TY - JOUR
T1 - Buddhist compassion and animal abuse in Thailand's tiger temple
AU - Cohen, Erik
PY - 2013/1
Y1 - 2013/1
N2 - The Tiger Temple in Kanchanaburi province, western Thailand, is a popular tourist attraction, offering visitors a unique opportunity to interact closely with tigers. It presents itself as a tiger sanctuary, whose tigers have been tamed by nonviolent Buddhist methods. This claim has been disputed by visitors and animal welfare activists. This article confronts the Temple's master narrative of Buddhist compassion with a counternarrative of animal abuse according to which, rather than being a sanctuary for tigers, the Temple in fact mistreats the animals and exploits them commercially. However, even as an animal welfare organization's report confirmed the abuse of the tigers and called for their confiscation and for the suspension of their display to visitors, the Thai authorities granted the Temple permission to operate as a zoo. This decision highlights the profound contrast between Thai and Western-inspired international norms for the treatment of captive (wild) animals. The article examines the cultural roots of this contrast and argues that in their narrow focus on the Tiger Temple the critics have unwittingly missed the opportunity to use the Temple's animal abuse as an instance of a wider problem in the perception and treatment of (wild) animals in Thailand.
AB - The Tiger Temple in Kanchanaburi province, western Thailand, is a popular tourist attraction, offering visitors a unique opportunity to interact closely with tigers. It presents itself as a tiger sanctuary, whose tigers have been tamed by nonviolent Buddhist methods. This claim has been disputed by visitors and animal welfare activists. This article confronts the Temple's master narrative of Buddhist compassion with a counternarrative of animal abuse according to which, rather than being a sanctuary for tigers, the Temple in fact mistreats the animals and exploits them commercially. However, even as an animal welfare organization's report confirmed the abuse of the tigers and called for their confiscation and for the suspension of their display to visitors, the Thai authorities granted the Temple permission to operate as a zoo. This decision highlights the profound contrast between Thai and Western-inspired international norms for the treatment of captive (wild) animals. The article examines the cultural roots of this contrast and argues that in their narrow focus on the Tiger Temple the critics have unwittingly missed the opportunity to use the Temple's animal abuse as an instance of a wider problem in the perception and treatment of (wild) animals in Thailand.
KW - Tiger Temple
KW - animal abuse
KW - animal shows
KW - ethical treatment of animals
KW - human-animal engagement
KW - tigers
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84878380746&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1163/15685306-12341282
DO - 10.1163/15685306-12341282
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AN - SCOPUS:84878380746
SN - 1063-1119
VL - 21
SP - 266
EP - 283
JO - Society and Animals
JF - Society and Animals
IS - 3
ER -