Love Pulse Posted March 18, 2022 Posted March 18, 2022 https://www.alaraby.co.uk/society/الحيوانات-رقيقة-المشاعر?amp During the capacity-building training, we show a drawing about working in a team consisting of five parts, showing two donkeys, and sometimes two goats, tied together with a short rope, and each of them is placed his share of forage at both ends of the drawing, so that neither of them can reach his pile. After an unsuccessful attempt at the second drawing, they sit with a question mark on their heads indicating thinking. Then they appear in the fourth part eating the first heap together, and in the last part they eat the second pile. Once, one of the trainees protested against our underestimation of the minds of animals, so I began to wonder why we think that we are more employing of our minds and the senses within us than the rest of the creatures, and why do we get surprised when we see an animal sympathetic to another of another species? Dozens of situations that we circulate on social media, confirm that animals have a tender heart that may surpass many human beings, but we soon forget the matter when we describe someone as an animal, because we do not like it. What is this contradiction? We condemn and denounce barbarism and ferocity and associate it with animals and survival theories, while we practice the most heinous of them on our own people and our cosmopolitan partners. We stigmatize the law of the jungle as extremely ferocious, while we find in forest and wild animals mercy, sympathy and solidarity that we cannot practice. We used to see it supernatural for that blind old man to speak to his donkey, and tell her where he was going so that she could take him where he pointed. This is a lonely old woman who has stayed for years in her home, unable to leave it, only to discover that the neighbors find that her sheep come to her place to milk their milk, and that her dog removes her droppings in a rare skill. Bugs Bunny, the famous bunny in the world of comics (Getty) Attitude Even rabbits! In 2003, Ian Douglas Hamilton of Save the Elephants in Samburu Sanctuary, Kenya, followed the reactions of elephants as Eleanor, the lead female elephant in the herd, was dying when she collapsed to the ground and another female leading a second family, Grace, rushed to Helping her to stand up, she kept pushing and urging her to get up until she died. Over the next week, females from five families showed a special interest in the body, confirming that the grief is not for the loss of a relative, but also for the loss of members of other families. In the Soisamo Reserve in Kenya, a giraffe gave birth to a baby with a deformed leg. The scientists noted that the mother risked her life and health so as not to go away from him during the four weeks that the little one lived. And in 2016, Melissa Regent, of the University of Milan, published an astonishing report describing 14 reactions to death in 7 species of whales and dolphins. With other evidence here and there, it is confirmed that seeing feelings of sadness in mammals is unmistakable. (environmental specialist)
Recommended Posts