Book Review
Title: Survival
at Stake
Author: Poorva Joshipura
Publisher: HarperCollins
India, 2023
Pages: 317 (including over 100 pages of
Notes)
Everything on planet earth is interconnected.
The survival of one depends on the survival of another. That is the fundamental
message of Poorva Joshipura’s book, Survival at Stake. An example
from the book for that interconnectedness: “Phytoplankton are eaten by small
zooplankton, who are consumed by larger zooplankton, who are consumed by fish,
who are consumed by sharks – you get the picture.” The phytoplankton, in turn,
requires the whales for oxygen supply.
The relative pronoun ‘who’ is used by
the author for the animals intentionally. She believes that humans are just
another species of animals and the undue importance given to this species has
been immensely detrimental to the other species as well as the planet.
We, humans, have misused the animals
in many ways: for food, sports (hunting as well as games like cockfight,
bullfight, etc), and fur and leather. Our treatment of the animals has engendered
disastrous consequences for them and the planet. It has led to the extinction
of many species, pollution of the planet in multifarious ways, climate change,
and our health too.
Joshipura’s book is a detailed study
of all the calamitous deeds of ours vis-Ã -vis animals. Let me start with health. “Around the
world, almost 75 per cent of antimicrobial drugs on the market are used to rear
animals for meat, eggs and dairy. That means far more antibiotics are used on
farmed animals than for ourselves. This overuse of drugs is contributing to
antimicrobial resistance and the development of superbugs – when medicines we
need to treat illnesses from bacteria, viruses, fungi and parasites become less
effective or stop working altogether and when new resilient forms of infections
arise.”
The book goes on to inform us that
approximately 700,000 people lose their lives every year from drug-resistant diseases.
In India, sepsis related to such infections kills almost 60,000 newborn babies
every year.
600 million people suffer from
food-borne diseases and 420,000 die from them every year.
Meat, fish, eggs, and milk are not
quite healthy foods, the book argues with a lot of convincing statistics as
well as scientific information.
Such foods form a humungous threat to the planet too
as well as other animals. A lot of land and resources are used in order to grow
animals for human consumption directly (as meat) or indirectly (eggs and milk).
Livestock production is the single largest driver of habitat loss, the book
says. This “ruthless habitat destruction” will soon be the number one reason
for the extinction of many species of animals and plants on earth.
The amount of water used by the
animals reared for human needs is mindboggling. It takes over 15,000 litres of
water to produce one kilogram of beef – with most of it for crops that are fed
to cattle. In contrast, 322 litres of water is enough to produce one kilogram
of vegetables. The “rearing of animals
for food uses up a mammoth one-third of all the world’s freshwater.” One-third
of the world’s cropland is used to feed cattle.
According to the FAO, meat, egg and
dairy production is responsible for about 14.5% of global greenhouse gas emissions.
That’s more than the emissions caused by the world’s entire transportation
systems! The book surprises us with a lot of such data.
India’s obsession with the cow and her milk is no good for the planet, the book informs us. India is the world’s largest milk producer. A lot of methane is emitted by the gargantuan cattle population of India. Methane is more than 25 times as potent as carbon dioxide at trapping heat in the atmosphere.
Human cruelty to animals is the theme of an
entire chapter. Blood-curdling details are provided about the ill treatment of
sheep for their wool, rabbits for angora wool, dogs for leather, and so on. Dogs
killed brutally for leather came as a new shock for me. China seems to be the
most notorious for human cruelty to animals. The book has shocking details.
Animals are also used for medical research.
Drugs are tried on them before being administered to humans. Joshipura says, “Scientists
who question animal use in research point out the vast physiological
differences between humans and animals means experiment outcomes in them cannot
reliably predict how a drug or chemical will react in human body.” We ill treat
too many animals for the sake of our wellbeing. Much of that cruelty is unwarranted
as it does not yield expected outcomes. The book quotes George Bernar Shaw (who
was a famous vegetarian and a forefather to the vegan movement): “Atrocities are
not less atrocities when they occur in laboratories and are called medical
research.”
Joshipura’s book is a commendable
effort to convince us of the need for and importance of vegetarianism, even
veganism. Renounce speciesism, she argues vehemently. Speciesism is a bias
in favour of our species. We, humans, are not the crown of the creation.
We are just another species of animals. What if we are capable of intelligent thinking?
What use is that thinking if it leads to the destruction of millions of animals
and plants?
The book made me think a lot. I
confess that I am not a vegetarian, let alone vegan. Joshipura has succeeded in
making me rethink my diet. The plain truth is that even the vegetables and
fruits I get from the market are contaminated with traces of pesticides and
weedicides. Theoretically, I accept vegetarianism. I wish I could put it into
practice.
PS. You can have a
preview of the book here.
Hari OM
ReplyDeleteA worthwhile read and I am glad of your review. I have been a long-term vego, but mostly, I confess, because it suited my health better. Later in life I also adopted certain philosophical tenets relating to consumption of animal product, although I do still take milk and very occasionally, eggs. Mainly for the protein balance. YAM xx
I knew you would be a vego. Sometimes even a person's writings imply such inclinations.
DeleteHaving lived in a pure vegetarian residential school of Delhi for a year and a decade, I think vegetarianism is a religion for a lot of people there. People were born into vegetarianism. So my school was "pure vegetarian". But when we took our students for outing, they rushed into Tandoori restaurants to eat chicken.
I was never fond of meat or fish. I ate it mostly for what they call 'balanced diet'. Even now.
This was a debatable topic since the hybrid food culture was introduced!!!
ReplyDeleteBtw, I loved the review!!
We can still debate. Unruly elements don't enter this space usually. :)
DeleteOh yea, what humans have done to the other species on this planet...
ReplyDeleteAnd we don't seem to be learning anything.
DeleteVery Strongly I have to agree with the first sentence...Everything on planet earth is interconnected.
ReplyDeleteIndeed.
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ReplyDelete