There are many different types of cults and religions that abuse and/or
sacrifice animals. Santeria is estimated to have at least 1 million followers
nationwide.(1) Thousands of animals, including chickens, quail, goats, sheep,
pigs, cows, and dogs, are killed each day during its religious rituals.
Sacrifices take place in secluded areas or in priests' homes or other secret
meeting places.
Slaughter and Symbols
Santeria sacrifices, normally attended by about 10 to 25 people, last an
average of four hours but may last days. Larger animals, such as goats or
sheep, typically have their throats slit, whereas smaller animals' heads may
be torn or twisted off by ritual participants. The heads of pigeons and other
birds may be put into the mouth of the Santero (priest), and their necks
crushed or bitten through. The animals' blood is poured over Santeros or into
containers for consumption.(2)
Satanic activity may also involve animal abuse. Animals have been found
bludgeoned to death, burned with acid, and dismembered.
Some ritual holidays involving animals are:
- Jan. 7: St. Winebald Day
- Feb. 25: St. Walpurgis Day
- Mar. 20: Feast Day
(Spring Equinox)
- Sept. 22: Feast Day
(Fall Equinox)
- Dec. 22: Feast Day
Rites and Rules
Some followers of Santeria have been brought to court. In the case of First
Church of Chango, Inc., v. American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to
Animals in New York City, the New York courts ruled that animal sacrifice is
not fully protected by the first amendment. Santeria is a religion, but it is
the belief, and not the practices, of a religion that the first amendment
protects absolutely.(3) A Santeria high priest in Washington, D.C., agreed to
use wine in rituals instead of animal blood. Followers of Santeria have also
been cited for the cruel conditions in which they keep animals. Animals
awaiting slaughter have been found with their legs tied, unable to move,
crammed into crates.(4)
What You Can Do
If you discover evidence or have knowledge of any case of animal sacrifice
or mutilation, contact the police. In addition, find out who in your town,
county, or state investigates and enforces the anticruelty code (such as an
officer from a humane society or SPCA) and provide him or her with a concise,
written, factual statement.
One way to determine whether religious cults that practice animal sacrifice
(such as Santeria) exist in your community is to consult your telephone
directory's yellow pages under religious suppliers or "botanicas." Botanicas
are stores that sell beads and other supplies used in ritual sacrifice and
other cult practices.
To protect your own companion animals from theft for animal sacrifices,
keep them indoors, on leashes, or closely supervised. Black cats are
especially vulnerable around Halloween, when people look for them to use in
their "festivities."
Determine whether the zoning ordinance in your area prohibits the
possession, breeding, and sale of any fowl or grazing animals in any
residential and commercial area of your community; if not, organize a
letter-writing campaign to city officials urging them to revise the ordinance.
(This would create an obstacle for individuals who sell animals for
sacrifice.)
Unfortunately, ordinances that specifically prohibit the killing or maiming
of animals for ritualistic purposes can be problematic. In 1993, the Supreme
Court found that three Hialeah, Fla., ordinances banning animal sacrifices at
a Santeria church violated the First Amendment's guarantee of religious
freedom. However, the reason that these laws were ruled unconstitutional was
because they specifically targeted religious practices alone. Animal
sacrifices may still be banned as long as the subject of regulation is the
method of sacrifice, "not a religious classification that is said to bear some
relationship to it." In other words, regulation under a neutral anticruelty
statute is still permissible. For example, a municipality can still, in
effect, ban animal sacrifice by banning all slaughter outside licensed
packinghouses or by prohibiting the keeping of certain animals in residential
areas.(5)
If all else fails, you can always visit or call your local newspapers or
television stations and try to interest reporters in the story. A news story
may force officials to act or scare the person causing the abuse into
stopping.
References
- Anderson, Paul, et al., "A Triumph for Santeria," Miami Herald,
June 12, 1993.
- McFarland, Cole, "The Secrets of Santeria, Part Two," The Animals'
Voice, Vol. 2, No. 5, p. 44.
- Francione, Gary L., "Santeria and the First Amendment," The Animals'
Voice, Vol. 2, No. 5, p. 45.
- Sanchez, Carlos, "Animal Sacrifice Ritual Spurs Rights Debate in D.C.,"
The Washington Post, Oct. 30, 1987, p. C1.
- Anderson, et al.