The
Amish (and Mennonite) community are known as "The Gentle People".
Amish Country is known for its wonderful restaurants, craft shops and well-kept
Amish farms. Beautiful fields where bearded men in wide-brimmed hats lead teams
of shaggy plow horses tilling the soil. Hay fields run along rolling hills of
Amish country, and the fields that sustain the simple lifestyle are mostly
bare. But one crop the most important crop to some remains: PUPPIES.
When people think of
the Amish, they tend to think of a people who live according to God's word and
religion. The Amish life that is depicted for tourist is NOT reality. There is animal abuse among Amish in the form of
puppy mills. As a matter of
fact Lancaster County, PA
is the Puppy Mill Capitol of the East Coast! For
farmers, a big crop of dogs can gross up to $500,000 annually. The “Gentle Men” in the suspenders and bushy
beards are masking a cruel form of factory farming behind the quaint and pure
image of the Amish culture.
In
areas of the U.S. where Amish dwell, there is a high number of puppy mills. The
Pennsylvania Bureau of Dog Law Enforcement lists 243 kennels in Lancaster
County Pennsylvania, 98% of them owned by the Amish. Holmes County, Ohio, has
470 kennels -- more than any other county in the nation with a large percentage
owned by the Amish.
If
you happen to not know what Puppy Mills are, they are mass dog-breeding
operations. They have been around for decades, but they continue to be a
problem because unsuspecting consumers keep buying those adorable puppies in
the pet store window or recently on some Internet sites and ads in local
newspapers. But many times, these masquerade the truth ... they are dogs
purchased from puppy mills.
These
breeding facilities frequently house dogs in shockingly poor conditions,
particularly for breeding stock animals who are caged and continually bred for
years, without human companionship and with little hope of ever becoming part
of a family. After their fertility days are over, breeding animals are commonly
killed, abandoned or sold to another mill. The annual result of all this
breeding is hundreds of thousands of puppies, many with behavior and/or health
problems.
Daily
existence for these dogs is a life of neglect, abuse, torture and suffering,
and when they have outlived their usefulness, an often brutal ending! Disease,
malnutrition, dehydration, sickness and death flourish in cramped filthy cages,
freezing in the winter, scorching in the summer. Females bred and over-bred
from their first heat cycle through every subsequent one until their bodies are
so used up and broken down that death is a welcome release for them. They never
know a kind word or a gentle touch. And this description barely scratches the
surface of the cruelty.
While
the Amish landscape has been described as among the most beautiful in the
world, the puppies bred at the mills NEVER see the outside of wire cages that
are usually stacked on top of each other in dark barns.
To
be fair, not ALL Amish are puppy mill owners but the population have chosen to
ignore what is going on in their own backyards. NOTHING IS BEING DONE TO THEM!
And we must remember the words of writer, political activist and Holocaust
survivor, Elie Wiesel... "to remain silent and indifferent is the
greatest sin of all."
What
if the Bishops of the Amish faith opposed this mass production and torture of
dogs? They should make it known to all who are of the Amish community that
anyone who contributes to this horror will be SHUNNED! Shunning is the calling
of members who break church rules to confess before the congregation. Those who
will not correct their behavior are excommunicated. Excommunicated members are
shunned in order to shame the individual into returning to the church. Members
may not accept anything from the shunned person like a handshake, payment or
even a ride. This form of discipline is recommended by the bishop after a long
process of working with the individual. Excommunicated members will be accepted
back into the church if they return and confess their wrongdoing. Those in the
Amish community can be shunned for something as simple as painting their barn
in an unapproved color ... SURELY the act of animal cruelty deserves nothing
less from their own peers.
Unfortunately,
as they say, MONEY TALKS. The Amish have been allowed to continue their
inhumane treatment of animals without pressure from the rest of the population
because of the money that tourism brings to Amish businesses.
Most
people who visit Lancaster County, Pennsylvania and Holmes County, Ohio go
there to experience the Amish Culture. Yes, the Amish in general are a hard
working, modest people. But ethical? NO! Hypocritical? ABSOLUTELY. Selling your
religion for money and international trade is not ethical. On top of that, they
have others ("the English" as they call outsiders) post on the
internet for them. Isn't it amazing how these Godly people who shun the outside
world have no qualms about using a third party to do what God has forbidden
them from doing? It appears that the majority of the Amish people are living
double lives or have double standards.
The
Amish continually breed poor quality pups and keep their breeding animals in a
state that defies decency. They all should be barred from dog breeding as all
they breed is poor quality dogs. They get away with it because people think
that religious people would never do anything bad. Their religion should not exempt
them from humane treatment of animals! This MUST Be Stopped!
More
than 400 kennel licenses are issued in Holmes County alone. Puppy sales have
turned into big business! Very few are legitimate, well-kept kennels where the
breeders limit the number of dogs they have, maintain their physical and mental
health and, best yet, care for them like the loving pets they are. The rest are
puppy mills which unbelievably have no limitations on how many dogs they can
have. In Holmes County, there are puppy mills with from 75 to more than 100
dogs. How can anyone possibly give this many dogs all the care they need both
physically and emotionally?
Even
if these puppy mills were to give adequate physical care to their animals, what
kind of quality of life do these poor dogs have? These animals are certainly
lacking in love, nurturing and companionship. Isn't that the reason we have
pets?
When
their usefulness is gone, the dogs are dumped like garbage into the dog pound
where they try to undo all the damage that has been done. Or worse, they are
taken behind the barn and shot, or drowned in the family pond. Their puppies
are sold as pets, but the parents of these puppies are not treated as pets.
They are nothing more than livestock to the perpetrators of this disgraceful
act.
This
inhumane process must be stopped. The best way to stop puppy mills from
continuing their abuse is for consumers to stop
buying the puppies they breed. Many people think they are rescuing a puppy
by buying one. Don't be fooled. You're just creating space for another puppy to
be sold.
I
strongly advocate adopting a dog from a local shelter or rescue. However, if
you have a need to buy a dog from a breeder and you’re mind can’t be changed, NEVER
buy a dog unless you can see for yourself where it was born, how the parents
are kept and what condition all the dogs are in. A reputable kennel owner and
breeder will never sell to a pet store, and they will willingly give you the
name of their veterinarian as a reference.
Please
watch the below video, but BE WARNED, there are some graphic images on the
video. However, if you care anything about the problem of puppy mills, you will
force yourself to watch it. This is the Amish people who own puppy mills and
where that puppy you purchase from a pet store comes from.