5/2/07
By Jack Turner
Author of "Teewinot" and "The Abstract Wild"
In 1814, John James Audubon watched a farmer torture three wolves. The farmer
had trapped them in a pit after they had killed his sheep and a colt. The man
jumped into the pit armed only with a knife, hamstrung each wolf as they cowered
in fear, and tied it up with a rope. Then he hauled them out one at a time
and set his dogs on them as they scuffled crippled along the ground. Audubon
was astounded by the meekness of the wolves and the glee with which the farmer
went about his revenge, but he was not distressed. He and the farmer considered
torturing wolves a Òsport,Ó something both normal and enjoyable. The sadistic
behavior did not warrant comment.
This story (and most of the language IÕve used to describe it) begins Jon T.
ColemanÕs award-winning book Vicious: Wolves and Men in America (Yale, 2004).
After reading a few paragraphs, you realize that the word vicious in the title
refers not to wolves but toÑPogo, againÑus. And by the time you finish this
scholarly reckoning of our slaughter of hundreds of thousandsÑprobably millionsÑof
wolves you will ponder ColemanÕs central question: Why is it that for 400 years
Americans were not content to just kill wolves? Why did we persecute and torture
an animal that both science and history informs us is a rather shy beast.
You donÕt have to take ColemanÕs word for the shyness. In his awarding winning
book, Of Wolves and Men, Barry Lopez quotes many early sources on this issue.
The historian Francis Parkman told prospective pioneers headed for the Oregon
Trail ÒThere is not the slightest danger from [wolves], for they are the greatest
cowards of the prairie.Ó A seasoned wolf hunter confirmed that he killed most
of his trapped wolves with either a tomahawk or a club. Nonetheless, for ranchers,
wrote another historian, Òwolves were an object of pathological hatred.Ó
Granted wolves killed livestock, but the reaction was out of all proportion
to their predation. We didnÕt merely kill them. We feed them fishhooks so they
would die of internal bleeding, we dragged them to death behind horses, we
set live wolves on fire, we released trapped wolves with their mouths and penises
wired shut. It is this disproportion between injury and persecution that justifies
claims of pathology, and Coleman, a professor of history at Norte Dame, documents
it in sickening detail.
When it comes to animals, the wolf is a special case. No other animal generates
such intense emotions, and research demonstrates that these emotions derive
either from science or a pernicious blend of agrarian folklore and childrenÕs
stories of precisely the kind that so often perpetuate intolerance and hate.
And it remains embedded in some folkÕs soul. America does not have a 400-year
tradition of burning, say, skunks, alive, but pathological hatred of wolves
still flourishes in Wyoming, as anyone reading newspapers and legislative reports
can attest. Wolves remain uniquely hated.
Which is why we should not classify wolves as predators. With predator status,
Wyoming Game and Fish will be helpless to prevent inhumane treatment of the
wolf by the many wolf haters in this state. Predator status will legitimize
sadism directed at a species that cannot deserve it and that many of us love.
Hence Vicious is perhaps the most important source for an informed conversation
about the future status of the wolf in Wyoming. Unfortunately, the book remains
virtually unknown. None of the three officials I contacted at Wyoming Game
and Fish had heard of it. Six libraries in Wyoming have the book but in two
of them it has never been checked out. Teton County Library does not have the
book.
Preciously few Wyoming statutes address inhumane treatment of our celebrated
wildlife. There is a prohibition against hunting with artificial lights at
night; another against running down game with vehicles; and an admirable statue
prohibiting the possession of animals such as bears, cougars, and wolves (including
wolf/dog hybrids). But crucially, although WyomingÕs Cruelty to Animals statues
prohibits causing undue suffering, or cruelly beating, injuring, or mutilating
an animal, it exempts Òhunting, capture, or destruction of any predatory animalÉÓ
from these actions (Title 6, Chapter 3, Article 2). In Wyoming there will be
nothing to prevent a trapped wolf from being burned alive, a wolf hater from
pouring gas into a wolf den and torching the pups, or any other form of mutilation
and humiliation they can dream up. Classifying wolves as a predator will be
shameful policy that, given the Jurassic nature of Wyoming politics, will be
virtually impossible to correct.
If wolves must be killed then it should be ethical killingÑassuming you can
wrap your mind around that idea. As trophy game animals, wolves will be killed
by hunters, not haters, and Wyoming Game and Fish can enforce principles of
fair chase, appropriate weapons, and sportsmanship.
Hence the federal government must hold WyomingÕs citizens and elected representatives
to a standard of decency greater than that which many can now conceive, and
until they can so conceive, wolves must remain under the protection of the
Endangered Species Act. Twenty years ago we fought to have wolves reintroduced
to Wyoming. Now we must fight to assure their decent treatment. Predator status
is the first line in the sand. We canÕt let it happenÑeven if we have to go
to court for decades.