PETA honours Grihalakshmi for highlighting importance of human breast milk
On International Women's Day, PETA India Award Commends Magazine for Celebrating Breast-Feeding.
Mumbai: On International Women's Day, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) India honoured Malayalam magazine Grihalakshmi with its 2018 Good Mother Award for highlighting the importance of human breast milk to infants' health.
The publication recently featured on its cover a photo of model Gilu Joseph in which she appears to breast-feed a baby.
Speaking about the decision to honour Grihalakshmi, PETA India spokesperson and vegan mother Neha Singh said, "Mothers of each mammal species naturally produce the perfect food for their own babies, so human mothers who breast-feed can be proud of their innate ability to nourish their infants.
She further added, "Often, when children are bottle-fed, they are given milk from cows or buffaloes, which is nature's perfect food for calves but can cause health problems including allergic reactions, diarrhoea, and anaemia in human babies. Dairy formula may also be diluted with contaminated water, risking illness and even death. Helping human mothers feel good about breast-feeding their children enables them to keep future generations healthy and strong!"
Human consumption of dairy "products" is linked to an increased risk of suffering from juvenile diabetes, allergies, obesity, heart disease, and cancer. Babies have difficulty digesting bovine milk, and drinking it can make them anaemic, while most adults lose their ability to digest milk altogether after infancy. Because of its health disadvantages, the late Dr Benjamin Spock, the world's leading authority on child care, denounced feeding cows' milk to children. What's more, babies who are breast-fed by mothers who drink cows' milk may suffer from colic.
PETA India – whose motto reads, in part, that "animals are not ours to eat" –notes that supporting breast-feeding mothers can also help prevent animal mothers and their babies from suffering in the dairy industry.
On today's dairy farms, farmers repeatedly forcibly impregnate cows and buffaloes through traumatic artificial insemination – which is rape. They also commonly inject cattle with oxytocin to force them to let down more milk, causing them painful muscle contractions similar to those experienced during labour. And farmers typically tear calves away from their loving mothers shortly after birth so that humans can steal the milk that nature meant for them.
If the babies are female, they are often fed milk replacer and will go on to be treated as milk machines themselves, just like their mothers. If they're male, farmers generally abandon them, let them starve to death, or sell them to be reared for beef. When mother cows' and buffaloes' milk production wanes, they, too, are often sold for beef or abandoned, or they end up at severely crowded goshalas.