Lily Tomlin joins the fight over Dallas elephant’s fate
“A big name in Hollywood just joined the fight to send the Dallas Zoo’s last surviving elephant to a sanctuary in Tennessee. ” - Dallas Morning News
“A big name in Hollywood just joined the fight to send the Dallas Zoo’s last surviving elephant to a sanctuary in Tennessee. ” - Dallas Morning News
“Ayers, a Tennessee senior defensive end, has seen most of the linemen in the SEC. Next to Edie and Jana, a 350-pounder in shoulder pads looks like a jockey.” - : GoVolsXtra.com
“In its editorial “Stop Micromanaging the Dallas Zoo,” The Dallas Morning News argues that investigating a decision made by city of Dallas staff to relocate Jenny, the city’s last remaining elephant, to a zoo in Mexico is tantamount to micromanagement.” - Dallas Morning News
“Concerned Citizens for Jenny, a Dallas/Fort Worth grassroots citizens group, is organizing a peaceful rally to encourage the Dallas Zoo and city council members to relocate Jenny, the lone elephant at the Dallas Zoo, to an elephant sanctuary in Tennessee.” - pegasusnews.com
“The Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee is the nation’s first natural-habitat refuge specifically developed to provide a haven for endangered African and Asian elephants. There are currently sixteen Asian and three African elephant residents. It is a non-profit organization, licensed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency. It is the only sanctuary in America to offer the setting, climate, and native vegetation that parallels habitat in the elephants’ native wetlands. We provide sanctuary for captive elephants that are old, sick or needy. Our primary objective is to provide a spacious and rich environment in which elephants can freely exercise their sensitive, intense socially gregarious, complex, and remarkably intelligent natures. We believe that all elephants should be treated with respect and minimal intrusion. Utilizing more than 2700 acres, The Elephant Sanctuary provides three separate multi-hundred acre protected, natural habitat environments for Asian and African elephants. Phil Snyder, regional director emeritus of the Humane Society of the United States has stated, “The Elephant Sanctuary” represents the future of enlightened captive elephant management.” - Zoo and Aquarium Visitor
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The city of Dallas is on the verge of losing one of its valued citizens through “Extraordinary Rendition” to a foreign facility where she will be subjected to solitary confinement, social isolation, emotional stress, and public humiliation. Jenny has worked selflessly for the benefit of Dallas and its residents for the last 22 years and deserves a better fate.
Jenny, a 31 year old female African elephant has been on display at the Dallas Zoo since 1986. She was forcibly separated from her mother in Africa when she was only 2 and spent the next 7 years at a “training” facility where she was routinely chained, beaten and humiliated to modify her behavior before placing her on display. The elephant enclosure at the Dallas Zoo has always been very inadequate – elephants are highly mobile and require adequate space to roam as much as 30 or more miles each day; her enclosure was measured in square feet when it should be measured in acres.
Elephants are intelligent, social, and self aware. They require a herd to have the social interactions and friendships that are vital to their physical and emotional well being. Jenny spent many years alone and that contributed to her emotional problems that led to self-mutilating behavior which had to be controlled with medications. Her mental condition has been described as “Zoochosis” and as PTSD. Several years ago, a second female African elephant, Keke, was added to the exhibit and she and Jenny became close friends. Unfortunately, Keke passed away earlier this year and Jenny is once again alone. She is extremely depressed (yes, elephants do suffer from depression) and the zoo has determined they can no longer care for her.
Without any input from the citizens of Dallas, the zoo decided to send Jenny to an African Safari Park located in Puebla, Mexico, 80 miles southeast of Mexico City and 950 miles from Dallas. Concerned citizens in Dallas have recommended that rather than shipping her out of the country where she won’t have the protection of U.S. animal care and anti-cruelty regulations, that she be sent to The Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee, where should would join 3 other female African elephants on 300 acres within a 2700 acre private reserve dedicated to the care of elephants rescued from zoos and circuses.
http://www.elephants.com
The zoo has refused to accept any input and remains resolute in their intention to send Jenny to the Mexican amusement park.
The zoo’s decision is wrong on many levels and their refusal to listen to the citizens of Dallas is unconscionable.
The Africam Safari Park in Puebla, Mexico is a drive-through amusement park that offers tourists the opportunity to drive their own cars through the various animal habitats. They have only 4.9 acres dedicated to their elephants which currently include 1 male and 2 female Asian elephants. Unfortunately, Asian and African elephants cannot be commingled as they have different social structures and behaviors. Worse yet, there are diseases that are harmless to African elephants while potentially fatal to Asian elephants. The bottom line is that Jenny would be alone in Mexico and all authorities in the subject agree that elephants should never be kept singly.
The idea that Jenny would be on public display and exposed to the noise, fumes, activity of cars and tour buses constantly moving through her environment represents the worst possible conditions for this sensitive creature already suffering from PTSD and depression. In contrast to this commercial exploitation, Jenny deserves the tranquility offered by The Elephant Sanctuary, with their focus on the preservation of the privacy, dignity and well being of elephants who have suffered years of mistreatment.
What can we do? Within the last several years, the zoos in Philadelphia and San Francisco have both determined that elephants cannot be humanely kept on display and have closed their elephant habitats by relocating their elephants to sanctuaries in Tennessee and California. We must join the citizens of Dallas in a public outcry against the “extraordinary rendition” of Jenny to a Mexican amusement park.
Please address your concerns and support for keeping Jenny in the U.S. and sending her to The Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee by emailing, calling and writing to:
The Dallas Parks and Recreation Department:
Paul D. Dyer, Department Director
Dallas City Hall
1500 Marilla Street, Room 6FN
Dallas, TX 75201
Phone: (214) 670-4100
Fax: (214) 670-3205
http://www.ci.dallas.tx.us/forms/form_pkr.htm
To Tom Leppert, Dallas Mayor at:
Dallas City Hall
1500 Marilla Street, Room 5EN
Dallas, TX
75201-6390
Main Phone: (214) 670-4054
Fax: (214) 670-0646
tom.leppert@dallascityhall.com
The following is a link to coverage by a local Dallas news report.
http://www.wfaa.com/sharedcontent/dws/news/localnews/tv/stories/wfaa080630_mo_elephant.f65c159.html
“In the thick jungles straddling TN and Karnataka where Veerappan once reigned and killed over 100 elephants, new poachers have sprouted over the past three years, gunning down 17 elephants so far for their valuable ivory tusks. ” - The Times of India
“Each participant gets a souvenir photo; those made at the Stokely African Elephant Preserve picture the human standing between the 9,300-pound pachyderm Jana and her 8,700-pound counterpart, Edie.” - Knoxville News Sentinel
“Mayor Stephen Mandel was given a stuffed elephant today from an activist who wants city council to give the Valley Zoo’s biggest resident a present in return - a new home in Tennessee.” - Edmonton Journal
“Lecture to offer behind-the-scenes look at The Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee, where once captive animals roam free from circus chains or cramped zoo habitats” - Decatur Daily
“The elephant, who was a fixture at Mesker Park Zoo & Botanic Garden from the 1950s to 1999, remains in a secluded area of Tennessee, where she has room to roam and plenty of food and friends” - Evansville Courier Press
“She was one of a hand full of animal rights activists who showed up at the zoo yesterday, asking the public to support the group’s call to relocate Lucy and Samantha, the zoo’s elephants, to a 2,700-acre wildlife sanctuary in Tennessee.” - edmontonsun.com
“The Elephant Sanctuary founded in 1995 in Hohenwald, Tennessee, is the nation’s largest natural-habitat refuge developed specifically to meet the needs of endangered elephants. It is a non-profit organization, licensed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency. It is designed specifically for old, sick or needy African and Asian elephants who have been retired from zoos and circuses.” - Horizon Solutions Site
“An animal-rights organization has offered to fly the director of the Alaska zoo to an elephant sanctuary in Tennessee so he could see for himself where their zoo’s sick elephant could go if she left Alaska.” - Alaska Report
“The Philadelphia Zoo recently said goodbye to a resident that has been there for more than 40 years. Dulary, the zoo’s Asian elephant, moved to a new homeThe Elephant Sanctuary in Hohenwald, Tennessee. By the fall, the zoo’s other elephants will also be gone, as the zoo closes its elephant exhibit.” - Scholastic.com
“One year ago, eight elephant veterans of the circus, Minnie, Lottie, Queenie, Debbie, Ronnie, Frieda, Billie and Liz were chained in a dark windowless barn. They had been that way for nearly two years. Today they spend their days roaming over 200 acres in middle Tennessee at The Elephant Sanctuary, enjoying the best life a captive elephant can have.” - Business Wire
“But this spring, the zoo’s affair with elephants will end. Instead of expanding the space for the exhibit, the board of directors will put the money elsewhere. The four elephants will be split between the Maryland Zoo in Baltimore and an elephant sanctuary in central Tennessee.” - The Seattle Times
“When animal activists cited health concerns and small space issues at the El Paso Zoo, they called for the release of Juno and Savannah to a Tennessee sanctuary in July 2005. City Council voted unanimously for the animals to stay and said it would revisit the issue in December.” - KFOXTV.com