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IAR NewsDecember 2007 The world’s biggest bear sanctuary - funded by IAR - celebrates its fifth birthday on Christmas Eve
Christmas Eve 2007 also marks a milestone in the campaign to free the dancing bears. It is estimated that there are still 400 dancing bears on the streets of India, so together the two charities have rescued just over half of them: their aim now is to end the cruel practice completely by 2010.
"We started with six frightened and traumatised bears that had been kept captive on the end of a rope ever since they were taken from the wild as cubs. When we removed the ropes their first reaction was bewilderment and fear. There will always be a special place in our hearts for those first bears we took in. Since those early days we have expanded the sanctuary and now we have more than 100 acres where the bears can roam freely and leave behind the pain and trauma of their lives on the streets."
Special environmental enrichment is provided to stimulate and amuse the bears, particularly the small group of blind bears who have lost their sight through malnutrition or ferocious beatings from their handlers. In October 2006 IAR and WSOS received a special award from the Indian government for successfully removing all the dancing bears from the tourist routes around Agra and the historic city of Fatehpur Sikri.
Bijli bear was terribly abused by her kalandar handlers before she was rescued and it took some time to get over her fear. She had had several owners in the past and was deeply traumatised when she arrived at the sanctuary. Today she is a healthy bear with a glossy coat and has finally managed to forget the pain of the past.
Alan Knight concludes: "How can we ever compensate these bears for the pain they have suffered at the hands of the human race? On 24 December this year we will certainly celebrate the success of the Agra sanctuary and of the campaign in general, but we won’t forget the bears still on the streets this Christmas, and still in need of our help. The biggest celebration will be when there are no more dancing bears in India because they are all safely in our care."
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