Thursday, April 19, 2007
Villagers enjoy bullfight near Madurai in Spanish style
The sport of bullfighting is popularly associated with Spain, but a non-descript village in Tamil Nadu also enjoys this dangerous sport known as "Jallikattu".
Unarmed males of Keelapati Village near Madurai battle it out in the fields with enraged bulls, and in the process some of the participants suffer serious injuries and even die.
"They announce a prize of 'Kuttuvilakku' (a lamp) or a television set, to whoever succeeds in taming the bull. I won it this year. The bulls are fed very well throughout the year and they are given proper care," said Sunderpandi, the winner of the competition.
Bullfighting in Tamil Nadu is said to be a centuries-old sport. Young winners were richly rewarded and even marriages were fixed during the event.
Drunken bulls, with horns sharpened to make them more dangerous, are let loose from an enclosure into the crowd where thousands stand to participate or view the craving to showcase one's machismo motivates the young and not so young participate.
"I've been injured many times during the bullfight in the past few years. But I've always had great fun. I have been participating since the age of seventeen," said Mayandi, a participant.
A public interest petition was filed in the Madras High Court to ban the game, but the sport continues albeit with a few medical professionals present to attend to injuries.
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Though many people in Spain and Mexico consider bullfights barbaric and out of place in the 21st. century; many tourists continue to support this senseless and cruel spectacle by going to “corridas de toros”.
S.H.A.R.K AND PETA have dedicated their time to documenting and filming the extremely sadistic and merciless torturing of bulls immediately before and during bullfights. It makes me sick and hurts me tremendously to think that as a ”civilized” people we still have human beings tormenting animals for “entertainment”!
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