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Is It Cruel to Eat Animals?

David Langness | Feb 27, 2015

PART 7 IN SERIES Cute Baby Animals

The views expressed in our content reflect individual perspectives and do not represent the authoritative views of the Baha'i Faith.

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David Langness | Feb 27, 2015

PART 7 IN SERIES Cute Baby Animals

The views expressed in our content reflect individual perspectives and do not represent the authoritative views of the Baha'i Faith.

No discussion of cute baby animals would be complete without a few words about eating meat.

A good friend of mine recently became a vegetarian, so I asked her to tell me about her decision. She said she believed that a vegetable-based diet would make her healthier, and would have a much smaller impact on the environment, but that she made her decision mainly out of her concern for other living things. She said “I just think it’s cruel to eat animals.”

What do you think?

The Baha’i teachings contain some very interesting guidance on this question. Like much of the Baha’i revelation, that guidance leaves the ultimate decision up to the individual, but takes a balanced approach and then suggests the best and most conscientious way forward, as well.

During the early part of the 20th Century, a Baha’i and her sister wrote a letter to Abdu’l-Baha, astonished that some religious laws permitted “the hunting of innocent animals, creatures who are guilty of no wrong.” Abdu’l-Baha sent this fascinating reply:

Be thou not surprised at this. Reflect upon the inner realities of the universe, the secret wisdoms involved, the enigmas, the inter-relationships, the rules that govern all. For every part of the universe is connected with every other part by ties that are very powerful and admit of no imbalance, nor any slackening whatever. In the physical realm of creation, all things are eaters and eaten: the plant drinketh in the mineral, the animal doth crop and swallow down the plant, man doth feed upon the animal, and the mineral devoureth the body of man. Physical bodies are transferred past one barrier after another, from one life to another, and all things are subject to transformation and change, save only the essence of existence itself — since it is constant and immutable, and upon it is founded the life of every species and kind, of every contingent reality throughout the whole of creation.

Whensoever thou dost examine, through a microscope, the water man drinketh, the air he doth breathe, thou wilt see that with every breath of air, man taketh in an abundance of animal life, and with every draught of water, he also swalloweth down a great variety of animals. How could it ever be possible to put a stop to this process? For all creatures are eaters and eaten, and the very fabric of life is reared upon this fact. Were it not so, the ties that interlace all created things within the universe would be unravelled.

And further, whensoever a thing is destroyed, and decayeth, and is cut off from life, it is promoted into a world that is greater than the world it knew before. It leaveth, for example, the life of the mineral and goeth forward into the life of the plant; then it departeth out of the vegetable life and ascendeth into that of the animal, following which it forsaketh the life of the animal and riseth into the realm of human life, and this is out of the grace of thy Lord, the Merciful, the Compassionate.

I beg of God that He will assist thee to comprehend the mysteries that lie at the heart of creation… – Abdu’l-Baha, Selections from the Writings of Abdu’l-Baha, p. 156.

After I showed her this passage, I told my friend that the Baha’i teachings don’t specify any particular required diet for human beings, and give everyone their own free choice in the matter–but also say that we can thrive without eating meat, and encourage us to eat more sustainably. She loved that approach, she said. But then she asked me “Do you think I should switch my dog to a vegetarian diet?”

Some animals, the Baha’i writings explain, have no choice in what they eat, and must kill other animals to survive:

Regarding the eating of animal flesh and abstinence therefrom, know thou of a certainty that, in the beginning of creation, God determined the food of every living being, and to eat contrary to that determination is not approved. For instance, beasts of prey, such as the wolf, lion and leopard, are endowed with ferocious, tearing instruments, such as hooked talons and claws. From this it is evident that the food of such beasts is meat. If they were to attempt to graze, their teeth would not cut the grass, neither could they chew the cud, for they do not have the molars. Likewise, God hath given to the four-footed grazing animals such teeth as reap the grass like sickle, and from this we understand that the food of these species of animal is vegetable. They cannot chase and hunt down other animals. The falcon hath a hooked beak and sharp talons; the hooked beak preventeth him from grazing, therefore his food also is meat.

But human beings, Abdu’l-Baha continued, can voluntarily decide to do without meat:

Eating-a-carrotBut now coming to man, we see he hath neither hooked teeth nor sharp nails or claws, nor teeth like iron sickles. From this it becometh evident and manifest that the food of man is cereals and fruit. Some of the teeth of man are like millstones to grind the grain, and some sharp to cut the fruit. Therefore he is not in need of meat, nor is he obliged to eat it. Even without eating meat he would live with the utmost vigour and energy. For example, the community of the Brahmins in India do not eat meat; notwithstanding this they are not inferior to other nations in strength, power, vigour, outward senses or intellectual virtues. Truly, the killing of animals and the eating of their meat is somewhat contrary to pity and compassion, and if one can content oneself with cereals, fruit, oil and nuts, such as pistachios, almonds and so on, it would undoubtedly be better and more pleasing. – Abdu’l-Baha, from a tablet to an individual Baha’i.

People are omnivores, and can live on a wide variety of diets, but science is discovering that we do tend to live longer and healthier lives if we don’t consume large amounts of animal protein. If we consider our spiritual lives as well as our physical ones, most of us may eventually conclude that tenderness and loving-kindness toward all living creatures will gradually move humanity in that direction.

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Comments

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  • Hasan Elias
    2 days ago
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    Bahá'u'lláh allowed eating meat in the Surih i Haykal, rejecting absolute prohibition.
    Bahá'í writings prefer minimizing meat consumption and favor plant-based food (fruits, seeds) over killing animals.
    Hunting for food and clothing is discussed within medieval Islamic laws, emphasizing moderation.
    Humans, with intellect, must follow a different law (than struggle for existence) to avoid destruction, maintaining ecological balance in their food search.
    The Aqdas supports personal hunting for meat and rejects buying from stores that institutionalize insane, toxic, and cruel mass killing and industry.
  • Maritza Andrade
    Aug 25, 2022
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    I will not eat meat, it is cruel. People are no realize the suffer that animals go while been killed for been eating by human beings. We havve a variety of veggies, fruits, cereleas why should human kill animals to eat them? A Bahai friend in Mozambique said a chicken is nothing, as she killed the alive chicken for eating. It was disgusting to hear it as the wya it was mentioned a chicken is a living thing too and felt pain while she killed for please her hunger.
  • Alysha Smith
    Jan 17, 2020
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    .
  • Alysha Smith
    Sep 26, 2018
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    I agree that people who eat animals should at least watch footage of how the animals are bred into existence, mutilated, tortured and then murdered so they can conveniently enjoy the taste of their flesh. It's also important to highlight the sustainability of our diet choices - 1kg of red meat requires 50,000L of water to produce and 1L of cow's milk requires 1,000L of water to produce. Furthermore, the greenhouse gases that the animal agriculture industries emits are more than all transportation in the world (all planes, trains, cars, etc.). Consuming animals is the largest scientifically-linked cause of human ...death in the world, killing 17 million people each year with heart disease, cancer and other metabolic diseases. Choose kindness.
    Read more...
    • jessica maboudi
      Jul 7, 2022
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      Dear Alysha,
      Bahai religion promotes vegetarianism. Even Bahaullah says future religion will taboo eating meat. Therefore Bahais not only must not eat meat, but they must encourage others too and prepare the world for that day. These people calling themselves Bahais and making excuses and twist the Bahai writtings, so they can countinue to their crulty are not Bahais.
    • Cory Churko
      Sep 27, 2019
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      Well said.... And there is nothing spiritual or compassionate about putting an animal through this for a 5 minute taste sensation. We don't need to consume animals and their secretions. If baha'is want to be the modern day religion they should adapt a vegan lifestyle that is predicted in their scriptures.
  • Ibrahim Hamadi
    Mar 4, 2017
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    David langness.desculpe me torpeza. En lo que respecta al manejo del móvil.
    Un fuerte abrazo
  • Feb 27, 2015
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    No doubt, the Western diet -- particularly the American diet -- contains a previously unprecedented amount of meat. And the negative effects have been obvious; on human health, on the environment and in the terrible animal cruelty associated with massive industrialized or "factory" farming of livestock and poultry. I my self would like to get to the point where the only meat I consume is that which I've hunted myself. Or, at least has been purchased from local ranches which I know grass-feed only, raise the cattle on open range and slaughter them quickly on site. I also see that ...less and less meat consumption, and probably a huge swelling in the ranks of vegetarians, is inevitable in the future. Another personal thought I have, anybody who consumes meat should at some point in their life hunt, kill and butcher an animal. Or, at least watch firsthand as an animal is slaughtered and butchered. Just eating meat with no mind as to where it came from creates a bad disconnect with animals and potential animal cruelty, I think.
    Read more...
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