Krishna Balaram Goshala Vrindavan
 

Srila Prabhupada instructs about cows
Srila Prabhupada

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Cow Adoption

Cow Adoption Program

Sponsor Krishna's cows in Sri Vrindavana Dhama
and obtain boundless mercy!


Every month you can donate some affordable amount and make Go-Seva a life time service to Sri Sri Krishna Balaram’s Cows.


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We found it very important to inform our well-wishers and supporters about the need of this program and what we wish to achieve by this in the long run. Since many people approach us wanting to donate a cow(go-daan) knowing it to be a highly pious activity one needs to do in one’s life, IMG_0017we felt that it’s required to inform all about the matter in this document:

Treatment given to the cows: All over Vrindavan we see cows wandering throughout the day eating whatever garbage they get. Many times we find them near the Municipality garbage pit searching out for something to eat in the refuse. The natural question that will arise in the mind of any sane person is ‘who is the owner of these cows?’ and ‘why doesn’t he protect his cow from eating filth and plastic?’
It is terrible that people even in Vrindavan use the cow as a commodity. They simply exploit the cow for its milk but do not feed her plentiful. After the milking is done the cow is left on her own to search out for food and when she has stopped giving milk she is completely dragged out from the home. They argue that they haven’t sold her for money but the inevitable fate of such street cows is the abattoir or that they die miserably of some disease caused by eating filth and plastic. ISN’T THIS CRUEL!!, should the owners not be honest toward taking the responsibility of their mother?

A Real Life Story
After a five-hour surgery, veterinary doctors removed 30kg of plastic from a cow’s stomach on Wednesday. A week ago, animal lovers from IIT Powai called the Bombay Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals to tell them about a cow that was unable to walk due to a wound on her tail. A team of doctors visited the area and saw that the problem was much worse. They suggested she be brought to Bai Sakarbai Dinshaw Petit IMG_0024Hospital in Parel for observation.
They found that her stomach was bloated and the food she ate would come out of her nose. She also had a deep wound in her pelvic region and showed loss of appetite. These were all indications that she had eaten too much plastic.
“First we cured the tail wound,” says Dr Ashish Sutar, manager of the hospital, “then we planned the surgery with the help of Bombay Veterinary College.” The doctors were surprised to see the quantity of plastic that came out of the cow’s stomach during a rumenotomy. During the first hour, they could remove only shreds of plastic.
It took four more hours to remove all of it. “Out of curiosity,” said one doctor, “we measured the plastic and it weighed 30kg. This is the first time so much has been found in a cow’s stomach.”

“Most cow owners leave their animals out to graze after milking them,” explains Dr J C Khanna, chief functionary of the hospital, “These cows eat out of garbage bins — as they are rarely fed by their owners — where food stuff is often wrapped in plastic.”
“It’s sad that owners look after their animals only as long as they are capable of giving milk,” says Khanna, “Then they are abandoned.” Sutar says, “The cow is now out of danger and in post-operative care.”

What we wish to do: Seeing this condition we at Bhaktivedanta Swami Goshala Vrindavan have designed a program of cow adoption with a desire to set-up an ideal standard of cow care in the long run. By letting people donate a cow (go-daan) to us we will also be a culprit of the same cruelty that we are protesting against. First of all we need to be honest in taking up the responsibility of those cows that are born in our Goshala, they are our own children.The above treatment met to the cows is due to the dearth of enough grazing land. All land is speedily getting used-up by construction companies or factories. So rather than donating any new cows to the Goshala we ask you to adopt either a new calf or one of the cows already in the Goshala. By your kind help it will be possible for us to purchase more land for the cows to graze on and to make sheds, thus setup an example for the whole community. Thanking you for your kind consideration.