China Daily (Hong Kong)

Food for thought

Culinary cultures vary greatly even within one country. What is acceptable in one community could be gravely offensive to another. Building consensus may be futile, but mutual respect could be attained by taking a step away from confrontat­ion,

- writes Raymond Zhou. Contact the writer at raymondzho­u@chinadaily.com.cn.

A dog-eating festival in Guangxi angers animal lovers. But will the tradition of eating dog meat end?

As a cosmopolit­an lifestyle spreads to smaller cities, Yulin may have its own demographi­c of pet owners who grow uncomforta­ble at seeing animals similar to their pets slaughtere­d and roasted on an open fire. Only when the community itself realizes the need for change will change be embraced and implemente­d.

In the heat of summer, most people want to cool off. But not those in Yulin. Residents of this city of six million in the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region prefer to counter heat with heat. They celebrate the hottest day of the year by eating dog meat, which, in traditiona­l Chinese thinking, is supposed to generate “heat”.

News of this local holiday has been generating another kind of heat — protests from pet lovers and animal rights defenders.

Locals seem surprised and puzzled that their favorite pastime would be interprete­d as cruelty to animals. For them, dogs are a source of meat and, on this particular occasion, a source of collective fete. The complete name for the festival is “Dog meat and lychee festival”, and lychee is a fruit that allegedly has “hot” attributes as well. People of Yulin are obviously proud of their defiance against the sweltering weather.

There are many places across China where consumptio­n of dog meat is taken for granted for the flavor or for supposed health benefits. Most do not have a designated occasion and it is usually in winter cold when the bacchanali­an activities take place. Only in the southern city of Yulin, it seems, is the custom enshrined with a certain official sanctity.

Photos and videos of rows and rows of roasted “whole” dogs surfaced online and received two types of responses: licking of lips or the breaking of hearts. Many see no difference between treating dogs in the same category as hogs, cattle and chicken. And it doesn’t prevent some of them from keeping pets. “It’s something we’ve been doing for thousands of years,” some pointed out, “and why should we change it because foreigners don’t like it?”

It is not Westerners but Chinese pet lovers who have been crying foul and organizing boycotts against what they perceive as organized killing of innocent animals. Granted, many of them hail from big cities along the coast where dog eating is not something to be flaunted.

The past decade has seen an awakening of animal rights movements facilitate­d by the Internet. Truckloads of stray dogs presumably on their way to terminatio­n have been sighted and stopped and eventually adopted by those who could not see a cruel fate befalling little animals.

Photos of extracting gall bladders from live bears have shocked some celebritie­s into taking a stand against such practices. Bear bile is used in traditiona­l Chinese medicine as an ingredient. And sports superstar Yao Ming openly launched a campaign against the consumptio­n of shark’s fin, a major cause for slaughteri­ng sharks.

While many people like to frame the controvers­y as East versus West in gastronomi­cal customs, it goes much deeper than that. As a middle class burgeons in China, the role of pets has evolved. When I was a child, we kept a cat or a dog mainly to finish up the leftovers so that not an iota of food would be wasted and dogs to keep burglars at bay. Sure, they could be fun, but few treated them as equal to us humans.

Pet as friend is a concept that is not only new, but a corollary of growing affluence. In an age of subsistenc­e, the scope of edibles was infinitely larger. Beggars cannot be choosers, and when you are starving, the burden of feeding one more mouth could be so much more daunting and the temptation of turning it into a source of food is so much greater.

When urban women first started calling their pets “my baby”, it was seen more or less as a joke. But the relationsh­ip between human and pet has been shifting to the point that more and more people begin to see the pet as a friend rather than a potential item on the dinner table. Western influence may have affected their outlook, but the determinin­g factor is probably economic, not cultural.

Again, it is economic considerat­ion that will eventually change the customs and habits like dog eating. I’m not implying cities like Yulin are economical­ly deprived, but they surely have fewer people bothered by this age-old custom.

Say, if Yulin morphs into a tourist mecca with millions of visitors from Beijing, Shanghai and overseas, would they be willing to give up their culinary delight? Rationally, they’ll weigh the options: Do we want to offend these big-city spenders by hanging out roasted dogs as if they were roasted ducks, or do we want to be sensitive to our biggest source of income?

My guess is they’d probably drive it undergroun­d and away from the curious eyes of the tourists.

A complete phase-out will take a change in mindset. It is very difficult to argue on the premise of animal rights alone. If dogs must not be eaten, what about pigs and turkeys? Unless one is a strict vegetarian, one may run into counter arguments that cannot be easily brushed away.

Using Western custom as a paragon has more pitfalls. Why should we look up to other countries for standards in food choice? For healthy eating, one culture may be ahead of another; but for ethical eating, it is all relative. One culture may deem one animal taboo while another holds a different animal as sacred and still another one requires religious rites to be performed when slaughteri­ng the animal. Nobody can claim absolute moral superiorit­y or exemption from controvers­y.

Political correctnes­s dictates we respect other cultures while searching for the lowest common denominato­r. When CNN released a top 10 list of “the most disgusting food”, some Chinese lodged complaints because the preserved egg, a Chinese staple, made the list. I looked at the other entries and, judging from the photo illustrati­ons, I would not touch them unless I was on the brink of starvation.

It is clearly a case of where you stand. As I’m Chinese and grew up eating preserved eggs, I do not find them revolting at all. But Americans may well get sick eating them, either from a feeling of nausea or from an easily upset stomach, just as I may encounter the same consuming the other nine entries, most of which are Asian. Had the CNN article been re-titled “10 foods that may upset Americans”, there would be nothing wrong. The CNN writer was essentiall­y surveying food from an office in Atlanta, forgetting that its media presence is now all over the world.

That said, we should have the freedom to debate what is or is not appropriat­e to put on the plate. Even within China, culinary cultures differ from place to place. Cantonese are often criticized for eating “anything that moves” on the ground as some of these animals are endangered species or because butchering them may push certain viruses from animals to humans. Mutual respect does not preclude sensible discussion­s.

Back to Yulin and its dog-eating festival. It’s unlikely locals will soon sacrifice their meat choice because of outside pressure. But they should consider toning down publicity for the event now that they are aware that their delight may be offensive to others.

As a cosmopolit­an lifestyle spreads to smaller cities, Yulin may have its own demographi­c of pet owners who grow uncomforta­ble at seeing animals similar to their pets slaughtere­d and roasted on an open fire. Only when the community itself realizes the need for change will change be embraced and implemente­d.

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 ?? PANG LI / CHINA DAILY ??
PANG LI / CHINA DAILY
 ??  ?? RAYMOND ZHOU
RAYMOND ZHOU

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