driving home the other night thru the paddocks we spied one rabbit and a mob of kangaroos.
once the rabbits were thick thru the farmlands and now we see one. the toll of a concerted campaign to eradicate them with trapping shooting the introduction of myxomatosis followed by the calicivirus.
the other night it was shooting central on the farm next to us . it started when we sat down to eat our dinner – boom boom boom – and continued until I went to bed. the shotguns were loud penetrating our house and our hearts. this is not an offence under law here in this country but still it upsets me and I wish it were otherwise.
run I whisper, hide if you can, run run as fast as you can.
whenever I see the kangaroo the wallaby the wombat the rabbit the fox I tell them, stay away from warrens, do not go there it isn’t safe. I like to think they know that I care about them and want them to survive and flourish.
the humble rabbit has been a food of the people for a long time. they have been a source of wool and fur becoming gloves hats and coats.
remember this rhyme:
bye baby bunting
daddy gone a hunting
to get a little rabbit skin
to dress his baby bunting in.
nowadays bunting applies to gaily coloured flags outside markets and shops when once it was a hooded sleeping bag for babies.
here in Australia they are despised devalued and made wrong. It should not be surprising that as we treat the rabbit so too we treat the refugees washing up on our shores seeking asylum. oh the cruelty of this government makes me weep.
this land was stolen and settled by the british crown who sent their unwanted – outcasts , convicts and trouble makers . in other words refugees. they also brought out the rabbit the fox and the blackberry all of which are actively pursued with the weapons of genocide.
our refugee policy allows little humanity preferring to incarcerate men women and children in detention camps more commonly these days on neighbour islands. the conditions are appalling the treatment is inhumane and the cost to our souls is high.
here is a story of a couple of asylum seekers that had a holiday with us :
three men two rods and a packet of pilchards
https://faeriembassy.wordpress.com/2013/09/
symbolically the rabbit is an innocent but also clever besting brer fox at every turn. it is a symbol of fertility and prosperity and linked with the moon. a rabbits foot was considered good luck and made into brooches . my mother had one.
on the one hand a revered respected creature of intelligence and immense usefulness to humans and on the other villified as vermin except at easter, when bunnies leap into our shops dressed in chocolate with bright paper wrappings or as fluffy toys carrying baskets of chocolate eggs.
I always thought the idea that a rabbit’s foot was good luck to a bit odd. I think I may have had one as a child.
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and I realised that I was given one some birthday or another…I did think it weird at the time…
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I read the link and of your friendship with the Tamils and your welcoming them into your home. Fine men …It is absolutely heart breaking the detention story Sandra – man’s inhumanity to man, and the creatures, our planet, is breath taking –
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I wonder ( and despair) where we are going with our blame of all these poor people, with our blame of the rabbit and the blackberry . so in what ways we can we need to bring generosity of spirit into our lives. thank you for your comments susan- we are not alone in our heartbreak…
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I love rabbits, used to have a wild one that came to the door every day for a banana. He rejected carrots and lettuce. I don’t have a balanced view on this. Talks of shooting rabbits just makes me think of my bunny.
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and as you can see karen I dont have a very balanced view on all this either.
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It’s a hard one isn’t it? The difference between an immigrant and a refugee, the difference between a plant or animal and a pest? It’s all about perspective and also the dangers of doing nothing and the small irritant becoming a huge problem. There are no easy answers for either side unfortunately.
Leanne | http://www.crestingthehill.com.au
R for Remember Silence
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yes it is hard and I know I have a tendency to over simplify a complexity – but what I try to remember when there e is talk of pest and problems is that the greatest threat (and hope) is us the human on the planet and our actions and I pray leanne that we can find other answers to these issues of ‘pest’.
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