PROTECTING MOTHER COW

Article 48 of Constitution of India is one of the Directive Principles which directs the states to make efforts for banning animal slaughtering of cows and calves and other milch and draught cattle. Of course, the cow has long had a place in Indian politics. Country’s constitution includes a provision explicitly urging a gradual movement toward full prohibition of cow slaughter – a ban that has already been implemented in most states. The cow was possibly revered because humans are relied heavily on it for dairy products and for tilling the fields, and on cow dung as a source of fuel and fertilizer. Cow protection was a significant part of the freedom movement, championed by a person no less than Mohandas Gandhi himself. Mahatma Gandhi had said, “Cow protection to me is not mere protection of the cow. It means protection of that lives and is helpless and weak in the world.” Reverence for cows is in the major texts of the Vedic religion. Hindus are vegetarians and consider the cow to be a sacred symbol of life that should be protected and revered. In the Vedas, the oldest of the Hindu scriptures, the cow is associated with Aditi, the mother of all the Gods. Mahatma Gandhi said, “I worship it and I shall defend its worship against the whole world.” Gandhi regarded more than mother, and called her ‘the mother to millions’. Cow protection has become a highly politicized core of the Hindu religion. Killing and maiming innocent animals for human consumption is the most irreligious, immoral and lowest human act. Indians have reasoned that killing a cow is like killing your own mother. In India, the cow is considered holy, and many devout Hindus devote themselves to protecting cows from slaughter and abuse – sometimes with violent results. Cow protection didn’t become India’s top political issue in 2017 overnight. There is a strong history and background to it that allows the BJP to garner such widespread public support while championing the bovine cause. Cow vigilante groups have become increasingly active in many parts of India. Rather than encouraging these cow vigilantes to take law into their hands, the government should strictly enforce laws so that no such illegal transportation or cow slaughter occurs in the first place. Animal slaughtering is wrong as they are also sentient beings and feel as much pain as we humans do. Not just cows but all the animals should be protected and not murdered to merely satisfy our taste buds. Breaking his silence on cow vigilantes in the country our Prime Minister Narendra Modi has already condemned their actions, saying most of them were anti-social elements masquerading as Gaurakshaks (cow protectors). India has 150 million cows today, giving an average of less than 200 lts milk per year. The cow has been a symbol of wealth in India since ancient times. However, they were neither inviolable nor revered in the same way today. Now days, it has been slaughtered in large numbers. Commercial benefits are not the only criteria in a human life. Cow-based farming has been the backbone of our agriculture for centuries. The cow is very much attached to the sentiment and the cultural traditions of the people. It is to be remembered that cow is the back-bone of Indian economy. India was golden bird until cow was base of agriculture. It is our duty to inform the poorly informed the bad consequences of animal slaughter for human consumption. We call the cow our mother. It’s not our duty to protect our mother? It is nice that the government runs several Goushalas, shelters for old cattle, across the country, but these are too few and are not governed by serious norms. Government must put a check on people who are running shops in the name of cow protection. We need to spread awareness about cow and its many uses.

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