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Hindus flock to Nepal animal sacrifice festival

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BBC News - Devotees flock to Nepal animal sacrifice festival

Devotees flock to Nepal animal sacrifice festival
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By Joanna Jolly
BBC News, Bariyapur

Devotee at Nepal animal sacrifice festival
More than a quarter of a million animals will be slaughtered

Hundreds of thousands of Hindu devotees have converged on a town in Nepal for a festival which is considered the world's largest animal sacrifice.

The Gadhimai festival, which happens once every five years, is taking place in Bariyapur in southern Nepal.

Over the next two days more than a quarter of a million animals are expected to be slaughtered for Gadhimai - a goddess of power.

Sacrifice is a seen as a way of thanking the deity for good luck, or asking her for fortune and prosperity.

"The goddess needs blood," says Chandan Dev Chaudhury, a priest at the Gadhimai temple in the centre of the festival site.

"If anyone has a problem, then I will cut the throat of an animal in the temple and that person's problem will be solved."

'Ancient belief'

Many of the worshippers have come from neighbouring India for the two-day festival.

Sixty-year-old Suresh Patak and his family travelled for a day to reach the festival from the Indian state of Bihar.

They have brought a goat to offer to the goddess.

"I have come here to worship Gadhimai. We are dedicated to her," he says.

Devotee at Nepal animal sacrifice festival

In pictures: Festival sacrifices

"It is our ancient belief."

Festival organisers estimate more than half a million people are already at the festival site.

Many of them, like Suresh, have brought their own animals to be killed.

Behind high brick walls, thousands of buffalo move silently through the winter fog.

They are the largest animals to be sacrificed, but goats, chickens, pigeons and rats will also be killed.

Police inspector Bikesh Adhikari is one of the officials guarding the buffalo enclosure.

"First of all five buffalo are taken and sacrificed at the temple," he says.

"The rest are sacrificed here."

Two hundred and fifty local men have been given licences to slaughter the animals using traditional khukuri knives.

Spectators queue to watch the killing, each paying 20 Nepali rupees (26 cents).

But the scale and method of this sacrifice has angered some Nepalis.

'Cruel and barbaric'

Outside the temple grounds, a small but vocal group of animal rights activists cracked coconuts in a symbolic temple sacrifice.

It was a last-minute plea to the organisers of the festival to call off the event.

They say that it is cruel and barbaric and that Hindu gods can be appeased by fruit and flower sacrifices.

"We're just giving out a message, that's all we can do at this stage," says protest organiser Pramada Shah.
Devotee at Nepal animal sacrifice festival
More than a quarter of a million animals will be slaughtered

"We're not saying stop the Gadhimai festival - everybody's having a nice time," she says.

"But let's have it in a less gory manner is all we're trying to say."

But it is unlikely the animal sacrifice will stop.

Not only does the Gadhimai festival attract hundreds of thousands of worshippers, it is also big business.

The meat, bones and hides of the animals are sold to companies in India and Nepal.

Local hotels and restaurant owners thrive during the festival period.

And while protesters say they hope to raise awareness about the issue of animal cruelty, this ancient and bloody homage to the goddess Gadhimai looks set to continue.
 
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Nepal Hindu temple conducts biggest animal sacrifice on earth | Analysis & Opinion |

Nepal temple conducts biggest sacrifice of animals
By Gopal Sharma
KATHMANDU | Wed Nov 25, 2009 5:16am EST
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KATHMANDU (Reuters) - At least 15,000 buffalo and "countless" goats and birds were sacrificed in a temple in southern Nepal, organizers said Wednesday, a ritual billed as the single biggest animal slaughter on earth.

Hindus in Nepal routinely offer animals for sacrifice to appease deities, Especially power goddesses, for good luck and prosperity.

But the festival held every five years at the Gadhimai temple in southern Nepal was condemned this year by animal rights activists, including French actress Brigitte Bardot, who called for an end to the centuries-old ritual of slaughtering animals.

The temple in Bariyapur is located about 150 km (95 miles) from Kathmandu, in Nepal's southern plains bordering India.

"We had more than 15,000 buffalo sacrificed Tuesday. But the number of goats and birds, including roosters and pigeons, sacrificed Wednesday is countless," Shiva Chandra Prasad Kushawaha, chief of the festival's organizing committee said.

"This reflects the faith of the devotees on Gadhimai, the goddess for power," he told Reuters by telephone.

Scores of butchers carrying big curved knives killed the animals in an open field as thousands of devotees stood by, witnesses reached by phone said. More than 80 percent of Nepal's 27 million people are Hindus.

"It is a tradition and people's faith. How can any protests stop that," asked Mangal Chaudhary, chief priest of the temple, adding there were no protests.

Some devotees said they were offering animals for sacrifice in the hope of being blessed with a son, preferred by many parents in Nepal and India. Thousands of devotees also traveled from neighboring India for the festival

(Editing by Bappa Majumdar and Bill Tarrant)
 
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