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Sherborn Hometown Weekly
Emily the Cow: A Legacy of Non-Violent Living
by Kathleen O'Brien
June 23, 2005
A statue honoring “Emily the Cow” was dedicated this
past weekend at the Peace Abbey, in Sherborn. Emily gained fame
by escaping from a slaughterhouse and eventually finding a home
at the Abbey.
People who were within earshot of the Peace Abbey in Sherborn this
past Sunday might have thought it strange to hear the sound of Barbara
Streisand singing “Emily, Emily, Emily…” but the
crowd of several hundred attending the service just beyond
the Gandhi Pacifist Memorial thought it entirely appropriate.
Emily the cow was a sacred animal; touching the lives of many by
teaching them about peace, non-violence, and compassion for all
living things. In a community where the front building is dedicated
to Martin Luther King, Jr. and Robert Kennedy and the Peace Abbey
itself is dedicated to Mother Theresa, a life-size, bronze memorial
over the resting place of Emily is just as significant.
Emily came to the Peace Abbey’s Vegan Peace Sanctuary on December
24, 1995 after being on the lam for forty days following her escape
from a slaughterhouse in Hopkinton. “There was something about
Emily that defied description,” said Lewis Randa, director
of the Abbey, and certainly the people who came to support Emily
shared that sentiment.
The Abbey community, believing in ethical vegetarianism, shared
this dedication with members of the Shri Lakshmi Hindu Temple of
Ashland. Cows are sacred animals in the Hindu faith, and the statue
was given a special blessing by two priests from the
temple. Also present were representatives of the Jain Center of
Greater Boston and the Boston Vegetarian Society. A member of the
Jain Center sprinkled water taken from the Holy River Ganges in
the City of Benares, India. The same priest from Shri Lakshmi
who blessed Emily’s statue, had previously placed on her a
sacred cow blanket, flowers, and put a golden thread through
the hole in her ear where her slaughterhouse nametag had once been when
she was diagnosed with bovine cancer. At the time of Emily’s
passing, friends of the Peace Abbey who were traveling in India
released clippings of her hair, traces of her blood, and the golden
thread into the Ganges River.
Harold Brown, from the Farm Sanctuary in upstate New York, also
spoke about his involvement with vegetarianism and with Emily. Brown,
ironically, a former beef farmer, stated that animals are individuals
and to truly find peace, one must cross the species barrier by extending
kindness to animals. Through this act of compassion there is hope
for extending it to all people.
Brown concluded, “animals are always in the present moment
and experience life from the heart.”
Dot Walsh of the Peace Abbey spoke about the four virtues she learned
from Emily, compassion, courage, kindness, and love. Emily, who
loved bagels, Wonder bread, and especially children, inspired many
people to extend their efforts in non-violence living through vegetarianism
and veganism.
The statue itself, with deep and engaging eyes, truly evokes
a human spirit through Emily’s image. Surrounded by plaques
with quotations about animal rights, both in English and Hindi,
the statue carries a message, which extends beyond Emily’s
life; the right to life for all living things is holy, an emotion
echoed by speaker Camilo Mejia.
Mejia, an Amnesty International prisoner of conscience and the first
conscientious objector for the Iraq War, was court marshaled and
then imprisoned for his beliefs. Mejia spoke about Emily as “a
fugitive of senseless violence”. He was supported, by all
the people in attendance, in his belief that killing is unnecessary
and only fuels corporate greed. Mejia explained that his vegetarianism
began while in the service as a way for a more healthy existence,
but quickly it became an issue of morality. Mejia spoke about the
essentiality for the respect of life and how Emily so beautifully
illustrated this point while asking for nothing in return.
The observance concluded with everyone reciting the Twelve Prayers
for Peace, which are from the twelve major religions of the world
and displayed on plaques at the Pacifist Memorial. In a tribute
to Emily, a plaque beneath her feet asks people to consider refraining
from eating meat for the rest of the day or the rest of their lives.
Surrounded by people who continue to love and cherish the memory
of Emily, her legacy is simple in its approach towards love and
kindness. In the company of words that serve to strengthen the meaning
of Emily’s life, one plaque in particular speaks to the humanity
of vegetarian lifestyle. These are the words of Alice Walker, writer,
activist, and feminist, who said, “The animals of the world
exist for their own reasons. They were not made for humans any more
than black people were made for white, or women created for men.”
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