Animal advocates hope to break barriers

Updated: 2013-06-03 07:08

By Wang Yuke in Tianjin (China Daily)

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Parents' misconceptions sometimes cause children to fear dogs and cats

Tianjin's animal welfare organizations held the Fourth Homeless Animals Adoption Day on May 25, aiming to help stray animals and find homes for them.

Organizers planned the event around Children's Day in the hope of encouraging children to get close to cats and dogs.

Animal advocates hope to break barriers

Homeless Animals Adoption Day, organized by Tianjin's non-government shelters, has run for four years in Tianjin to encourage more people to adopt stray animals. You Sixing / for China Daily

"Some parents likely tell children to stay away from animals, saying they carry diseases and would be aggressive," said Zhao Jing, a devoted volunteer with Eryi Pet Yard, an animal shelter in Tianjin. "In my experience, few dogs or cats are aggressive unless humans provoke them first."

Parents' misconceptions might lead children to refrain from fully engaging with their pets, said Zhao, a kindergarten teacher. "Most children in my class stay away from animals though they are obviously interested in them."

She has convinced her kindergarten director to allow students to make frequent visits to Eryi Pet Yard.

Liu Hao, who attended the event with her 6-year-old son, said she is trying to make him a caring person by encouraging him to care for the family's dog.

"My son looks after his dog just as we do with him," she said. "He gives it food, keeps it company and plays with it."

But she still worries about the unpredictability of other animals and the possibility they might have communicable diseases.

"I can't put my worries aside even if I am assured there is no danger or risk. I can hardly gamble my son's safety on animals he doesn't know," she said.

Niu Zhonghui, who has a 12-year-old girl and is also the director of Tianjin University Kindergarten, said that although she wants her daughter to be friendly with animals and care for them, she is still cautious.

"She is only allowed to throw food to stray cats and dogs from a distance. After all, it's anybody's guess whether these unhygienic animals carry diseases or not," she said.

When asked whether her daughter might grow up to be indifferent toward animals if she was not allowed to get close to them, Niu disagreed.

"I have bought her pets from time to time, such as fish, birds, silkworms and a rabbit. Likewise, children in our kindergarten are tasked with observing, tending and feeding caged animals in the yard, so long as it is under the supervision of teachers," she added. "Helping rear these animals will also help kids become familiar with animals and care for them."

But for some Chinese people, a wariness of dogs is deeply ingrained. Some dog owners said they often receive insults from passers-by when they walk their pets.

"I'm annoyed when pedestrians stay clear of my chihuahua or parents shield their children behind them. Some even order me to get away from them," said a Tianjin University of Technology freshman surnamed Li.

Chen Qinggang, a psychiatrist in Tianjin Anding Hospital, which specializes in psychological consultancy and treatment, said it is difficult to strike a balance between encouraging children to like animals and preventing kids from interacting with them due to health or safety concerns.

He suggested parents also become more familiar with animals so they can weigh the risks rationally.

He said parents are right to take protective measures in encounters with wild dogs because of the possibility that the animal might have rabies or other communicable diseases.

Wang Jing, director of Tianjin Beining Pet Clinic, said parents who take in stray animals should take them to the vet for a physical examination before allowing them to interact with their children.

She said parents need to protect their children from diseases.

"But diseases like toxoplasmosis affect pregnant women and fetuses only, so parents don't need to panic about it," Wang said.

Tianjin's shelters

Tianjin Common House Stray Animal Rescue Center

Common House, which is now home to 2,000 dogs and 200 cats, was the brainchild of Yang Xiaoyun. The center was founded in 1995 when her husband passed away. The initial spark for the rescue center can be traced back to 19 years ago.

After failing to make a deal, an illegal peddler cruelly threw a cat into a canal. The cat survived thanks to Yang, who resolved to help other cats and dogs.

As her center hosted more and more animals, Yang ran out of money. To sustain her undertaking, she sold two houses.

She has been forced to relocate the center nine times, because of neighbors' complaints about the dogs' barking.

Eryi Pet Yard

The shelter, named after its founder who is known as "eryi" (Aunt Er), is now home to 500 dogs and 30 cats.

She was moved by the stray dogs and cats - many of them hurt or ill - that would come foraging for food, and she started taking them home.

She initially hid her growing number of pets from her friends and neighbors, because she was afraid they would mock her. But volunteers at the shelter yard now affectionately say the animals are her kids.

Tianjin 800 Cats Rescue Team

The shelter has been operating for five years. The team members forcibly seized 800 cats from illegal vendors on Aug 31 last year, and since then they have become known as "800 Cats". The philanthropic institution is widely backed by many well-established organizations, including the Tianjin Protective Pet Association, that generously donate pet food.

- Wang Yuke

Pets and pregnancy

Many pregnant women give up their pets when their relatives and friends fuss over the fact that they have a pet during the crucial nine months.

This is due to the possibility that expectant mothers can contract toxoplasmosis, a disease that may cause birth defects.

Gynecologists and scientists, however, confirm that this can be avoided, first because cats and dogs can only catch the disease once in their lifetimes.

"Toxoplasma eggs are present in cats' feces, or in their fur in rare cases. As a matter of fact, it is not an easily contracted disease, especially if pregnant women avoid their pets' feces and claws," said Zhang Xilong, an internal infection specialist at the People's Hospital in Jidong county, Heilongjiang province.

Research also suggests that people who consume raw meat are far more prone to contract the disease than cat owners.

But pregnant woman should not make light of the disease's potentially irreversible impact. Unborn babies can be treated, but in severe cases ending the pregnancy is the best option.

- Wang Yuke

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