How Many Animals Will Die in This Year’s Gadhimai Festival in Nepal?

Butchers ready to sacrifice water buffaloes at the Gadhimai festival in Nepal (C) Diwakar Bhandari

Butchers ready to sacrifice water buffaloes at the Gadhimai festival in Nepal (C) Diwakar Bhandari, used with permission.

Nepal is set to host one of the world's largest religious slaughter of animals after the Eid-ul-Azha festival for the Muslims. Gadhimai festival, celebrated once every five years, will welcome hundreds of thousands of pilgrims to the Bara district. The festival, which commenced this week, is observed for a month. The animal sacrifices are scheduled for next week, on November 28 and November 29.

Despite a rising chorus of voices against the festival's treatment of animals, the organising committee has decided to go ahead as planned.

At the festival, participates sacrifice nearly 500,000 animals over the course of two days. With approximately 70 percent of the animals coming from India, India’s Supreme Court has issued a notice to stop the illegal transport of animals into Nepal.

Animal rights activists of Animal Equality protested at Brandenburg Gate against the world's biggest animal sacrifice in Gadhimai in Nepal, with blood on the hands and signs with sacrificed animals. Image by Florian Boillot . Copyright Demotix (28/10/2014)

Animal rights activists of Animal Equality protested at Brandenburg Gate against the world's biggest animal sacrifice in Gadhimai in Nepal, with blood on the hands and signs with sacrificed animals. Image by Florian Boillot. Copyright Demotix (28/10/2014)

Joanna Lumley, who advocates for Gurkhas‘ civil rights, urged officials to ban the animal sacrifices at the Gadhimai festival. Lumley is the ambassador of the British organisation Compassion in World Farming (CIWF), which promotes animal welfare. Animal Welfare Network Nepal, another similar organisation, and CIWF are currently sponsoring a joint online petition against the festival.

Other online petitions have also emerged in opposition to the treatment of animals at the Gadhimai festival. Many campaigning to stop the sacrifices at the event have been active on social media, pressuring the authorities to crack down on the violence against animals. 

Activists against the festival's animal practices aren't the only voices online, however. Supporters point to how the festival brings families together, often reuniting relatives who live on opposite sides of Nepal's borders. The celebrations, these people argue, help strengthen the country's communal bonds. The priest of the Gadhimai temple, for instance, is a Tharu, whereas most devotees from the bottom of Nepal's hierarchical caste-segregated Madhesi society.

Mass slaughter of animals dedicating the Hindu goddess of power, Gadhimai. Image by Koji. Copyright Demotix (23/11/2009)

Mass slaughter of animals dedicating the Hindu goddess of power. Gadhimai, Nepal. Image by Koji. November 23, 2009. Copyright Demotix.

Others point out that the festival's slaughter of animals pales in comparison to the cattle industry in a country like the United States, where 9.1 billion animals were killed for food last year, averaging almost 25 million animals every day.

With people still divided about the festival, activists and participants alike can only hope to raise awareness, recruiting more people to their causes.

Rather than seek international pressure, some of the festival's opponents believe local awareness could be a more reliable means of curbing the animal abuses at Gadhimai.

For instance, S.S. Pokharel, a medical student, writes:

Gadhimai temple in Nepal. Image by  Diwakar Bhandari, used with permission.

Gadhimai temple in Nepal. Image by Diwakar Bhandari, used with permission.

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