Educational Farm Nurtures Animals Rescued From Slaughter

For most dairy cows, life is a continuing cycle of pregnancy and birth before heading to the slaughterhouse.

Angela was one of those cows. But thanks to a kindhearted farmworker, she was reunited with her blind baby, Gali, at Freedom Farm instead of ending up on a dinner plate.

About 250 cows, chickens, sheep, goats, pigs, turkeys and ducks live out their days in peace at this educational sanctuary in Israel, alongside 18 rabbits rescued from research labs.

Cofounders Adit Romano and Meital Ben Ari know their sanctuary doesn’t make a dent in the multibillion-dollar factory farming industry. But they hope visitors will come away more compassionate after encountering creatures they may otherwise be eating.

Roy, born disabled on a dairy farm, got vitamins, physiotherapy and acupuncture to help him walk. (Danielle Meiri/Freedom Farm Sanctuary)

“The animals here are so precious to us but their brothers and sisters stay behind and suffer,” said Ben Ari. “Even though we’re not saving so many, every person who visits and makes a change ultimately rescues many animals.”

Most of the animals at Freedom Farm were released to the sanctuary because they have disabilities, making them unprofitable to the food industry.

“Here you will meet sheep and goats in wheelchairs, cows and goats that are blind,” said Romano. “We put so much into healing them physically and mentally, building their trust in human beings. We have volunteers around the clock feeding them by hand, showing them that not all humans are cruel.”

A common purpose

Romano and Ben Ari each worked in the business world until their lives were transformed in 2011 by watching “The Most Important Speech You Will Ever Hear” from American animal-rights activist Gary Yourofsky. His lectures about the suffering and environmental damage in factory farming had a big role in kickstarting Israel’s world-leading vegan revolution.

Ben Ari helped establish Vegan Friendly, a nonprofit organization founded in September 2012 by Omri Paz that promotes and enhances the vegan lifestyle in Israel.

Before meeting one another, both women learned about the Woodstock Farm Animal Sanctuary in upstate New York and dreamed of starting something similar in Israel. After being introduced by Paz, they began planning their venture.

Adit Romano and Meital Ben Ari, founders of Freedom Farm Sanctuary. (Nir Kalush)

“We didn’t know what to expect, and that was lucky because we might have been discouraged if we knew the bureaucracy would be so complicated and expensive,” said Romano.

Israel had no legal guidelines governing a sanctuary for animals that are normally raised for slaughter.

“It wasn’t a donkey sanctuary or an animal shelter or a petting zoo, so they didn’t know how to treat us. An educational place to make people view animals in a different way — this was something new,” said Ben Ari.

Tamir, a goat rescued from the milk industry. (Rotem Biran/Freedom Farm Sanctuary)

“For two years, we built a business plan, sought special approvals, looked for land and collected donations,” said Romano. “The Agriculture Ministry suggested the North or South where we could have more land, but we wanted it to be convenient to more people because change will come only from changing behavior.”

On Oct. 5, 2016, Freedom Farm Sanctuary opened on Moshav Olesh, 45 minutes north of Tel Aviv. It has a staff of 15 part-time workers plus volunteers who help on location and with marketing and social media. The farm has 500,000 followers on its English Facebook page alone.

Supported by donations and revenue from Israeli and foreign visitors — some groups are brought by the Foreign Ministry and Birthright — Freedom Farm is closed to the public during the pandemic.

Sophie the chicken and Yossi the pig. Yossi was donated from a pig breeder in cooperation with Israeli organization Let the Animals Live. (Shelly Sternberg/Freedom Farm Sanctuary)

“We were established for education, and so now we do a lot of Zoom classes. We reached 2,000 students over the past few months,” said Ben Ari. “We have a long waiting list of schools that have contacted us.”

Visitors are never asked about their dietary habits or pressured to become vegetarian or vegan. Tours of the farm stress compassion and the value of helping the less fortunate.

Yael the turkey, rescued from the meat industry, and Billy the goat, rescued from the milk industry. (Noa Aviv/Freedom Farm Sanctuary)

Teachers tell Romano and Ben Ari that their pupils relate differently to one another after their Freedom Farm sessions.

“Compassion for animals leads to a society where people have compassion to each other,” said Romano.

When conditions allow, tours in English can be arranged by email.

Educational farm nurtures animals rescued from slaughter appeared first on ISRAEL21c.

(Edited by Carlin Becker and David Martosko)



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