of the Department participating--is taking place once a week over a seven-week period, with PSYETA Executive Director Ken Shapiro conducting one of the sessions.

Ken also joined Mary Lou in giving a two-hour presentation, on the human-animal violence connection, to Frederick County, Maryland, Animal Control.  In addition to Animal Control staff, the audiance included a state senator's aide, a prosecuting attorney, police officers, domestic violence
workers, and counselors at a mental health agency.

Mary Lou spoke at a February 1st dinner attended by 20 Maryland judges, and also in February, addressed the Domestic Violence Council of Frederick County, Maryland.  The Council included police and animal control officers and prosecuting attorneys.
 

... and Instructs Teachers ...

On November 19th and 20th, Mary Lou attended a Violence Free Schools conference of the California Teachers Association.  Mary Lou and two other animal protectionists in attendance--Kim Sturla of Animal Place and The Fund for Animals and Elliot Katz of In Defense of Animals--created four themes for the next series of workshops: Teacher Advisory Committee on Humane Education, 2000: Year of the Humane Child, Bias-Free Nutritional Information (information and availability of plant-based diets in the schools), and Encouraging Humane Alternatives to Dissection.  These teacher workshops will be held in November 2000 under the supervision of new PSYETA Board member Yale Wishnick, who works for the California Teachers Association  (see Welcome!).
 

... and Works with Kids.

On January 22nd, Mary Lou and Ken led a conference, sponsored by the National Cathedral, in Washington, D.C., for high school students and community activists on early warning signs of violence in youth, emphasizing cruelty to animals as an important visible signal that a young person may also be in danger of harming human beings.


From PSYETA to You and the Animals

These PSYETA books, journals, and video help explain the animals' plight and our work to end it.  Longtime friends, newcomers, and even thoughtful people who aren't sure what we're all about can learn vast amounts from these well-researched and beautifully presented materials designed to
help you help animals.

Program Director Mary Lou Randour's new book Animal Grace: Entering a Spiritual Relationship with Our Fellow Creatures (see Ask Not What Animals Can Do for You...) reveals the spirituality of personal relationships with animals and of daily choices that help animals.  Especially if you've been thinking you're alone in your profound experiences with animals, this one's for you!  167 pages, hardcover. New World Library, 2000.  Members $17.50, other friends $20.00.

PSYETA's video Beyond Violence: The Human-Animal Connection. "How we treat animals influences ... the ways in which we treat one another," begins this clear and compelling appeal to teach compassion to prevent violence. Almost 300 copies already in the hands of concerned parents and officials, and we've barely begun to promote it! 13 minutes. $19.95 individuals, $29.95 organizations. Includes booklet with discussion guide and list of resources.

The AniCare Model of Treatment for Animal Abuse, by a leading family violence expert and PSYETA Program Director Mary Lou Randour, provides a cognitive-behavioral model of treatment by mental health professionals, aimed at producing changes in attitude and behavior so animal abuse does not repeat or lead to violence against human beings.  30 pages.  $14.95.  Includes resource list and references.

Executive Director Ken Shapiro's groundbreaking volume Animal Models of Human Psychology: Critique of Science, Ethics and Policy exposes fundamental flaws of psychology-related and other animal experiments. They harm animals and human-health research. They're poorly regulated and evaluated-a scandalous use of our tax dollars. A must-read for scientists and everyone else concerned with the animal-experimentation boondoggle. 328 pages, hardcover. Hogrefe & Huber, 1998. Members $30.00, nonmembers $39.50.

Society & Animals: Social Scientific Studies of the Human Experience of Other Animals, a journal edited by Ken Shapiro, provides articles, commentaries, and book reviews. Topics: research, education, medicine, and agriculture using animals; entertainment, companion animals, animal symbolism, and other popular-culture uses of animals; wildlife and the environment; and sociopolitical movements, public policy, and the law. Members $30.00 for three issues, nonmembers $40.00.

The Journal of Applied Animal Welfare Science (JAAWS), coedited by Ken Shapiro, makes available articles, commentary and book reviews on effects of captivity on naturally free-roaming animals; how to minimize animals' pain and stress in laboratories; how to improve lives of animals raised for food; and other research by scholars in many disciplines. Members $17.50 for four issues, nonmembers $35.00.
 

Click here to order this or other PSYETA materials

Have a Wonderful Spring!

At PSYETA, the renewal of life in the spring brings thoughts of what a life-affirming movement ours is and what a crucial contribution we make.

As our Beyond Violence video sows seeds of compassion in thousands of minds, a compassionate way of life may spring into existence.  As we succeed in introducing non-animal research methods for tomorrow's advances.  Maybe some will show communities how to live and let live instead of killing geese and deer for engaging in their natural behavior.

Please help us make these maybes the new reality with your generous gift to PYSETA.  If you do, we promis to continue sending you good news like that contained in this issue of PSYETA News.
 

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