Τα σκυλιά εκτρέφονται, για κατανάλωση στη Ν. Κορέα
By Megan
Fox
Staff
Writer
Dog meat
awaits customers in a shop in S. Korea's Moran Market.
Food and
eating cultures differ around the world. In many countries people have a kind
of meat that is tied specifically to their culture. In Peru locals eat Guinea
pig, China they eat cat, Italy, horse, and strangely many westerners also
choose to drink the mammary products of bovines, cow milk. Foreigners have
often looked on with disbelief as "strange" animals are consumed by
other cultures.
However in
our ever more globalized world the pressure of outside influences on those
native dinning habits have begun to be felt. This is particularly true of dog
meat and in a quest to learn more about this increasingly polar topic we
decided to take a trip to the Moran Market east of Seoul to see the practice
for ourselves.
Dog meat
consumption has occurred in many parts of the world, in Eastern and Western
countries alike. In Korea the practice of eating dog has been common for
centuries. The meat is eaten year round, most commonly in summer time. It is
believed by many that eating dog can bring virility and can cure many ailments.
Jin Kim grew up in Korea and throughout his childhood eating dog meat was a
normal practice. “My family would often eat dog meat during summer trips to the
country to see my grandparents.
Live dogs
are waiting to be slaughtered for meat or soup at a shop in S. Korea's Moran
Market in Seongnam City.
The food is
very healthy. It helps give a long life, clear skin and clean body. It also is
filling. If you eat dog, you can skip two meals following. In the summer months
dog meat will cool your body. ” Though these traditional beliefs were once
widespread it is unlikely that it differs greatly from other lean red meats
like venison.
The primary
breed of dog that is farmed and raised for eating is the Nureongi. This large
breed differs from the dogs that are kept for pets in Korea and reminded me
somewhat of a domesticated dingo. Their hair is short and yellow and they had a
very uniform appearance. Dog meat itself is prepared in several styles. It is
commonly boiled and eaten in a stew but can also be steamed and grilled.
Behind the
debate over the practice of eating dog meat there is also much debate about the
manner of death for dogs raised as livestock. Some people have asserted that
dogs are often killed by repeatedly hitting them with a long stick. This
practice may have been done in the belief that a ‘many hit killing’ might make
the flesh meat become soft. Although others discount this theory pointing to
the common belief among western livestock slaughterers that pain prior to death
leads animals meat to become tainted by adrenaline and therefore of much less
quality.
Azumi
Sugimoto is an expat from Japan that has been living in Korea for 13 years. “I
do not personally eat dog meat because it is not part of my culture. I
understand that it is part of the Korean culture and do not take offense to the
consumption of dog meat by Korean people. I do not, however, support the
killing of dogs brutally. Hitting a dog many times before death is tragic.”
As South
Korea becomes increasingly globalized, many people are choosing not to eat dog
meat by personal choice. A Korean National study revealed that 59% of Koreans
under the age of 30 would not consume dog meat. 62% believe that dogs are pets
and not food. A growing percentage is also actively seeking to take action
against it. In recent years, animal activist groups have sprung up throughout
Korea. Narmia Lee a Korean in Seoul wants to see an end to the consumption of
dog meat: “Many parts of me say, who are we to distinguish what animals are OK
to eat and what aren’t? But animal cruelty is my main issue with this. The dogs
are treated terribly before being slaughtered. There is no regulation of how
the animals are cared prior to their death since these are all illegal farms.
These dogs must be treated and killed humanly during their lifetime.”
While we
discovered a near universal agreement on the necessity of humane treatment for
these animals the dog farm industry remains relatively independent of oversight
due to the tenuous legal status of being seemingly underground. Some have
argued that the best way to enforce humane treatment is to fully legalize the
trade so that there can be additional oversight, a notion that bears some resemblance
to the way prostitution is partially legalized in many European countries.
If oversight is provided than the question becomes more
about what is acceptable after euthanasia. It is much easier to judge when
looking at our relationships with our own pets but many westerners fail to
realize that millions of dogs are euthanized each year to control the pet
population and their meat is simply wasted. According to the animal activist
foundation, ASPCA, 3 to 4 million dogs and cats are euthanized each year in the
United States of America. This is 60 percent of the dog population in America.
While the practice of eating dogs as meat is considered socially unacceptable
some 5 to 7 million companion animals are placed in shelters each year.
In the interest of learning more about this topic we decided
to take a trip to Moran market, the largest market for dog sales in South
Korea. It is located in Seoul's southeastern corner and open on days of the
month ending in 4 and 9. Here dogs are on display in clean cages. Butchered
meat is sold by the piece in front of the living animals. On a recent trip to
the market over 500 dogs were on display in cages. The cages seemed clean and
dogs were kept fed and watered. Ironically, puppies and kittens are sold as
pets about 50 meters away in the very same part of the market.
While we were expressly instructed not to take pictures by
many of the workers in the area it was clear that this was not an unhygenic
underground practice, as is occasionally asserted, but a relatively open and
sanitary one. Our trip to the dog meat portion of the Moran Market left us
feeling disinclined to partake ourselves but it was easier to understand the
domestication and processing of dogs for food when you looked at rows of caged
uniform looking very similar to any other form of commonly eaten livestock. If
anything the trip made us both think that other animals for sale to be
slaughtered there like, ducks and chickens, were in many ways just as pitiable
as the dogs, even though we happily consume them all the time and have no
intention of stopping. In the end we learned that once you see something with
your own eyes and get a little closer to it, it becomes harder to judge what is
right.
The above story was written by Megan & Thaddeus Fox.
Megan Fox is an American writer and educator. She currently
serves as the staff writer for The Seoul Times. She came to Seoul with her
husband Thaddeus who is an officer in the United States Army. Megan studied
communications media concentrating in photography at Fitchburg State
University. She enjoys traveling, cooking and volunteering. If you would like
to learn more about Megan's travels and life abroad please visit her blog at
www.seoulmateskorea.blogspot.com.
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