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The Five Freedoms for Animals
are vitally important for the health of all animals

The 5 Freedoms are endorsed by the World Organisation for Animal Health (WOAH)

and are available to learners in all 11 official South African languages.

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Click on the buttons below to download the posters

in the language of your choice.

See the call by the World Organisation for Animal Health (WOAH)  for global collaboration to make animal health and welfare a priority, for the sake of the health of all.

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Please distribute the URL link to teachers and schools so that they too can benefit from this platform
naturebased.education

Forging an understanding of the emotional, psychological and mental states of animals in our care

Global concern for the welfare of animals is increasing rapidly and with it, two important developments have recently come into being.

Firstly, the World Organisation for Animal Health has changed its acronym from OIE (based on the French version of its name) to WOAH, making the organisation more accessible internationally.

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The second development is the Five Animal Domains.

While the Five Freedoms for Animals are a basic checklist of fundamental needs of animals in our care, the Five Animal Domains, on the other hand, refer to the implications of our treatment of animals in our care on their emotional, psychological and mental states of being. The essence of this development is that our care should facilitate that animals thrive and not simply survive.

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Leading Educators suggest that as humans become involved in projects for the restoration of nature, they also heal themselves and many of the mental health issues that plague society today.

Professor Glen Albrecht

Geoscientist, eco-philosopher and author of

Earth Emotions: New Words for a New World

“To repair and restore this Earth is now the highest good that I can think of.

He invites everyone to step out of the current Anthropocene era (where human self-interest dominates and destroys) and become part of the Symbiocene era in which all human activity supports all life.

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Professor Karin Murris

Associate Professor at the School of Education, University of Cape Town, and author of

The Posthuman Child. She suggests the focus of education be turned away from Westernised Humanism, towards Posthumanism with its understanding of the

“connectivity and interdependency between all earth dwellers including human animals, other animals and nonhumans (e.g. machines)."

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Professor Kai Horsthemke,

visiting lecturer at the University of the Witwatersrand School of Education and author of Animal Rights Education. The current model of Education, he says,

“emotionally desensitizes children to the suffering of animals, reinforcing the prejudice that the value of an animal is dependent on

its usefulness to man.” 

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Dr Rainer Ebert, lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Dar es Salaam, and Dr Anteneh Roba, physician and president of the International Fund for Africa, are joint editors of Africa and her Animals, published by the UNISA Press. They state:

“This book is intended as a call upon the reader to take nonhuman animals seriously, as individuals, and as members of our moral community. We want to challenge the common view that animals are essentially inferior to humans.” 

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Andreas Schleicher,

 Director for Education and Skills, and Special Advisor on Education Policy to the Secretary-General at the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). He suggests that as AI (artificial intelligence) gradually takes over many of the jobs that keep us busy now, “we should cultivate in our children that special thing that sets us apart from AI, the very thing that makes us uniquely human – our capacity for empathy and creativity.” If we don’t, he says, “the world will be educating second-class robots and not first-class humans”.

 

Professor Simon Baron-Cohen,

professor of Developmental Psychopathology at the University of Cambridge and author of the book

The Science of Evil. He suggests that instead of using the term evil, we should talk about reduced or even absent empathy.

“It is puzzling that in school curricula, empathy figures hardly at all… The erosion of empathy is a critical global issue of our time.”

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Dr Magdie van Heerden,

social worker specialising in the Human-Animal bond.

She says: “The development of empathy should be a focal point in education. It starts with the teddy bear in the cot and with the companion animals in our homes. Child welfare and animal welfare are intertwined and we cannot split the one from the other as we strive towards emotional health in our communities.”

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For more info refer to
Education Rewired

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APPEAL FOR YOUR SUPPORT

Please make a contribution to our efforts to raise human consciousness so that the animals in our care can lead healthy lives in accordance with the Five Freedoms for Animals 

Your donation is tax deductible!

For every donation, The Humane Education Trust will issue a Section 18A Tax Certificate for you to hand in to SARS.

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