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Nepal's killing fields: FIVE THOUSAND buffalo lie slaughtered at 
the beginning of Hindu ceremony which sees up to 300,000 animals killed to bring 
worshippers good luck
 Friday, November 28, 2014 Sara Malm, Daily Mail
  
More than 250,000 animals are being lined up for slaughter as Nepal embarks on a 
two-day religious festival where buffalo, birds and goats are sacrificed to 
appease a Hindu goddess. Millions of 
Hindus flock to the ceremony, which is held every five years at the temple of 
Gadhimai, the goddess of power, in Bariyarpur, Nepal, near the Indian border. The last time the 
festival was held, in 2009, more than 250,000 animals were killed, according to 
animal rights organisation PETA, who is campaigning to put a stop to the 
practice. The festival is 'kicked off' with the ritual slaughter of five 
thousand buffalo in a field near the temple, after which two days of ritual 
animal slaughter takes place.  Animal rights 
activists such as PETA are campaigning to halt the mass animal-slaughter, but 
despite their efforts, the organisers of the festival has promised that this 
year will be the biggest yet.  About 2.5 million 
devotees  have turned out for the festival, according to local government 
official Yogendra Prasad Dulal, who said it was 'impossible to estimate' the 
total number of animals sacrificed so far. 'It has been a grand day,' Mangal 
Chaudhary, head priest at a the Gadhimai temple said. 'The buffalo sacrifice has 
ended, but we will continue the rituals with goats and other animals for one 
more day,' On the first day, 
worshippers slaughtered more than 6,000 buffaloes, which were coralled into 
holding pens in the fields, along with at least 100,000 goats and other animals, 
Chaudhary said. The festivities will continue on Saturday when at least another 
100,000 animals will die in the name of goddess Gadhimai.  
More than 80 per cent of Nepal's 27 million people are Hindus, but unlike most 
of their counterparts in neighbouring India, they frequently sacrifice animals 
to appease deities during festivals. Authorities 
deployed hundreds of police personnel to make sure there were no clashes between 
activists and the devotees. 'It is a ritual connected with people's faith,' said 
Yogendra Dulal, an assistant administrator of the Bara district, where the 
temple is located. 'We can't hurt their sentiments and ban the practice.'   
 Worshippers 
believe the animal sacrifice, meant to appease Gadhimai, the Hindu goddess of 
power, brings them luck and prosperity. The ritual began at dawn with a 
ceremonial 'pancha bali' or the sacrifice of five animals, comprising a rat, a 
goat, a rooster, a pig and a pigeon. Although cows are 
considered sacred by Hindu's, the thousands of animals seen slaughtered in these 
pictures are buffalo. 6,000 buffaloes were held in an open-air pen prior to 
being beheaded by butchers using swords and large curved knives. Thousands of 
goats and chickens will also be sacrificed before the festival ends on Saturday, 
temple officials said.  The heads of the 
sacrificed animals will be buried in a huge pit while the animal hides and skin 
will be sold to traders who have contracted to buy them. 'It is not proper 
to kill animals in the name of religion,' Uttam Kafle, of rights group Animal 
Nepal, told Reuters by telephone from the site. 'We are trying to convince the 
people that they can worship at the shrine peacefully and without being cruel to 
animals.' India's Supreme 
Court recently asked the government to stop the illegal movement of animals into 
Nepal for the ceremony. Comment: Animals murdered 
in the name of culture, tradition, religion, celebration, or superstition are 
among the greatest obstacles to our moral progress. Logical arguments and 
fact-based evidence can help awaken people to their moral blindness. |