Indonesia's Street Monkeys #streetmonkey #animalrights #creepy #Jakarta #WowShack: image via Wow Shack @WowShack, 1 February 2015
My family. To begin with it had no part
or share in what I was doing. Having set forth from that place, it was
only natural I should return to it, given the accuracy of my navigation.
And my family could have moved to other quarters during my absence, and
settled down a hundred leagues away, without my deviating by as much as
a hair's-breadth from my course. As for the screams of pain and wafts of
decomposition (assuming I was capable of noticing them), they would have
seemed to me quite in the natural order of things, such as I had come to
know it. If before such manifestations I had been compelled each time to
turn aside, I should not have got very far. Washed (on the surface only)
by the rains, my head cracking with unutterable imprecations, it was for
myself I should have had to turn aside, before all else. (After all
perhaps I was doing so: that would account for my vaguely circular
motion.) Lies, lies: mine was not to know, nor to judge, nor talk, but
to go.
Jakarta, Indonesia: A monkey is chained on its cage before it is trained for a monkey circus. Monkey circus or "topeng monyet" is very popular and the most original form of entertainment in Indonesia especially in Java: photo by Adi Weda/EPA via The Guardian, 7 November 2008
That the bacillus botulinus should have
exterminated my entire kith and kin (I shall never weary or repeating
this) was something I could readily admit -- but only on condition that
my personal behaviour had not to suffer by it. Let us rather consider
what really took place, if Mahood was telling the truth. And why should
he have lied to me, he so anxious to obtain my adhesion? (To what, now
that I come to think of it? To his conception of me?) Why? For fear of
paining me perhaps. But I am there to be pained, that is what my
tempters have never grasped. What they all wanted (each according to his
particular notion of what is endurable) was that I should exist and at
the same time be only moderately (or perhaps I should say finitely)
pained. They have even killed me off, with the friendly remark that
having reached the end of my endurance I had no choice but to disappear.
(The end of my endurance! It was one second they should have schooled me
to endure: after that I would have held out for all eternity, whistling
a merry tune.)
#streetmonkey: image via daniar aditya @ daniar aditya, 27 March 2013
The hard knocks they invented for me!
But the bouquet was this story of Mahood's in which I appear as upset at
having been delivered so economically of a pack of blood relations (not
to mention the two cunts into the bargain: the one for ever accursed
that ejected me into this world and the other, infundibuliform, in which
-- pumping my likes -- I tried to take my revenge).
To tell the truth (let us be honest at
least), it is some considerable time now since I last knew what I was
talking about. It is because my thoughts are elsewhere. I am therefore
forgiven. So long as one's thoughts are somewhere everything is
permitted.
A monkey is led by its trainer Qi Defang in preparation for a circus in Suzhou, China. The city has more than 300 circus troupes: photo by William Hong/Reuters via The Guardian, 6 December 2014
On then, without misgiving, as if
nothing had happened. And let us consider what really took place (if
Mahood was telling me the truth when he represented me as rid at one
glorious sweep of parents, wife and heirs). I've plenty of time to blow
it all sky-high, this circus where it is enough to breathe to qualify
for asphyxiation: I'll find a way out of it, it won't be like the other
times. But I should not like to defame my defamer. For when he made me
turn and set off in the other direction, before I had exhausted the
possibilities of the one I was pursuing, he had not in mind a shrinking
of the spirit, not for a moment: but a purely physiological commotion,
followed by a simple desire to vomit -- corresponding respectively to the
howls of my family as they grudgingly succumbed and the subsequent
stench (this latter compelling me to beat in retreat under penalty of
losing consciousness entirely). (This version of the facts having been
restored, it only remains to say it is no better than the other and no
less incompatible with the kind of creature I might just conceivably
have been if they had known how to take me.)
So let us consider now what really
occurred. Finally I found myself, without surprise, within the building
(circular in form as already stated, its ground-floor consisting of a
single room flush with the arena) and there completed my rounds --
stamping under foot the unrecognizable remains of my family (here a
face, there a stomach, as the case might be), and sinking into them with
the ends of my crutches, both coming and going.
To say I did so with satisfaction would
be stretching the truth. For my feeling was rather one of annoyance at
having to flounder in such muck just at the moment when my closing
contortions called for a firm and level surface. I like to fancy (even
if it is not true) that it was in mother's entrails I spent the last
days of my long voyage, and set out on the next. (No, I have no
preference: Isolde's breast would have done just as well, or papa's
private parts, or the heart of one of the little bastards.) But is it
certain? Would I have not been more likely, in a sudden access of
independence, to devour what remained of the fatal corned-beef?
How often did I fall during these final
stages, while the storms raged without?
Monkey Training for a Circus, Suzhou, China. With more than 300 circus troupes, Suzhou is known as the hometown of the Chinese circus.: photo by Yongzi Chu/EPA via the Guardian, 12 February 2015
But enough of this nonsense: I was
never anywhere but here, no one ever got me out of here. Enough of
acting the infant who has been told so often how he was found under a
cabbage leaf that in the end he remembers the exact spot in the garden
and the kind of life he led there before joining the family circle.
There will be no more from me about bodies and trajectories, sky and
earth -- I don't know what it all is. They have told me, explained to me,
described to me, what it all is, what it looks like, what it's all for
(one after the other, thousands of times, in thousands of connections),
until I must have begun to look as if I understood. Who would ever
think, to hear me, that I've never seen anything, never heard anything
but their voices? (And man! The lectures they gave me on men, before
they even began trying to assimilate me to him!) What I speak of, what I
speak with, all comes from them -- it's all the same to me. But it's no
good, there's no end to it. It's of me now I must speak, even if I have
to do it with their language. It will be a start, a step towards silence
and the end of madness: the madness of having to speak and not being
able to -- except of things that don't concern me, that I don't believe,
that they have crammed me full of to prevent me from saying who I am,
where I am, and from doing what I have to do in the only way that can
put an end to it, from doing what I have to do. How they must hate me!
This is gross. #Indonesian fun?? Please sign against #streetmonkey abuse and #murder: image via Suzi Urell @SuziUrell, 12 March 2015
Ah a nice state they have me in -- but
still I'm not their creature (not quite, not yet). To testify to them,
until I die (as if there was any dying with that tomfoolery): that's
what they've sworn they'll bring me to. Not to be able to open my mouth
without proclaiming them, and our fellowship: that's what they imagine
they'll have me reduced to. It's a poor trick that consists in ramming a
set of words down your gullet on the principle that you can't bring them
up without being branded as belonging to their breed. But I'll fix their
gibberish for them. I never understood a word of it in any case -- not a
word of the stories it spews, like gobbets in a vomit. My inability to
absorb, my genius for forgetting, are more than they reckoned with. Dear
incomprehension, it's thanks to you I'll be myself in the end. Nothing
will remain of all the lies they have glutted me with. And I'll be
myself at last (as a starveling belches his odourless wind, before the
bliss of coma).
But who, they?
Is it really worth inquiring? With my
cogged means? No, but that's no reason not to. On their own ground, with
their own arms, I'll scatter them, and their miscreated puppets.
(Perhaps I'll find traces of myself by the same occasion.)
That's
decided then.
Circus poster, Omaha, Nebraska: photo by John Vachon, November 1938 (Farm Security Administration Collection, Library of Congress)
What is strange is that they haven't
been pestering me for some time past (yes, they've inflicted the notion
of time on me too). What conclusion, using their methods, am I to draw
from this? Mahood is silent: that is to say his voice continues, but is
no longer renewed. Do they consider me so plastered with their rubbish
that I can never extricate myself, never make a gesture but their cast
must come to life? But within, motionless, I can live, and utter me, for
no ears but my own. They loaded me down with their trappings and stoned
me through the carnival. I'll sham dead now, whom they couldn't bring to
life, and my monster's carapace will rot off me. But it's entirely a
matter of voices: no other metaphor is appropriate. They've blown me up
with their voices, like a balloon, and even as I collapse it's them I
hear.
A monkey enjoys a watermelon during the ‘monkey buffet festival’ in Lopburi, Thailand. The festival is held every year to promote tourism and to thank the monkeys for drawing visitors to the town: photo by Narong Sangnak/EPA via The Guardian, 6 December 2014
Who, them? And why nothing more from
them lately? Can it be they have abandoned me, saying "Very well,
there's nothing to be done with him, let's leave it at that, he's not
dangerous"? Ah but the little murmur of unconsenting man, to murmur what
it is their humanity stifles! The little gasp of the condemned to life,
rotting in his dungeon garrotted and racked, to gasp what it is to have
to celebrate banishment! Beware!
No, they have nothing to fear. I am
walled round with their vociferations. No one will ever know what I am,
none will ever hear me say it: I won't say it, I can't say it, I have no
language but theirs. No, perhaps I'll say it (even with their language),
for me alone -- so as not to have not lived in vain, and so as to go
silent. (If that is what confers the right to silence -- and it's
unlikely: it's they who have silence in their gift, they who decide, the
same old gang, among themselves.) No matter, to hell with silence: I'll
say what I am, so as not to have been born for nothing. I'll fix their
jargon for them. Then any old thing (no matter what, whatever they
want), with a will, till time is done -- at least with a good grace.
Samuel Beckett (1906-1989): from The Unnamable (1959)
A street monkey performing in a baby mask in Jakarta: photo by Tatan Syuflana/AP via The Guardian, 27 October 2013
12 comments:
http://www.thepetitionsite.com/728/456/424/stop-masked-street-monkey-exploitation/
PETITION CLOSED.. It is really a pity...
This is gross. #Indonesian fun?? Please sign against #streetmonkey abuse & #murder
¡ en todos lados sucede ! and why it does not end ?
"They've inflicted the notion of time on me too"
This phrase struck me: the worst of all measures.
It's not surprising that in these monstrous photographs we can catch something of our own prisons.
We are diabolical creatures.
Amen.
Perhaps the most consoling quality in the writings of Samuel Beckett is the constant reassuring rejection of humanism, including, especially, all those assumptions in humanism which make possible sentimentality of all kinds, the overvaluation of one's own biology and the biology of one's blood kin, in particular.
Historical human slavery is a cultural feature which in itself reflects the deep falsity in the belief that human cleverness, the pitifully weak foundation of all claims to human superiority over other primate species, privileges humans to practise upon one another forms of cruelty unknown among all other primates.
Human slavery is now illegal everywhere yet is still practised, under various transparent guises, in many parts of this planet ruled by the ugly, terminally sick apes at the top of the power chain.
A primary site is China, where humans on the low end of the wage scale are made to do hideous work 16 hours a day in order to earn enough to live through another day of same = slavery.
The Chinese, among primates the cleverest, sickest, least respectful group, do a great deal of monkey business involving fellow primates; with the current increase of wealth among the Chinese middle classes, the market in monkeys is booming.
A pet monkey, bought as a baby, starts out cute and cuddly (and of course scared and vulnerable, having been ripped away from its mother and family), but then turns into a stunted version of a grownup monkey -- strong, unpredictable, wanting to be wild.
Owners of these de-natured pets perform various prescribed rituals to keep their slave animals subdued -- that is, "quiet", as Bibi would say.
Confinement in small enclosures, chaining, shocking, beating, and removal of teeth and nails to prevent scratching and biting are practises commonly employed by Chinese primate-pet owners.
The terrible monkey-business "theatre", or "street monkey show", is now regarded as something of an embarrassment in Jakarta; watching animal torture, it turns out, while great fun for local audiences, is a bit of a turn-off for the shrinking-violet element in the tourist trade; there has actually been talk of regulation (and of course regulation would merely amount to removing the shows from open public view to clandestine spaces).
In China the street monkey antics proceed full-on.
Chinese "street monkey" abuse
In this video (and by the by there are way too many of these online), one may observe a typical sample of the fun. The "trainer" or "handler", whose long systematic abuse of his primate "performers" is writ in every aspect of their aberrant, terrorized, totally unnatural behaviour, concentrates his attentions upon a single "performer", provoking it to be "naughty" -- for which transgression, at 7:00, the animal is doled out an extra degree of punishment (that is, over and above the simple beating with whip and thong and menacing with stun gun or no, real gun): to the great glee of the crowd on onlookers, many of them small children, a surgical glove is forcibly slipped over the animal's face by the "handler", preventing, among other things, breathing. The animal, thus "pacified", with forelimbs string-tied behind back, slumps from obedient-kneeling to supine posture, and remains so, inert, for the next six minutes; until, that is, the "handler" commands another "performer" to drag away the supine, bound, suffocating "transgressor" by its tail. A trick which doesn't go so well.
The tourist who makes this video reports that he was charged -- by an opportunistic fellow spectator -- 81 cents for the privilege of observing the show.
Viewers of the video have annotated this atrocity exhibition spectacle with several pages of comments, some expressing outrage, some expressing disappointment that the cruelty doesn't go far enough -- the monkey isn't doused with lighter fluid and set fire to, as a climax, for example.
Tom,
Beckett talks about language, perhaps by extension, the market- what it is to have respect for something beyond the human ken?
Bowie
And Rimbaud, a paraphrase: "I am an animal...you are making a big mistake..."A criminal"...the mistreatment of anything lacking the power to make its' experience known to us...
Tom, all of what you say about how human beings treat other humans and other animals is, sadly, quite true. I'm not sure if that exhausts the meaning of the word humanism, though.
Grateful for the generous, thoughtful and intelligent commentary by everybody.
Beckett, Rimbaud yes -- now and then there's somebody who just can't get with the human program, thank dog.
Pleased that billoo has caught me out for playing fast and loose with humanism like that. Thus proceeds dialogue.
Coincidentally I've been re-reading So Human An Animal, the 1969 book in which microbiologist René Dubos advanced his view of the way in which homo sapiens is shaped by environment, and how, in turn, homo sapiens uses such forces as urbanization and technology to control environment. It is a foundational text of modern "enlightened" scientific humanism.
Dubos proposed that global problems conditioned by local circumstances and choices should and thus necessarily would be addressed by new kinds of thinking made possible by social evolution, enabling the species to rethink human actions and change direction to bring about an ecologically balanced environment.
And yet, in this key work of optimistic scientific humanism, Dubos conceded that through its characteristic tendency to attempt to transcend simple biological (i.e. animal) urges, the human species is prone to converting ordinary processes of existence into something else again -- "actions, representations and aspirations that have no biological necessity and may even be inimical to life".
Homo sapiens, Dubos admits, can never fall back on its biological instincts, because they have been so successfully "transcended".
Personal, individual choices outweigh instinct and collective understanding in humans. This, he suggests, is called progress. Irrational progress, you ask?
"The response of any given person to an environmental factor is conditioned both physiologically and psychologically by his own past experiences; it is therefore highly personal. The power of the personal past is so great that it can distort the meaning of any event and magnify trivial happenings into momentous experiences. Human reactions are so profoundly influenced by the individual past that they are usually unpredictable and therefore appear completely irrational."
Humans, in short, are blind, bumbling, brilliant, irrational, chronically shortsighted and selfregarding, and total wizards.
What Dubos in 1959 calls "the biological remembrance of things past" has already by that time grown dim, as he acknowledges. In the early darkness of proliferating global environmental problems, Dubos, with the support of the Rockefeller Foundation, foresaw a future in which new technologies and new cities would arise out of the muck and jumble of things to set the planet on course once more, running along more or less smoothly, as it had been, before this short-term-thinking, selfish, deeply irrational individualist homo sapiens had shown up on the scene, armed with his brilliant scientific humanistic optimism kit.
Right. And all that worked out wonderfully.
The well meaning Naomi Klein has been touring hard behind her book on climate change and the destruction of the planet.
In the book she describes a kind of Eureka moment. She's on tour, flying from Charleston, South Carolina to DC. It's a hot summer day. The plane can't take off because the tires have sunk four inches into the melting tarmac. Everybody is made to get off the plane, to lighten its load. Plane still won't roll. This and that rig has to be hauled out, and finally it's three hours before the plane is up, up and away into into the foul, stinking American air.
Klein's point in describing this episode is that runways aren't supposed to melt.
In my mind while reading her words was the thought that if Klein really expected anyone to believe her message, she'd not have got back on that plane. She'd not have got on another plane. She'd not have got into a car, or a taxi, or a bus, or any of those other forms of carbon-spewing conveyance.
Her personal, individual decision to put her book tour above all other possible choices of action, and in fact, in doing so, to contribute personally to the carbon overload her book laments, is a sensible, modern, humanistic decision.
That's the problem with enlightenment and humanism and technology and the human project. There are as many versions of it as there are modern, individualistic, technologically advanced, personally unique, perpetually selfcentered human beings with smartphones.
Nature, though, what's that, again?
Miles Davis / Kenny Garrett: Human Nature (live, Hamburg, 1990)
Tom, this is a profound way of thinking: "the biological remembrance of things past". Perhaps only a shaman/poet can think in that way now?
Your comments reminded me of something Hans Jonas once wrote ('the Phenomenon of Life): before the modern period the Spirit was everywhere (or at least there was some sort of continuity).
And now there's only dead matter, "pure extension", soulless machines.
I wonder if it all started when we began to think of animals as nothing more than beasts or brutes?
I think maybe, if we were in a utopian mood and wished to start our relations with other species all over, the first good faith step in the negotiation would be to quit eating them.
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