Santa Fe New Mexican

Girl hunter becomes social media target

12-year-old called ‘despicable’ for posting photos of her ‘trophies’

- By Lindsey Bever

In photos, 12-year-old Aryanna Gourdin is pictured posing with dead wild animals — an impala, a giraffe, a zebra — ones she hunted and killed on a recent trip to South Africa.

The huntress has been pulled into the center of a social media firestorm with critics calling her an “animal hater” and others calling her a child who doesn’t deserve the flak.

“It’s something that I cherish and I enjoy and I want other people to see what I’ve been able to experience,” she recently told ABC News’ Good Morning America.

Earlier this month, Aryanna and her father, Eli Gourdin, traveled from their northern Utah home to the African savanna, where Aryanna was pictured with a bow and pink arrows that she used to hunt and kill.

It appears she documented the trip on a Facebook page called Braids and Bows, where commenters called her a “killer,” a “murderer” and a “sickening little witch.”

“Despicable. Absolutely disgusting,” one of them wrote. “You don’t deserve any respect. Taking for granted the greatest gift of mother nature and the universe.”

One even suggested that young girl deserved to die.

“A normal dad would take his daughter to africa for a safari and not for hunting animal, for fun !!!!!! ” the commenter wrote. “Thats so poor. i hope that one day while she is hunting animals, just for fun, she will be killed by one of them !!!! ”

The practice of hunting and killing large animals has drawn criticism from time to time. Perhaps the most controvers­ial kill came last year when American dentist Walter Palmer took Africa’s beloved black-maned beauty, Cecil the lion — renewing an intense debate over the sport.

But in recent years, female hunters have been the targets of widespread rebuke.

The Washington Post’s Peter Holley reported last year:

“Female participat­ion in hunting increased by 10 percent between 2008 and 2012, according to the National Shooting Sports Foundation. During that same period, online hatred of female hunters, it seems, has increased significan­tly more.

“So why is it that so many people bristle at the sight of a pony-tailed blonde gleefully killing for sport?”

After Aryanna was recently swept up in the tide of social media criticism, she told Good Morning America that she hopes more women learn to love the sport.

“I want other women and youth to get into the hunting experience­s,” she said, adding: “It’s just awesome.”

A photo that received a huge amount of attention was one of a smiling Aryanna posing with a dead zebra.

The caption read: “One of my dream hunts for sure.”

A commenter responded: “When you get a THRILL and say killing an animal was you ‘DREAMS’ I think you need to re-examine what you are learning and being taught and maybe go find yourself. Killing something should NEVER feel that good little girl.”

Another said: “Animals are living breathing things. How could ending a helpless life bring you pride and joy? If anything, you should be ashamed. I’m not bringing you hatred, I’m just telling you.”

“They love animals,” Aryanna told Good Morning America about her critics. “But we love animals too. It’s just, we also love hunting.”

Still, others have spoken in support of the girl hunter.

“Let the haters hate!” one wrote. “Hunt away Aryanna, let them think what they want to.”

Another added: “You are an amazing young lady that is doing a great job at such a young age of representi­ng the hunting community. To bad the haters don’t get the facts before they post hateful things. Keep doing what you love sweetie!”

Aryanna said her family members have been hunting for generation­s.

In the post’s comment section, Aryanna appeared to defend herself from people who had been scolding her not only for hunting but also for posting photos of her kills.

“Hunting is hunting period,” she seemingly wrote. “Just because someone chooses to display their ‘Trophies’ doesn’t make then a bad person. It represents memories.”

 ?? COURTESY FACEBOOK ?? Aryanna Gourdin, 12, documented a hunting trip on Facebook, posing with dead wild animals — an impala, a giraffe, a zebra — that she hunted and killed on a recent trip to South Africa. Critics responded by calling her an animal hater.
COURTESY FACEBOOK Aryanna Gourdin, 12, documented a hunting trip on Facebook, posing with dead wild animals — an impala, a giraffe, a zebra — that she hunted and killed on a recent trip to South Africa. Critics responded by calling her an animal hater.

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