Cultre Clash - Hunting dolphins is traditional and legal in Japan

Are you sick of USA 2004 election news…well, here are some interesting news about dolphin hunting… in japan dolphin hunting is leagal as well as traditional…what a cultre clash…

Dining with the dolphin hunters

By Paul Kenyon
Director/producer/reporter, Dolphin Hunters

Most people deplore the mere thought of hunting and killing dolphins, but in Japan it is legal and arguably, traditional. So, is the process known as drive hunting symbolic of a cultural gulf, or does it simply amount to mindless slaughter?

Drive fishermen
Few people outside Taiji know exactly how the dolphins are caught

The thin, dark slivers of meat were prepared in a fan shape, and had started bleeding in the high humidity.

This was the only bar in Taiji, a small town in southern Japan with a strong suspicion of outsiders.

The meal that faced me was raw dolphin.

The locals jab at it, and slurp it down with the local beer. It is one of their favourite foods, cheaper than whale, and more flavoursome.

It looks like tuna, but black. After some prodding, I swallowed a single piece… and won a little trust.

We had come here after an American marine mammal specialist with One Voice, Ric O’Barry, told us about the annual mass slaughter of dolphins in Japan.

It has been going on for 400 years and the process is called “drive hunting”.

Dolphin Hunters
Tuesday, 9 November, 2004
1930 GMT on BBC Two (UK)

The fishermen surround a pod of dolphins at sea. They lower metal poles into the water and bang them with hammers.

The clattering noise carries through the water, and confuses the dolphins’ sonar. In their panic, the dolphins are driven into shallow water.

Then the killing begins.

There is little finesse about it. The water runs red, as the fishermen use knives and ropes to capture them and hoist their thrashing bodies onto the quayside.

From there, they are dragged, many still alive, to the slaughter house, chunks of flesh ripping from them onto the tarmac.

Hunters’ logic

Dolphin hunter Akira Takeuchi
The fishermen were not the callous animal rights abusers I had been led to expect

Two days after arriving in Japan, I was in the dolphin hunters’ co-operative in Taiji.

All they know of Westerners are the handful of protesters who turn up each year, trying to stop their hunt.

In a town of 500 fishermen, only 27 are allowed to catch dolphins. It is an elite club, membership of which is chosen by Masonic-style ritual.

“Even if you were the prime minister’s son, you wouldn’t necessarily get in,” said one former mackerel fisherman, guzzling a plate of dolphin in The Whale Bar.

But, the dolphin hunters surprised me. They were not the callous animal rights abusers I had been led to expect.

They were dignified and philosophical about their trade.

They were also confused. Dolphins to them are just big fish to be treated like any other.

“You’d think nothing of slicing off a tuna’s head while it was alive, so why the outcry over dolphins ?” one of them said.

That night, in the dolphin bar, I showed them a BBC film about the latest research on dolphin intelligence.

Paul Kenyon shows research film
Taiji fishermen refuse to be swayed by “dolphin intelligence” research

I wanted to understand the cultural gulf dividing Japan and the rest of the world.

They sat in silence, watching bottle-nose dolphins master up to 60 words of sign language and demonstrate some pretty mind-blowing problem-solving skills.

They were not impressed.

“They’re just like dogs”, said one. “You could teach dogs the same tricks, it doesn’t mean they’re clever.”

International outrage

The dolphin hunting season began at the start of October.

As the fishermen prepared their boats, marine mammal specialist Ric O’Barry prepared his plans to stop them.

Each year he flies from his home in Miami, and takes up residence in Taiji for six months.

Ric O’Barry
Marine mammal specialist Ric O’Barry has dedicated his life to saving dolphins

He and his colleagues wake early in the morning, and shadow the fishermen, trying to film their activities.

The confrontations between the two sides can descend into scuffles. Mr O’Barry says he has been threatened with a knife.

The fishermen deny it.

They wonder how we would feel if a group of Japanese turned up each year in the English countryside to picket a fox hunt.

Greater impact

Further up the coast, we discover the real cost of dolphin hunting, something that goes beyond the cultural arguments batted backwards and forwards by protesters and fishermen.

In the town of Futo, we meet a man who used to hunt dolphins, but stopped.

His reason? He says his colleagues were breaking the government-imposed quota; they were killing too many dolphins.

Izumi Ishii, former dolphin hunter
Izumi Ishii was a dolphin hunter for 30 years before he stopped

The quota is there to prevent damage to the species, but he said his colleagues cared little about that.

He now takes tourists out to observe dolphins in the wild. On our day-long trip, we did not see a single one.

Not only that, his colleagues have not carried out a drive hunt here for four years. They have not been able to find dolphins either.

It seems the fishermen have simply fished themselves out of a job.

But, back in Taiji, the hunt is going ahead this year as it has done for the last four centuries.

The fishermen say they need it to survive. It is the only business they know.

The activists trying to stop them are likely to be exclusively outsiders.

That is not necessarily because the Japanese support the trade. During the three weeks we were there, we found no one outside the dolphin hunting towns who even knew that dolphins were eaten.

So, perhaps the challenge is not to change minds, but to inform them.

Dolphin Hunters will be broadcast in the UK on BBC Two at 1930 GMT.

PD if it swims like a fish and smells like a fish it must be a fish. These animal right activists are bunch of whacked out crazy looneys. Save the planet, save the water, save this, save that, pretty soon the animals will come out of jungle and and eat us. I almost got killed in wyoming (yellow stone) by a bear because of these damn activists. Ric O’Barry should go and have a Guiness stout, I am sure he’ll be hunting flippers with the Japanese after that. Tell 'em to move to North Korea and tell young Kim to stop eating dogs (hell they are as smart as the fish in question). There should be a celebrity death match between charlton heston and these activists on MTV. Go NRA :rocketup:

P.S I guess no sushi for Ric O’Barry

  • You musta nota eata fish, nota gooood fah you *

Yeah we have a similar problem with coyotes. There are just too many of them running around in the neighborhood but these environmentalist wackos won’t let the city do anything about it.

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by Verizon: *
PD if it swims like a fish and smells like a fish it must be a fish. These animal right activists are bunch of whacked out crazy looneys. Save the planet, save the water, save this, save that, pretty soon the animals will come out of jungle and and eat us. I almost got killed in wyoming (yellow stone) by a bear because of these damn activists.

[/QUOTE]

:D :D

ok now don’t take me wrong....I am not happy because that damn bear was about to eat you in Wyoming.......I am just amused at your style of expression...very expressive one... I like it

but you know what Verizon and agent smith...the more I come to know of your views and many other like you about different issues, the more I realize how “republican” you guys are….still, you guys and thousands of other Pakistanis opposed republicans in current election because of an assumption “Islam is in danger if bush gets re elected”……

(guys, it is just an observation and by no means I intend to derail the thread…..)

Lets derail the thread a little more, what the heck. So according to PD anyone who thinks those environmentalists are wackos they must be rethuglicans? Oh well then I am pro life. I have high moral values, I am against affirmative action, and I am in favor of including abstinence in school curriculum as an only source of sex education. Hmm I didn’t realize that I am more rethuglican than an independent. May be that’s why I voted for Dumbya back in 2000.

PD, You got it I am a flip flopping republican. I was actually a republican all the way till Bush Jr popped on the radar screen, to further add to it I heard that uncle wesley clark (yes that cardigan sweater wearin’ general :Salute: ) was a republican like me but now wanted volunteers to kick bush out so, I flopped and joined the democratic bandwagon.

See here’s my logic I flip :k: I become a republican, I flop :nook: and become a democrat (I hope you guys understand the pun and sarcasm behind this).

AS no we are not derailing this thread, see flipper used to flip flop flipper was a fish,

http://uploads.savefile.com/redir/14016.gif

so in a convoluted way it’s still on track.