In one night I heard a weeping sound. In the silence of night the sound torned my heart. Oh! what is this sound. I thought that a child is crying. But in the morning my wife told me that the it was a kitten who is mourning painfully on the death of her baby.
I feel very much sorry and my mind also cried as i could imagine what she is facing the destiny.
As she was away from a baby the dog caught her baby and eat it. The death of a child in front of the Mother's eyes ! What a painful event in mother's life. Parting from loved one is a death for the loving person. The life becomes baseless and dry. What is the purpose of living without our loved ones? I prayed for the kitten from my heart.
The same story of a sad gorilla mother from the zoo in Muenster, Germany, has sparked a wave of interest among the public in the strength and depth of emotions in animals. Reactions to the events in Muenster ranged from very emotional expressions of sympathy, through dry scientific statements that gorillas surely feel sorrow for losing their relatives similar to people but it is hard to bring scientific proof of that, to a resolute rejection of such an idea and claims that people are only projecting their own emotions into gorilla behaviour.
Who can judge? If you ask how we can know that animals have emotions, we can answer with another question - how can we know that they have not? According to the widely accepted Darwin's theory of continuous evolution of species, emotions evolve, too. If we feel jealousy, so do chimpanzees, gorillas, and wolves, for instance. Animal emotions may differ from ours but there is no reason why they should not exist. We can imagine them as shades of grey. However, we cannot establish their intensity.
Human life is so much comfortable as compare to other animals. Let help animals by not disturbing their living cycle and killing them ruthlessly.
- Mahaveer Vibhute
See also :
http://www.rozhlas.cz/therevealed/comments/_zprava/498161