
August 17, 2008
MIAMI – A year after practitioners of ritual animal sacrifices were held at gunpoint and detained for hours by Coral Gables police, Miami-Dade police plan to remind officers that federal and state laws protect people’s freedom of religion.
Animal sacrifice and religious ritual have intertwined for thousands of years. The practice remains integral to Santería, an Afro-Cuban religion that has many adherents in the United States, particularly in Florida.
In 1987, when the Santería Church of Lukumi Babalu Aye announced plans to open in Hialeah, Florida, the city reacted by passing a set of ordinances banning animal sacrifice. The church sued and the issue of whether the ritual killing of animals constituted protected religious expression eventually made its way to the Supreme Court.
Last year, Coral Gables police raided a home where practitioners of the Santeria religion were slaughtering goats, chickens and pigeons. As a result, next year’s Miami-Dade police handbook will include a note about how to respond to calls about such activities.
Pet Pulse obtained a copy of the memo that was sent to officers. It starts with a reminder that the First Amendment of the United States Constitution provides freedom of religion.
The memo then refers to the 1993 Supreme Court decision in the case of Lukumi Babalu Inc. vs. Hialeah. The court found that the city of Hialeh’s ordinances aimed at stopping animal sacrifice were unconstitutional.
Officers determining that animals were killed during a religious ritual are then instructed by the memo to first determine whether excessive noise has occurred.
“This crime is a misdemeanor and must occur in the officer’s presence,” the memo states.
The memo says the officers should then determine whether excessive parking has taken place due to a large gathering.
When Pet Pulse requested an interview with an authority to explain the memo, a Miami-Dade police spokesperson responded by email, saying, “Unfortunately, we are not going to have a representative available for an interview.”
In a paper he wrote this year, entitled, Animal Sacrifice and the First Amendment, Pace University Law Professor David Cassuto addressed the impact of the Supreme Court’s 1993 decision on the ability of the police to enforce animal cruelty laws.
“By classifying the animal sacrifice laws as failed anti-cruelty statutes and then invalidating them on First Amendment grounds,” Cassuto wrote, “the Court jeopardized future attempts to legislate animal protection laws, even when such laws only incidentally impact religious practices.”
New Jersey State SPCA Corporal Al Peterson says he has handled animal sacrifice cases involving Santeria and similar religions since the 1970s, and is considered a national authority on the subject.
In New Jersey, officers investigating possible religious animal sacrifice need to ask one primary question, according to Peterson: Did needless animal cruelty occur, in conjunction with Title 4, the state’s animal cruelty statute?
If animal cruelty occurred, any resulting offenses and charges are no different, Peterson says, than in any other case not involving religious expression.
“In an animal is killed for food, it’s not against the law,” Peterson said of New Jersey’s standards. “But at the same time, if an animal is killed in a ritualistic way, and not used for food, and basically tossed off to the side and discarded, that becomes the threshold between what is the basis of religious freedom and needless cruelty.”
Black dogs and black cats are sometimes sacrificed in the name of religion, Peterson says.
“These are Afro-Caribbean religious belief systems,” said Peterson, who calls instances of animal sacrifice “very prevalent.”
The carcasses of animals sacrificed in rituals, Peterson says, are typically disposed of in a variety of places.
“Parks, reservations, along the side of the road, in cemeteries, along railroad crossings, things that would be befitting of the spirits and the religious gods and spirits that they worship,” Peterson said.
Babalu have been known to eat the animals they sacrifice, such as in a stew, and then bury their bones and other remains, Peterson says.
“It’s very hard to make arrests,” Peterson said. “Because many of the sacrifices are done within people’s homes of the Santeros, which are the holy men, the priests. And then after the ceremony is over, someone within the congregation is given a chore, or a duty to place the sacrificed animals either in a cemetery or near a roadway or near a railroad.
“Wherever the Santero priest feels is befitting to the saints. To appease them, to make them happy, to grant them the wishes for which the animals have been sacrificed in the first place.”
Having done extensive interviews and research on animal sacrifice, Peterson says the use of animals is merely an option, not a religious requirement.
“Animals do not have to be used,” he said. “You can do it to a fruit, to a vegetable, an herb, a spice. Animal cruelty in Santeria is not a true requirement. The Santeros actually use this as a stronger point.”
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killing birds is not a good thing as any decent person can see, but it happens soo much now adays most people dont even care anymore!
something is wrong with us today!
3 months ago
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Anyway - I am not sure about a solution for animal sacrifices.
But one or two chickens compared with how many that are kept in horrific conditions their entire lives, pumped with chemicals, and slaughtered to become chicken nuggets? I wonder.. which is less humane? Not to see the light of day And Then be slaughtered, or live a normal life (possibly raised with high regard and respect) and be slaughtered?
Dead is dead - how they lived and how they were killed is the real question for cruelty.
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As was stated, you could use fruit if you want to sacrifice. I'm all for freedom of religion, but I'm even more for freedom of life for these animals. I've friends who've been involved at some point in religions requesting sacrifice, and yes, plant matter had been used.
3 months ago
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noise complaint arrests in this kind of situation are similar in my opinion to the punishment of 'obstructing traffic' that the women who were fighting for the right to vote got arrested for. It is unfair - and in that case was eventually deemed unconstitutional.
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The animals are killed in a humane manner.
They are generally eaten later, just as the many of millions of animals slaughtered daily in North American commercial establishments.
Ritual sacrifice of animals was extensively practiced in ancient Israel and was only discontinued after the destruction of the temple in Jerusalem in the eighth decade CE.
They feel that the sacrifices must continue because their Orisha require the food. (The Orisha are various manifestations of God).
Animal sacrifices have formed a part of their religion for over one millennium.
The constitutions of the United States and Canada guarantee freedom of religious expression.
They have won a number of court cases; one went all the way to the US Supreme Court.
4 months ago
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I great up around this stuff and have ripped into people I know that sacrifice pigeons. As a youngster, I had a head reading, naming ceremony, and been immersed in Santeria.
It is barbaric and the justification is weak. It reminds me of the short story, The Lottery. A village citizen is killed to ensure a good harvest in post modern times, and the tradition is more of a habit than a belief system. It must stop, pure and simple.
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We also vote on everything once a year in Jan. We vote on the pastor, trustee board, etc. etc. We also get consulted about repairs or freshening up of the chruch building, and if the congregation doesn't approve, it doesn't get done. That's one reason why I love my assembly...we do have a voice and we loved and respected, and it shows.
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I will shut up.
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Although followers point out that the animal sacrifices involved are conducted in a safe and humane way, there is nothing humane about sacrificing an animal and one has to wonder what exactly is a humane way of doing so. Additionally after the sacrifice animals were traditionally cooked and eaten by the community. Based on this report they are not eaten but discarded wherever the participants decide to drop the remains. Sorry, but I think it is time the Santerias become part of the modern Twenty-first Century world!
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Well, I stole his altar in the dead of night, threw it in the trash, and pi$$ed on his porch. I'm still alive.
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