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THE DANISH WAY

ZOO

Lion dissection is ‘incredibly Danish’

The Local's opinion columnist and 'The Danish Way of Parenting' author Jessica Alexander writes cutting up a lion in front of school kids is just a manifestation of Danes' honest approach to life.

Lion dissection is 'incredibly Danish'
The Odense Zoo has been performing public dissections for years without controversy, including this 2008 dissection of a lion. Photo: Odense Zoo dissekerer en løve. Byline: Sonny Munk Carlsen/Scanpix
Recently my co-author and I were interviewed by BT on The Danish Way of Parenting’s opinion about the international outrage surrounding the Odense Zoo performing live autopsies of animals in front of children. 
 
They wanted to know why we thought the international community had been so upset about it. In 2014, the Copenhagen Zoo put down a healthy giraffe due to overcrowding, and dissected it publicly. They then fed the remains to the lions. The whole thing caused such a stir that the zoo’s scientific director received death threats.
 
 
Now Odense Zoo will perform another public autopsy, this time on a lion, for school children during their autumn holiday. 
 
“The reason we are dissecting it is because we believe there is a lot of education involved in dissecting a lion” zoologist Michael Wallberg Sørensen told AFP.
 
Is it wrong to put animals down due to overcrowding in a zoo? Is it wrong to cut them up in front of all ages of children and show them the organs and open a dialogue about it? Is it wrong, as with Marius the giraffe, to feed his cut up remains to the lions? Those are questions I can’t answer. But what I can say is: whether you are outraged, fascinated or angry, this whole scenario sounds incredibly Danish. 
 
In fact, this is what my co-author, Danish psychotherapist Iben Sandahl, and I said in our interview with BT. This is a very good example of The Danish Way of Parenting’s “authentic” education style. Danish parents tend to be very honest with their children about life and death – the good, the bad and the ugly. For many foreigners, Danish honesty can feel a bit blunt, something akin to a hammer slamming down on your face. But once you get used to that bluntness it can actually be quite refreshing. 
 
It’s hard to decipher meaning when people try to sugarcoat what they say. Kids in particular can have a difficult time understanding this. The truth is, it is often adults who are uncomfortable talking about harder subjects, not kids. Danes don’t sugarcoat information for their children or for others, for that matter. They don’t feel the need to protect kids too much from reality. Being unafraid to be in touch with reality is how we can get more in touch with ourselves and our true feelings. This kind of authenticity creates more wellbeing in the long run. 
 
Right or wrong, animals are put down in zoos due to overcrowding. Right or wrong, many people eat meat. Right or wrong, that meat comes from dead animals. And right or wrong, other animals in the zoo have to eat other dead animals to survive. Many Danes feel this experience gives their children the true insight to help them make their own choices in the future. That could be anything from becoming a veterinarian to a vegetarian to an animal activist. The objective is to show them a real scenario and be open to talking about it.  
 
Some have suggested that it is the over Disney-ification of animals that has created such an uproar over a live autopsy. I don’t think so. I think many parents want to protect their children from damaging experiences. And this is both good and understandable. The only problem is: how do we define what is damaging and what is informative? Where is the line between protection and suppression? Between reality and censorship? If we over-package everything to look nice, sound nice and have a happy ending, is that really preparing our children for life’s ups and downs? Or is that buffering them from a bigger shock later on?
 
What exactly are we protecting them from?
 
If the saying is true that “it’s a jungle out there” then maybe there is no better time like the present to get kids acquainted with it.
 
Jessica AlexanderJessica Alexander is an American author who co-wrote 'The Danish Way of Parenting: A Guide to Raising the Happiest Kids in the World'. She has been married to a Dane for over 13 years and has always been fascinated by cultural differences. She speaks four languages and currently lives in Rome with her husband and two children. Her book can be purchased via Amazon and Saxo

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ANIMALS

Coronavirus: Four lions test positive at Barcelona zoo

Four lions at Barcelona Zoo, three of them older females, caught Covid-19 last month but suffered only mild symptoms and have since recovered, the Catalan animal park said.

Coronavirus: Four lions test positive at Barcelona zoo
File photo of lions in a zoo: AFP

Their keepers were tipped off when they noticed “mild respiratory symptoms” among three 16-year-old females and a four-year-old male, a zoo statement said.

The symptoms emerged as two of their keepers tested positive for the virus.   

“The four lions were tested with the viral antigen detection kit… and were found to be positive,” it said, indicating the diagnosis was confirmed by PCR tests.

They were immediately treated with anti-inflammatories and closely monitored under a protocol similar to that for the flu, and “responded positively”.

“At no time were the lions seen having difficultly breathing or other respiratory issues, and all symptoms disappeared within a fortnight, apart from coughing and sneezing,” the zoo said.

To avoid catching the virus, the keepers wore FFP3 masks, plexiglass visors and protective footwear, and they were lowered into the enclosure in a halter.   

The zoo also contacted “international experts such as the Bronx Zoo veterinary service in New York, the only one to have documented a case of Sars-CoV-2 infection in big cats,” it said.

In early April, a four-year-old female tiger at the Bronx Zoo tested positive for Covid-19, likely contracting it from a keeper who was asymptomatic at the time.

Since the start of the pandemic, cats, dogs and various other animals have tested positive for Covid-19 but until now, minks are the only animals proven to both contract the virus and pass it on to humans.

Several countries have ordered the mass culling of their mink populations, notably Denmark where more than 10 million have already been killed.

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