Board of Directors NARN
Northwest Animal Rights Network
August 2017
I really ask those who care about animals but who remain silent against white violence in this country; the terrorism falling upon people of color in this country, to please reflect on the compassion and empathy that brought them to veganism in the first place.
In the wake of the white supremacist violence at Charlottesville and
across the country, NARN stands by its mission statement, which calls for
for an end to the suffering of all sentient beings–both non-human and human.
Because we believe the liberation of all creatures is interconnected, we
also call on the animal rights community as a whole to find the empathy and
compassion in our hearts and use it to show up, speak out, and get active in
opposition to oppression.
We stand in solidarity with folks like Dr. Breeze Harper [The
Sistah Vegan Project] and
Food Empowerment
Project in committing to “fight against white supremacy and in a way
that is more than cosmetic and
“integrates [that commitment] into [our] organizational goals and values.”
We urge folks to think about the US-based animal rights organizations they
know of and work with and hold them accountable.
As Dr. Harper says:
Let them know that they cannot be neutral about the white [supremacist] elephant in the room (and that ‘room’ is a white settler nation called the USA in which the logics of white supremacy were its foundational CORE values and still operate today– from the logic of neo nazis to the logic of white savior complex to the logic of racial profiling to the logic of gentrification to the logic of tracking in K-12 education to the logic of engaging in missionary language when campaigning about animal rights and veganism).
In that spirit, we offer the following personal reaction to what
happened in Charlottesville from one of our long-time volunteers (see
below). We hope you will not only take it to heart but take action (see this
link for suggestions on how to do that in an animal rights context and
beyond). Like we say at NARN, show up, speak out, and get involved. It
cannot wait another moment.
In solidarity,
Board of Directors
The Northwest Animal Rights Project
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I had this idea in my head when I became veg as a kid–that people became
vegetarian or vegan because they widened their circle of compassion and
empathy beyond people that were like them to include people that were less
like them and then to include individuals that were non-human. Once I found
an activist community, it didn’t take me very long to realize that racism,
sexism, and other “-isms” exist in the animal rights movement as well. In
fact, it can be quite rampant.
Even knowing this, it somehow still hurts worse when people in the animal
rights community perpetuate hate speech, violence, or are silent about
others who do. There’s still a part of me that expects that vegans and
animal rights activists will understand that those of us who are different
than they are still have a right to live as freely as they do. That same
part of me still expect vegans to be people who, when they see injustice,
they do something about it instead of turning the other cheek. They speak
up–not just for non-human animals, but for the human animals, too. To give a
more specific example: Part of me expects them to speak up when family or
friends say things that perpetuate violence against people of color.
Yes, I am frustrated by people who would stand next to me while I fight for
animals, yet disappear when attacks are directed at me or other people of
color. It was incredibly frustrating to have another animal rights activist
tell me that if I want to feel “safe,” I should leave animal activism and do
human rights activism instead. I am able to continue to do this work,
because I know people like this are not the whole of our movement.
There are two vegan animal rights activists in the hospital right now who
stood up against hate and were struck by that vehicle in Charlottesville.
There are many of us, like them, that understand that fighting for human
justice doesn’t have to take anything away from animals. Those people remind
me that I am not alone–that I don’t have to choose. They remind me that it’s
not some awful multiple-choice test of “who deserves the right to live?” a)
myself & other people of color, or b) non-human animals.
I really ask those who care about animals but who remain silent against
white violence in this country; the terrorism falling upon people of color
in this country, to please reflect on the compassion and empathy that
brought them to veganism in the first place. Then when you find that
compassion and empathy, be willing to actually DO something with it. Use
your voice, your vote, your privilege wherever you can to fight oppression
and support ALL those who are impacted by it.
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