National Post

Pandemic could deal fatal blow to Spain's bullfighti­ng culture

Funding cuts, waning interest add to problems

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MADR ID • Usually at this time of year Madrid’s Las Ventas bullring is packed as matadors take on lethal halftonne bulls in daily fights during the annual San Isidro festival.

But plazas across Spain are empty this season as the pandemic has kept matadors and fans stuckin their homes.

Major festivals such as San Isidro, Sevilla’s April Fair, and Pamplona’s San Fermin in July have been cancelled and bulls have been sent from ranches straight to the slaughterh­ouse.

The shutdown could deal a fatal blow to a controvers­ial spectacle.

Traditiona­lly an emblematic part of Spanish culture, it has struggled for survival in recent decades.

Although the big festivals still draw crowds, public interest in bullfighti­ng has dwindled considerab­ly.

Local government­s have cut funding for fiestas, leftwing politician­s oppose it, and a highly vocal anti- bullfight movement has grabbed headlines. Some cities and regions, notably Catalonia, already prohibit bullfights, or “corridas.”

Although Spain has started to ease its lockdown, it is not clear if any corridas will now take place before the end of the season in October.

“The worst- case scenario for us would be not to have bullfights in the whole year. That would be dramatic,” bull breeder Victorino Martin told Reuters. “Just imagine. We already haven’t had any income because of the winter stoppage, imagine one more year like this.”

The industry also supports thousands of jobs, from the matadors and their teams to ranch- hands and bullring staff. They are also under threat now.

For anti- bullfight activists, the corrida’s plight is to be welcomed.

“It has been good news, one of the few good news brought by this pandemic,” said Aida Gascon of Animanatur­alis.

“Not only because of all the bulls that are not going to be tortured to death — although we know they are going to die anyway as they will be sent to the slaughterh­ouse. Nobody is going to benefit from that torture show.”

Ac tivis ts have s taged regular demonstrat­ions outside plazas. For them, it is a cruel and bloody spectacle with no place in modern Spain.

The Union of Breeders estimates the industry’s losses could exceed 77 million euros if the season is written off.

Ranchers have already shipped hundreds of bulls to the slaughterh­ouses, where they fetch about 500 euros ($ 762) each as butcher’s meat. The cost of raising a fighting bull is about 5,000 euros, which is only viable if the events take place.

Supporters consider the bullfight an art form.

“Four or five thousand fighting bulls will go to the slaughterh­ouse this year without being fought and without giving us the revenue for which the brave bull is raised,” said Andres Romero, a rejoneador who fights bulls mounted on a highly-trained horse.

“We devote all possible resources to the animals since they are born until they die so they subsist and have a good life.”

Nobody is going to benefit from that torture show.

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