Among the many questions I’ve been asked in the last couple of weeks since helping out with the launch of The Whale Sanctuary Project is this one:
“It’s going to cost millions of dollars to create a seaside sanctuary for a few whales and dolphins that you hope to get retired from places like SeaWorld so you can take care of them for the rest of their lives. Wouldn’t that money be better spent on conservation programs for endangered species in the oceans?”
It’s the kind of question that’s often put to sanctuaries: “Why are you spending so much money looking after half a dozen elephants/chimpanzees when there’s a more urgent need to protect them in Africa.” Or: “Why are you spending so much to take care of a few dozens/hundreds of dogs and cats when we need that money for spay/neuter programs?”
The thing is, it’s not a zero-sum game in which the benefit to one group of animals means a loss to another group. It’s not an argument over some finite sum of money as to where you can get the most perceived benefit. There’s a need for both approaches, and a win for one can be a win for the other.
The two approaches can be described as conservation and restoration.
Conservation, very broadly, is about stopping things from getting worse: like protecting elephants and chimps in their native lands, or spay/neutering more dogs and cats to prevent more homeless pets from being born.
Restoration is slightly different: it’s about giving something back to the animals who have already been screwed over, as in caring for elephants from circuses, or making new homes for abandoned dogs and cats.
Conservation
Conservation is often described as “management of natural resources.” And while that’s important, the kind of language that’s often used betrays how human-centered it can become. Living creatures aren’t “resources” that need to be “managed”. They don’t exist for human benefit; they exist for their own benefit. And euphemisms like “stewardship” (popular in the religious community as an alternative to “dominion”) still carry the same arrogant belief that we humans stand at the pinnacle of creation. “Stewardship” acknowledges our claim that the rest of nature exists primarily for our benefit, while tempering this claim with the notion that we should demonstrate our superiority by treating the rest of creation responsibly. Euphemisms like “stewardship” carry the same arrogant belief that we humans stand at the pinnacle of creation.
It gets even worse when this attitude is used as a rationale for institutionalized abuse. Classic examples would be that sport hunting promotes conservation, that circuses and Shamu shows are educational, and that killing (oops, “euthanizing”) dogs and cats at shelters is a necessary part of saving those not so lucky to have been brought in yet.
At its best, conservation can help protect our fellow animals from some of the worst atrocities that we humans are wreaking upon them. And many organizations have embraced the term “compassionate conservation” to emphasize that their work is not about, for example, “conservation of fish stocks” (i.e. for human benefit), but is about protecting the individuals who make up these populations.
Restoration
Restoration is a somewhat different concept: It’s about giving back, as best we can, what’s been taken away, and making up for the damage and abuse we’ve inflicted.
Restoration can go hand-in-hand with conservation, like when you restore a damaged wetland in order to conserve a natural ecology. But it begins with the recognition that nature and our fellow animals aren’t “resources” in the first place. As Henry Beston famously wrote:
“They are not brethren, they are not underlings: they are other nations, caught with ourselves in the net of life and time, fellow prisoners of the splendor and travail of the earth.”
Beston argued that we need “a wiser and perhaps a more mystical concept of animals.” And in order to gain such an understanding of who they truly are, we have to at very least give back what we’ve taken from them.
Not that we will probably ever truly understand them:
“Remote from universal nature and living by complicated artifice, man in civilization surveys the creature through the glass of his knowledge.”
Going a step further, restoration isn’t really even about gaining a better understanding; it’s simply about the animals themselves. We do it because it’s right, and we do it to make up for what we’ve done that’s wrong. We do it because we can, and we do it regardless of the cost or the inconvenience to ourselves. An act of contrition to make up for a deep wrong.
If there are additional benefits that serve a wider, perhaps conservation-oriented, purpose, that’s certainly good, too. But the act of giving back is ultimately its own purpose – a true act of altruism. And if, as a result, we gain a “wiser and perhaps more mystical concept of animals,” then that’s a reward in itself.
In the case of The Whale Sanctuary Project, we’re talking about animals who, for the most part, were born into captivity and have never even seen beyond the concrete walls and screaming audiences that are their entire world. They have never experienced the close family relationships that are the bedrock of life in the ocean; never eaten the food that’s natural to them; never lived the life for which 50 million years of evolution had prepared them.
Reparation
By any definition and by any standard, keeping these apex predators of the ocean in small tanks for the amusement of shallow people is more than just wrong; it is a crime against each of them individually, a sin against nature, and a wrong that cannot be righted simply by conservation efforts toward others of their kind, fueled by notions of “better stewardship.”
Rather, it is an act of contrition and a gesture of reparation, born of the recognition of human error, and an attempt to make up, if only in a small way, for the deep wrong that our own species has committed.
In creating sanctuaries that can make up for some of what went before, we offer the best we can by way of restitution. And even though we can never fully recompense them for what they’ve lost, having their own sanctuary can help to heal the deep wounds we have inflicted upon the fabric of nature itself.
Conservation, Restoration, Reparation
By Michael Mountain,
Among the many questions I’ve been asked in the last couple of weeks since helping out with the launch of The Whale Sanctuary Project is this one:
It’s the kind of question that’s often put to sanctuaries: “Why are you spending so much money looking after half a dozen elephants/chimpanzees when there’s a more urgent need to protect them in Africa.” Or: “Why are you spending so much to take care of a few dozens/hundreds of dogs and cats when we need that money for spay/neuter programs?”
The thing is, it’s not a zero-sum game in which the benefit to one group of animals means a loss to another group. It’s not an argument over some finite sum of money as to where you can get the most perceived benefit. There’s a need for both approaches, and a win for one can be a win for the other.
The two approaches can be described as conservation and restoration.
Conservation, very broadly, is about stopping things from getting worse: like protecting elephants and chimps in their native lands, or spay/neutering more dogs and cats to prevent more homeless pets from being born.
Restoration is slightly different: it’s about giving something back to the animals who have already been screwed over, as in caring for elephants from circuses, or making new homes for abandoned dogs and cats.
Conservation
Conservation is often described as “management of natural resources.” And while that’s important, the kind of language that’s often used betrays how human-centered it can become. Living creatures aren’t “resources” that need to be “managed”. They don’t exist for human benefit; they exist for their own benefit. And euphemisms like “stewardship” (popular in the religious community as an alternative to “dominion”) still carry the same arrogant belief that we humans stand at the pinnacle of creation. “Stewardship” acknowledges our claim that the rest of nature exists primarily for our benefit, while tempering this claim with the notion that we should demonstrate our superiority by treating the rest of creation responsibly. Euphemisms like “stewardship” carry the same arrogant belief that we humans stand at the pinnacle of creation.
It gets even worse when this attitude is used as a rationale for institutionalized abuse. Classic examples would be that sport hunting promotes conservation, that circuses and Shamu shows are educational, and that killing (oops, “euthanizing”) dogs and cats at shelters is a necessary part of saving those not so lucky to have been brought in yet.
At its best, conservation can help protect our fellow animals from some of the worst atrocities that we humans are wreaking upon them. And many organizations have embraced the term “compassionate conservation” to emphasize that their work is not about, for example, “conservation of fish stocks” (i.e. for human benefit), but is about protecting the individuals who make up these populations.
Restoration
Restoration is a somewhat different concept: It’s about giving back, as best we can, what’s been taken away, and making up for the damage and abuse we’ve inflicted.
Restoration can go hand-in-hand with conservation, like when you restore a damaged wetland in order to conserve a natural ecology. But it begins with the recognition that nature and our fellow animals aren’t “resources” in the first place. As Henry Beston famously wrote:
Beston argued that we need “a wiser and perhaps a more mystical concept of animals.” And in order to gain such an understanding of who they truly are, we have to at very least give back what we’ve taken from them.
Not that we will probably ever truly understand them:
Going a step further, restoration isn’t really even about gaining a better understanding; it’s simply about the animals themselves. We do it because it’s right, and we do it to make up for what we’ve done that’s wrong. We do it because we can, and we do it regardless of the cost or the inconvenience to ourselves. An act of contrition to make up for a deep wrong.
If there are additional benefits that serve a wider, perhaps conservation-oriented, purpose, that’s certainly good, too. But the act of giving back is ultimately its own purpose – a true act of altruism. And if, as a result, we gain a “wiser and perhaps more mystical concept of animals,” then that’s a reward in itself.
In the case of The Whale Sanctuary Project, we’re talking about animals who, for the most part, were born into captivity and have never even seen beyond the concrete walls and screaming audiences that are their entire world. They have never experienced the close family relationships that are the bedrock of life in the ocean; never eaten the food that’s natural to them; never lived the life for which 50 million years of evolution had prepared them.
Reparation
By any definition and by any standard, keeping these apex predators of the ocean in small tanks for the amusement of shallow people is more than just wrong; it is a crime against each of them individually, a sin against nature, and a wrong that cannot be righted simply by conservation efforts toward others of their kind, fueled by notions of “better stewardship.”
Rather, it is an act of contrition and a gesture of reparation, born of the recognition of human error, and an attempt to make up, if only in a small way, for the deep wrong that our own species has committed.
In creating sanctuaries that can make up for some of what went before, we offer the best we can by way of restitution. And even though we can never fully recompense them for what they’ve lost, having their own sanctuary can help to heal the deep wounds we have inflicted upon the fabric of nature itself.