Bullfighting Facts

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WAF FACT SHEETS Bullfighting _________________________________________________________ Every year, ap proximately 35,0 00 b ulls are tormented and killed in bullfights in S pain alone.(1) A lthough many bullfight attendees are Am erican tourists, 90 pe rcent of these tourists never return to another fight after witnessing the relentless cruelty that takes place in the ring.(2) Spanish bulls and their many counterparts in Mexico and other countries are victims of a savage display disguised as "art" or "entertainment" that noted M exican author Eduardo del Rio described as "a stumbling block for the humanization of man."(3) M urderous M ystique Spanish and Mexican bullfight advertisers lure American tourists with mystique. They claim the fight is festive, artistic, and a fair com petition betwe en skill and force. W hat they d o not reveal is that the bull never has a chance to defend himself, mu ch less survive. Many pro minent former bullfighters report that the bull is intentionally debilitated with tranquilizers and laxatives, beatings to the kidneys, petroleum jelly rubbed into their eyes to blur vision, heavy weights hung around their neck for weeks before the fight, and confinement in darkness for hours before being released into the bright arena.(4) A well-known bullfight veterinarian, D r. Manuel Sanz, repo rts that in 19 87 m ore tha n 90 percent of bulls killed in fights had their horns "shaved" before the fight. Horn shaving involves sawing off several inches of the horns so the bull misses his thrusts at the altered angle.(5) The matador, two picadors on horses, and three men on foot stab the bull repeatedly when he enters the ring. After the bull has been com pletely weakened by fear, b lood loss, and exhau stion, the m atado r attemp ts to make a clean kill with a sword to the heart. Unfortunately for the suffering bull, the matador rarely succeeds and must make several thrusts, often missing the bull's heart and piercing his lungs instead. Often a dagger must be used to cut the spinal cord and spare the audience the sight of a defenseless animal in the throes of death. The bull may still be fully conscious but paralyzed when his ears and tail are cut off as the final show of "victory."(6) Mexican bullfighting has an added feature: novillada, or baby bullfights. There is no ritual in this slaughter of calves. Baby bulls, some no more than a few weeks old, are brought into a small arena where they are stabbed to death by spectators, many of whom are childre n.(7) T hese b lood baths end w ith spectators ha cking o ff the ears and tail of the often fully consc ious ca lf lying in his own blood. The so-called "b loodless bullfights" that are legal in many U.S. states are on ly slightly less barbaric than their blo ody counterparts. Although the bulls in these "fights" are not killed in the ring, they are often slaughtered immediately afterward. During the fights they are tormented, teased, and terrified.(8) Oth er Victim s The bulls aren't the only victims of the intense cruelty of the arena. According to Lyn Sherwood, publisher of an English-language bullfight magazine, horses used in bullfights are "shot behind the ear with dope. The horses are drugged and blindfolded and they're knocked dow n a lot."(9) These horses, who are often gored, usually have wet newspaper stuffed in their ears to impair their hearing, and their vocal cords are usually cut so their cries do not distract the crowd. Fight promoters claim the horses are "saved" from glue factories; this means these animals are often old, tired plow ho rses who end up being knocked down by bulls weighing up to a half a ton.(10) American author Ernest Hemingway, a bullfighting aficionado, wrote in his book D eath in the Afternoon, "In the tragedy of the bullfight, the horse is the comic character ... I have seen it, people running, horse emptying, one dignity after another being destroyed in the spattering and trailing of its innermost values [viscera], in a complete burlesque of tragedy. I have seen these, call them disem bow ellings, that is the worst word. W hen due to the ir timing, they were very funny. T his is the sort of thing yo u shou ld not admit, but it is because such things have not been admitted that the bullfight has never been explained."(11)


Bull Breeding Bulls today are specially bred for bullfighting. They are raised on 280 registered bull ranches located in various parts of Mexico. Selective breeding has enabled ranchers to create a bull who will die in a manner most satisfying to the public.(12) Because the sight of a wounded b ull desperately trying to retreat from the ring would ruin the image of the "sport," bulls are bred to return to the torture repeatedly and appear to be a wild and vicious challenge to the matador.(13) Growing Opposition While its exact origins are not known, bullfighting is believed to have emerged in connection with ancient fertility rites. In 1567, Pope Pius V decreed that "exhibitions of tortured beasts or bulls is contrary to Christian duty and piety." He called for "an end to such bloody amusements, abject and more appropriate for devils than for men." The penalty for violating this decree, which has never been repealed, is excommunication.(14) In 1725, bullfighting began to assume its present state when Francisco Romero invented a stick with a red cloth suspended from the end, which he used to tease and torment the bulls. Today's bullfighting maneuvers became defined in the 1700s and have changed little since.(15) Recent polls of Spanish citizens show they are not particularly interested in attending bullfights. Even bullfight promoter Sherwood adm its "there's no way to morally justify bullfighting."(1 6) B ut tourists' mo ney kee ps bu llfight profiteers in business. T he W orld Society for the Protection of Animals has issued reports and made repeated verbal recomm endations to national leaders in Mexico and Spain criticizing bullfighting. Colin Platt, coordinator of the WSP A's Scientific Advisory Panel, commented in a memo attached to one report that "...in over 15 years of compiling scientific reports, this one was the most distasteful subject to research--a sentiment shared by several of my co lleagues on the P anel."(17 ) Ma ny anti-bullfighting groups have sprung up wo rldwide, including the S panish Alternativa P ara La Liberacio n Anim al, the M exican Pena Antitaurina Mexicana, the S ociety for the Prevention of C ruelty to A nimals in Tijuana and M exico City, and the Anti-Bullfighting Comm ittee in New Y ork. (18) Spain's Green Party has been working with the country's Association for the Defense of Animal Rights (ADDA) to have bullfighting banned. In 1993, a petition drive by the coalition raised over one million signatures.(19) W hat Yo u Can Do: If you are planning to visit a country that permits or encourages bullfighting, please tell your travel agent you are opposed to animal cruelty in any form. Many tourist resorts are building bullfight arenas as part of their "recreation" facilities; refuse to stay at such a resort, and write a letter to the owner explaining why you will not stay there. Instead, visit the resort town of Tossa de Mar, which was the first town in Spain to ban bullfights and related advertising.(20) Tell others the facts about bullfighting and urge them to protest as well. When tourists stop attending bullfights, profiteers will stop the cruelty. Blo ody o r bloo dless, bullfighting is a senseless, d egrad ing spectacle that has no place in a civilized soc iety. References 1.Nilsson, P.Q., "Think Spain . . . Think Again," 1994. 2.Delaney, Paul, "El Toro's Fight Goes On, but the 'OlĂŠs' Are Fewer," New York Times, August 6,1988. 3.McFarland, Cole, "Death in the Afternoon," The Animals' Voice, Volume 1, Number 1, 1988. 4.Ibid. 5.Ibid. 6.Ibid. 7.Ibid. 8."Savage Spectacles," The Animals' Agenda, July/August 1988. 9.The Animals' Voice, op. cit. 10.Ibid. 11.Hemingway, Ernest, Death in the Afternoon, N.Y.: Scribner, 1932. 12.The Animals Voice, op. cit. 13.Ibid. 14.Pope Pius V, Bullarum Romanorum Pontificum, Vol. 4, 2nd Part, 402-3, 1567. 15.Ibid. 16.Ibid. 17.Ibid. 18.The Animals' Agenda, op. cit. 19.Davison, P., "Matadors on Horns of a Dilemma," Independent (U.K.), Feb. 12, 1994. 20.Greanville, David P., "Catalonian Town Enacts First Bullfight Ban," The Animals' Agenda, May 1990.

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