Register for E-mail alerts. Comment on articles. Sign up today, it's easy.
Close
The Washington Times Online Edition

PETA suspends exhibit linking blacks, animals

RICHMOND — People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals — known as much for staging shocking protests as for championing animal rights — is reconsidering a campaign comparing slavery to animal abuse after complaints from civil rights groups and others.

“Animal Liberation,” which includes 12 panels juxtaposing pictures of black people in chains with shackled elephants and other provocative images, had visited 17 cities before the Norfolk-based group put the tour on hold. The decision came within the past week.

PETA wrapped up the first leg of the tour in the District on Thursday.

“We’re not continuing right now while we evaluate,” said Dawn Carr, a PETA spokeswoman. “We’re reviewing feedback we’ve received — most of it overwhelmingly positive and some of it quite negative.”

Stops had included Columbia, S.C.; Birmingham, Ala.; and Baton Rouge, La. — cities in the heart of Dixie where, ironically, Miss Carr said the images were most well-received.

Suspended from a metal trellis, one cloth panel shows a black civil rights protester being beaten at a lunch counter beside a photo of a seal being bludgeoned. Another panel, titled “Hanging,” shows a photo of a white mob surrounding two lynched blacks, their bodies hanging from tree limbs; a nearby picture shows a cow hanging in a slaughterhouse.

But controversy erupted last Monday, when the display stopped in New Haven, Conn.

“There was one man who began shouting that the exhibit was racist,” Miss Carr said. “Then, there was a lot of shouting.”

Miss Carr said officials are using the shocking images to prove a point: Whether it’s humans harming animals or one another, all point to an oppressive mind-set.

But officials with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People aren’t buying it.

“PETA operates by getting publicity any way they can,” said John White, an NAACP spokesman. “They’re comparing chickens to black people?”

It marks the second time in recent months that PETA has come under fire for comparing the suffering of a group of people to the plight of animals.

Officials with the group apologized earlier this year after a campaign comparing the suffering of Jews during the Holocaust with that of factory animals.

That campaign ran from February 2003 to October 2004.

“These people seem to be in the very-slow-learners category,” said Mark Potok, director of the Intelligence Project with the Southern Poverty Law Center, in Montgomery, Ala., where the exhibit stopped in July.

Story Continues →

View Entire Story
Comments
blog comments powered by Disqus
You Might Also Like
  • Education Department deploys ‘mystery shoppers’ to check for fraud

    By Jim McElhatton - The Washington Times

  • Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney speaks at a campaign rally in Mesa, Ariz., on Monday. Arizona holds its GOP presidential primary on Feb. 28, the same day as Michigan, the home state of the former Massachusetts governor. (Associated Press)

    Romney finds tough times in Michigan

    By Andrea Billups - The Washington Times

  • Delegate Robert G. Marshall holds a book as he reads to the House during debate on a bill defining life at the moment of conception during the House session at the Capitol in Richmond, Va., Monday, Feb. 13, 2012.  (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

    Virginia House vote states life starts at conception

    By David Sherfinski - The Washington Times

  • In Case You Missed It
    Happening Now

          Independent voices from the TWT Communities

          Rights So Divine

          Everyone has the divine rights as human beings because they were created in the image of God

          Haydon's Soccer and Sports Pitch

          Covering the world of soccer, including the World Cup, Major League Soccer, D.C. United and the English Premier League and other interesting sporting events.