13 March

The Blue-Star Idea. A Vision Every Animal Lover In The World Can Accept

by Jon Katz
The Blue Star Idea
The Blue Star Idea

(This photo is by the very gifted New York City photographer and chronicler of the New York Carriage Horses Nina Galicheva).

I’ve been writing about the New York Carriage Horses for more than a year, but this photograph, taken at Blue-Star Equiculture Farm last Sunday by Nina Galicheva, tells me things are getting personal between me and the horses. That’s what people are telling me.

For most of the year, my writing about the horses has been conceptual, ideological. The campaign to drive them out of New York seems both ignorant and dishonest to me. It is unjust, that is what spurred me to write about it.

When Chief Avrol Looking Horses, the spiritual leader of the Sioux, told me the horses were speaking to me and praying for me to carry their messages, I was surprised, and confused. But now I know they are speaking to me, I no longer doubt it, it no longer is a strange idea for me. But what next? I’m not sure.

We had a pony on the farm – Rocky – but dogs, and to some extent, donkeys, sheep and barn cats have been the focal point of my life with animals, not horses. I try and live a life of the mind, but the horse question is becoming increasingly personal, I am drawn to these mystical creatures and I am being told they are drawn to me. Maria and I have become friends with Paul Moshimer (above) and Pamela Rickenbach,they are co-directors of Blue Star, the retirement and rescue farm for working horses and an organic farming center.

I have been drawn closer and closer to the horses, I feel they are speaking to me and through me, and in my visits to Blue-Star, I sense something deeper occurring, but I am not sure what. Pamela Richenback wrote this morning about my experiences at Blue- Star, she and Maria and others are seeing the impact the horses are having on me. The big horses are communicating with me in ways I can feel but not see, but which Maria and others can see very clearly.

I am one of those people who can see things in others, but not always in myself, a tunnel vision common to writers I think.

My remarkable journey  began in a horse carriage stable in New York more than a year ago, it has led me to Blue-Star, an amazing experiment in Palmer, Mass. I believe Blue-Star and their values are the future for animal lovers and animals. There, they are showing us the way to keep animals in our world, to keep them with people, to treat them humanely and lovingly, to know them rather to see them as an ideological idea.

At Blue-Star, the pilgrims and prophets of the animal world – Native-Americans, poets, off-duty police officers and firemen, artists and photographs and animal lovers, students and the young, outcasts and misfits and warriors, animal lovers and writers – gather every day of the year, drawn to the farm like the wise men to Nazareth. It is an astonishing to see, especially against the backdrop of the anger, greed and argument that shrouds the lives of more and more animals and their people every day. The ponies need such a place, so do the elephants in the circus, and the working dogs, and the animals on farms.

So far, it’s only the horses, I believe that will change.

Pamela writes very personally about the horses, each one is an individual being to her and to Paul, they are not one thing, there is not one answer for all of them. They do not exploit animals for political purposes, or to feel good, they see them out and rescue them and look every day for ways to connect them to the work and people that will keep them safe and healthy.  And engaged. There is a loving and nourishing feeling about the place, something I have never felt at an animal rights demonstration in New York City.

At Blue-Star, there are no arguments about horses, there is a common understanding about them, a common and healing and uplifting purpose. We need the horses, just as we need the dogs, we have always worked alongside of them, they need us. Domesticated animals like horses – and some elephants as well –  must not be abandoned on preserves or driven to slaughterhouses. Their work needs to be protected, it is their salvation. The freedom and dignity of the people who own them also needs to be respected. These are the values at Blue-Star.

There, horses and animals are not a wedge to be driven against human beings, not a means of alienating people, attacking them or coming between them and the animals in their lives. The new idea in the great awakening is that we must support the people who live with animals and work with them and love them, not anger and frighten and harass them and  seek to take their animals and livelihood away.

The animal world has, like the political world, become bitterly angry and polarized, but at Blue-Star I can see the way, the common purpose. It is the answer I have been looking form.

Blue-Star is the future. We don’t need to drive the animals away, or drive the people away who care for them. We can support both. We can make the lives of the animals better without pushing them out of the world. We can know them once again as the individual creatures that they are, as people used to know them. When animals lived amongst people, no one believed it was cruel for them to do their work. As we have moved farther and farther from them, this tragic idea that work is cruel and abusive has become endemic, and now threatens the very existence of every domesticated animal in the world.

We need a new and more humane and grounded understanding of animals. I see this at Blue-Star every time I visit there.

We used to know better, for almost all of our history.  We used to know what was good for animals and what was not, we did not need disconnected ideologues to tell us. The people who made decisions about animals knew something about them.  Every horse need not pull a carriage or haul lumber, each horse, like each human is different. The horses do not deserve to be lumped together and viewed as the same thing. As one learns right away at Blue-Star, their lives and needs ought to be determined by their nature, not by some angry political or ideological position. We owe it to them to do better.

Bella, the horse in the photograph above, was a fearful and mistreated animal when she came to Blue-Star, aggressive and anxious, impossible for most people to handle. She is calm and very different now, she shocked the people at Blue-Star when she came up to me and wanted to be part of our photograph. She had never approached a stranger before. What does this mean? Did she want to send a message, be part of the horse’s dramatic struggle to save themselves and remain in the great city? I don’t know, I can’t say. This is all a struggle for me.

Blue-Star is an important place, the most important place in the animal world that I have yet encountered.

If we can listen to them, they can show us the way out of the dysfunctional and divisive and self-serving morass that the animal rights movement has become. That movement does not save many animals, it doesn’t seem to know or understand animals or care for them much in the way they are cared for at Blue-Star.  The contrast – you can see it for yourself – is stunning. You will never see an animal at an animal rights demonstration, you will never seen an animal rights activist touch a horse or bring one a carrot.

In New York, the horses  simply become symbols, remote stand-ins for the rage and alienation of human beings in the modern world. All of them fit into one pocket, they are all abused and miserable animals needing rescue from hateful human beings to be happy and survive. At Blue-Star, it could hardly be more different. The animals are known and respected.

(You can help Blue-Star rescue horses, care for them, help heal Mother Earth. Check it out here.)

The people at Blue-Star speak for the true animal lovers in the world, these are people who love animals and care about their true rights. The more we understand the horses, the more certain we are that they belong with us.  At Blue-Star, everyone gets to know the animals there, see them as distinct entities from one another, then come to a true realization of what they need, of what is best for them.

For me, this journey is just beginning, and I do see that the horses have called me to it. I am open to learning what it is that is really happening to me, and I see that the answer for me can perhaps be found at Blue-Star, already a historic place in the history of the human-animal bond.

I’ve been wondering for years how the animals of the world can be saved from the political quagmire that engulfs them and threatens them and obscures the most crucial issue facing them – how can they survive among us when our culture seems intent on driving them away? More than anything, Pamela and Paul’s vision is to find way that animals and people can work together, and both be treated with love and respect.

That is the new and wiser understanding of animals that the author and naturalist Henry Beston called for a century ago, that is the vision that the animal rights movement has failed to see or find. That is the humane vision, the truly progressive one, the way to protect their genuine rights and welfare.

That is the vision that every true animal lover can accept and adopt. It is a powerful wave, I believe it is coming.  The horses remind us that we are at a crossroads, the world is bleeding, every one of us has to decide whether we will work to save the natural world or abandon it to cowardly and greedy politicians and ideologues exploiting animals rather than saving them.

 

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