Archive for the ‘Action Alert’ Category

ACTION ALERT: 28 Days Left to support “The Eyes of Thailand” Film

Wednesday, February 1st, 2012

In January I attended the Sundance Film Festival with “The D Word: Understanding Dyslexia”, another documentary I produced. It was very exciting, to say the least, to be at an internationally renowned film festival and I am happy to announce that the film will appear on HBO in October.

Last week was full of celebration and networking, and I made some powerful and inspiring connections that will be fruitful for “The Eyes of Thailand” once we complete the film this spring. This week we are keeping up the momentum by pushing “The Eyes of Thailand” forward.

In December, we launched our IndieGoGo donation campaign for individuals who would like to be a part of our inspiring and award-winning documentary by making a small donation to “The Eyes of Thailand” film.

This our LAST IndieGoGo campaign for “The Eyes of Thailand”. The last opportunity to raise $17,500 to complete the film, the last chance to claim your donation perks, pre-reserve your DVDs and posters, and your last chance to get your name in the film’s credits.

Your donations of $10, $30 and up are greatly appreciated, and can be made between today and February 28th. In return, donors will receive some very cool “perks” (think of “perks” as cool gifts).

For example, with a $100 Donation, YOU will receive:

  1. IMDB Film Credit (that’s right, you would get listed in the film’s ending credits under “Thank Yous”)
  2. Personal THANK YOU and Shout Out from me (the Director)
  3. DVD or digital download of “The Eyes of Thailand” film & the Film’s Score (when available)
  4. Official poster signed by Filmmaker

Plus, your donation is 100% Tax-deductible and 15% goes directly to the FAE Elephant Hospital in Thailand.

Watch the powerful and inspiring trailer, learn more about the campaign and how to donate at: <http://tinyurl.com/TheEyesofThailandMovement>

If you have already donated, please consider donating again, even if it’s $10. It may not seem like much to you, but $10 donations add up quickly and they give us an opportunity to announce our progress online and keep the buzz up.

Another way to help keep our momentum going is sharing the link with your friends and networks and encouraging them to join you in donating to the film.

I hope you will join us and show your support by being a part of THE EYES OF THAILAND and making a small donation today.

With gratitude,

Windy Borman

Director/Producer, “The Eyes of Thailand”

ACTION ALERT: Support Landmine Survivors, Send your Photos

Monday, January 30th, 2012

Dear Ele-Friends,

We’re helping Mines Action Canada spread the word about their Call for Photos for an upcoming video project. Now’s your chance to get your hands or feet featured in an online video to support the Mine Ban Treaty and survivors of landmines and cluster munitions.  The video will premiere in early March. Photos are due February 6th (next Monday). For more details, please read Erin’s request below:

Hello,

Mines Action Canada needs your help.  We are making a video for our web site
and for the youth campaign that requires photos from our colleagues around
the world.

We are looking for photos of hands, feet, prosthetics and missing limbs
doing everyday things.  Pretty much I’m asking for photos of hands/feet or
whatever you’ve got doing whatever you normally do – walking, playing,
cleaning, writing, cooking etc.  A variety of ages and ethnicities would be
great.  They don’t have to be new photos if you already have a photo that
fits these criteria that’s great….

Photos do not have to be zoomed in too much or anything fancy but the higher
resolution the better.

If you have any photos you would like to include in the video please send
them to me at erin@minesactioncanada.org by February 6th.  The estimate is
we will need about 60 photos so feel free to send more than one.

Please send photos directly to me…so that the video
will remain a surprise for everyone….Thanks!

Take care,

Erin

Erin Hunt
Program Officer
Mines Action Canada
Mobile: +1 613 302-3088
Skype: hunt.erinlynn
Twitter: @erinlynnhunt
<http://www.minesactioncanada.org/>

Thank you for your support and we look forward to sharing their video with all of you in early March.

Cheers,

Windy Borman

Director/Producer, “The Eyes of Thailand”

How Can We Ban Landmines?

Tuesday, April 5th, 2011

How can we ban landmines? Sign the People's Treaty and Get the USA on board.

The two new elephant landmine victims in Sri Lanka, combined with the confirmed use of landmines in Libya, have forced me to reflect on what we need to get the remaining 39 Non-signatory countries to sign the 1997 Mine Ban Treaty.

First, we need everyone who reads this blog to sign The People’s Treaty and forward the link to their friends.

Secondly, if we can get the United States of America to sign the Mine Ban Treaty, it would send a clear message to the remaining countries that all types of anti-personnel weapons (landmines, cluster bombs, etc.) are unacceptable and it would force the other countries to step up because they couldn’t hide behind the U.S. any more.

As it turns out, the International Campaign to Ban Landmines (ICBL) agrees with me about the importance of getting the United States on board!-)

Below is a copy of their press release:

Groups Worldwide Urge the U.S. to Ban Landmines

Geneva, 1 March 2011 – Civil society groups worldwide are calling on the United States to ban antipersonnel landmines immediately, said the Nobel Peace Prize-winning International Campaign to Ban Landmines (ICBL) today, as the Mine Ban Treaty turned twelve. Campaign members will meet today and throughout the month with U.S. representatives in dozens of countries to urge the U.S. to join the Mine Ban Treaty.

“It is absurd that the U.S. continues to cling to a weapon that is so horrific that only a country like Myanmar still uses it,” said Sylvie Brigot, Executive Director of the International Campaign to Ban Landmines. “If nearly all of the United States’ closest military allies were able to remove antipersonnel mines from their arsenal without compromising their national security, we are confident the U.S. can as well.”

The Obama Administration started a comprehensive review of its landmine policy in late 2009 to determine whether to join the Mine Ban Treaty. Officials have consulted with allies, States Parties to the treaty, international organizations, civil society including landmine survivors, and former military personnel. No date for completing the review has been made public yet. By joining the Mine Ban Treaty, the U.S. would help send a clear signal that all types of antipersonnel mines are unacceptable weapons, would strengthen international security, and would spur to action some of the other 38 states still outside the treaty.

The U.S. already follows the core obligations of the Mine Ban Treaty: it has not used antipersonnel landmines since 1991, has not exported any since 1992, and has not produced since 1997. It is also the world’s largest individual donor to mine action and victim assistance programs. This should be complemented by a legal commitment to end the threat of use of antipersonnel mines.

In 2010, ICBL members undertook an array of actions calling for the policy review to result in a decision by the U.S. to join the Mine Ban Treaty:

  • In March 2010, 65 U.S.-based NGOs signed a letter to President Obama, welcoming the policy review and urging that it results in a decision to accede to the Mine Ban Treaty.
  • On 18 May 2010, 68 U.S. Senators wrote to President Obama, expressing strong support for the ban on antipersonnel mines.
  • In June 2010, landmine survivors from various regions of the world shared testimonies during a meeting with U.S. officials.
  • On 30 November 2010, sixteen Nobel Peace Prize laureates sent a letter to President Obama. Signatories included Mohamed El Baradei, Shirin Ebadi, Aung San Suu Kyi, His Holiness Dalai Lama, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Elie Wiesel, and Jody Williams.

At the beginning of 2011, a Bush policy adopted in 2004 took effect, whereby the U.S. renounces the use of so-called “dumb” mines or “persistent” mines everywhere in the world, including on the Korean peninsula. The U.S. retains the right to use so-called “smart” mines equipped with a self-destruct or self-deactivation mechanism.

“So-called smart mines are by no means safe for civilians. While these mines are active, they cannot distinguish between a soldier and an innocent civilian. And their self-destruct mechanisms have an estimated failure rate of 1 to 10%. By retaining the right to use them, the U.S. stands completely at odds with the international norm that rejects landmine use,” said Atle Karlsen, mine clearance expert at Norwegian People’s Aid and a member of the Governance Board of the ICBL.

Adopted in 1997, the Mine Ban Treaty entered into force on 1 March 1999, just 15 months after it was negotiated – the shortest time ever for a multilateral treaty. The treaty comprehensively bans all antipersonnel mines, requires destruction of stockpiled mines within four years and destruction of mines already in the ground within 10 years, and urges extensive programs to assist the victims of landmines. The ICBL calls on all states to join the treaty. The Eleventh Meeting of the States Parties to the Mine Ban Treaty will be held from 28 November – 2 December 2011 in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.

ENDS

More information and interviews:
Amelie Chayer, Communications Officer (in Geneva, GMT+1)
mobile: +33 6 89 55 12 81
email: media@icbl.org

Background & Figures

Eighty percent of the world’s countries (156 countries) have joined the Mine Ban Treaty. China, Russia, and the United States are among the 39 states that have not yet joined. But nearly all of those states are in de facto compliance with most of the treaty’s provisions. Every NATO member has foresworn the use of antipersonnel mines except for the U.S., as have other key allies, such as Afghanistan, Iraq, Australia, and Japan. In the Western Hemisphere, only the U.S. and Cuba have not joined the Mine Ban Treaty.

Some 45 million antipersonnel mines have been destroyed from stockpiles since the Mine Ban Treaty was adopted; only 12 of the more than 50 countries that manufactured antipersonnel mines in the early ’90s still have a production capacity; trade in antipersonnel mines has virtually stopped; and large tracts of land have been cleared and returned to productive use. Landmines still contaminate 66 states.

The ICBL, 1997 Nobel Peace Prize laureate, is a global network of advocacy organizations, mine clearance operators, victim assistance organizations, and dedicated individuals, working in over 90 countries towards the goal of a mine-free world.

To find out more about the ICBL and their campaigns, please visit:

International Campaign to Ban Landmines: www.icbl.org
Landmine and Cluster Munition Monitor: www.the-monitor.org

To encourage all governments to ban landmines, sign The People’s Treaty started by Mines Action Canada.

-Windy Borman

Director/Producer, The Eyes of Thailand

Sri Lanka moves elephants into former war zone, landmines remain

Monday, January 10th, 2011

Photo credit: BBC

In December 2010, ElephantVoices distributed a press release describing the maltreatment of Sri Lanka’s dwindling number of Asian Elephants. While The Eyes of Thailand documentary focuses on Asian Elephants primarily in Thailand and Southeast Asia, I felt compelled to share an update on Sri Lanka’s Asian Elephants because they face many of the same issues as Thailand’s elephants: deforestation, exportation, abuse, conflicts with humans over resources and food, and now LANDMINES.

The BBC originally covered Sri Lankan’s deadly clash with elephants in October 2010. “Environmentalists say people have been thoughtlessly settled in their range land. The animals invade farms looking for crops – and people despair. The result each year is usually more than 60 human deaths and more than 200 elephants killed.”

Unfortunately, the situation did not improved and the November death of a magnificent “tusker” (large elephant with big tusks), called “Parakrama”, while he was being transported, spurred ElephantVoices into action:

Elephants will continue to try to live in the manner in which they have evolved. Therefore we urge the authorities to include elephant behaviour and movements patterns, and the role they play in maintaining healthy ecosystems, as a starting point. With open dialogue and a more holistic and compassionate approach Sri Lanka can find workable solutions for the country’s wild elephant population that offers hope for a better, kinder, more sustainable future for people as well as elephants.

Currently, the government is solving the human-elephant problem by turning a former Sri Lankan war zone into a wildlife sanctuary. The BBC reports:

The area was the scene of heavy fighting during the final stages of Sri Lanka’s bloody civil war 18 months ago. Sri Lanka’s wild elephant population has dwindled over the last century from around 15,000 to just 4,000. The jungles of Mullaitivu were at the heart of the Tamil Tiger insurgency. For decades they were home to key rebel bases and the Tigers buried hundreds of thousands of landmines to protect their camps from the advancing government troops.

It is estimated that 1.5 million landmines remain in the country’s northern region. A wildlife department official said the wildlife park would be open to the public only after mines were removed – most likely next year.

I find it particularly unsettling that not only will the elephants be transported from their habits to this former war zone, which may or may not have enough resources to support them, but they will also inhabit the land before it has been de-mined! I hate to think about how many more elephant landmine accidents will occur under this so-called “solution”. The four elephant landmine survivors at FAE’s Elephant Hospital are already four too many–I hate to think that there will be more elephant landmine injuries.

Please join me in writing to Sri Lanka to protect its Asian Elephants.

Please write to Basil Rajapaksa and S. M. Chandrasena to express your concerns:

Basil Rajapaksa, Minister of Economic Development, Ministry of Economic Development
Presidential Secretariat Colombo 1 Office: Jagath/Aruna – for meetings/appointments, tel: +94-11-2333268,
Fax: +94-11-2438045, E-mail: arunakgap(at)yahoo.com, Political Secretary, tel: 94-777445560

S. M. Chandrasena, Minister of Agrarian Services and Wildlife, Ministry of Agrarian Services and Wildlife. Govijana Mandiraya, Rajamalwatte, Battaramulla, Sri Lanka, Fax #: +94-11 2887480 (direct).

Let us know you’ve written by leaving your comments below. Thank you!

-Windy Borman

Director & Producer, The Eyes of Thailand

Help make a movie about injured elephants

Thursday, October 14th, 2010

Dear Friends, Family and Elephant Supporters,

As you know by now, I’m going back to Thailand to film the two newest elephant landmine survivors at the Friends of the Asian Elephant (FAE) Elephant Hospital (Oct 31-Nov 4) and then it’s on to Laos to attend the Youth Leaders Forum for the International Campaign to Ban landmines (Nov 7-12). But I need your help to get there!

In the past week we’ve raised $1,500 of the $3,000 needed for the 16-day documentary trip. Thank you for this amazing show of support!

We still have a ways to go, so if you’re still looking to donate or invest in the film, if you’ve always wanted to be in show biz, and if you want to help make a movie you’d be proud to see in the theaters, please help us today.

  1. Donate through the film’s fiscal sponsor, the San Francisco Film Society. All donations are tax-deductible and you can donate using a debit or credit card through a secure link via The Eyes of Thailand web site: http://eyesofthailand.com
  2. Transfer stock to the film via the SF Film Society. It’s also tax-deductible.

No donation is too small and all donations are tax-deductible! In recognition of your support, I am offering the following VIP perks to donors:

  • $25 = Personal thank you note from yours truly, plus a signed promotional postcard—it’ll be a collector’s item one day!
  • $100 = All of the above, plus thanked in the film’s credits.
  • $500 = All of the above, plus “Special Thanks” in the film’s credits and a signed DVD of the finished film.
  • $1,000 = All of the above, plus listed in the Partners section of The Eyes of Thailand web site.
  • $5,000+ = All of the above, plus a private screening for you and friends, plus a Q&A with me about the film.

Next, I’m hoping you can help me spread the word about my trip. The October 8, 2010 blog post contains a copy of the Press Release about my upcoming trip.  Please read it and then share the official link with your press contacts.  We’re hoping this goes global, so don’t be shy!

Finally, I’ll be blogging and posting updates on Facebook and Twitter from Thailand and Laos, so you can follow my progress. You can access all the updates via “The Eyes of Thailand” web site.

Thank you for continuing to support my quest to tell the world about the plight of the Asian Elephants and the ongoing threat of landmines. I could not do it without you!

Gratefully,

Windy Borman

Director/Producer, The Eyes of Thailand

windy@dvaproductions.com

http://eyesofthailand.com

P.S. Donations of any size help and all donations are tax-deductible when made through the San Francisco Film Society. You can donate by either clicking the “Please Donate” link on the The Eyes of Thailand web site. Thank you so much! Krup kum ka!

ACTION ALERT: Can you help us film in Thailand & Laos?

Monday, October 4th, 2010

Dear Friends, Family and Elephant Supporters,

I’m going back to Thailand.

On September 11, 2010, another elephant stepped on a landmine along the Thai-Burma (Myanmar) border, thus becoming the fourth elephant landmine survivor to be treated at FAE’s Elephant Hospital in Thailand. This latest victim (Boonmee) joins three others: Mae ka pae, who stepped on a landmine in August, Motala and Baby Mosha.

Thanks to generous donations, I traveled to Thailand in August 2009 to film Motala and Mosha receive their prosthetic limbs for my documentary The Eyes of Thailand. I optimistically thought I could end the film with the happy ending of the elephants taking their first steps on their new prostheses. Instead I need to return to film two new survivors and try to unravel why elephant landmine accidents have increased in the past 2 months.

My current plan is to travel to Thailand October 28 – November 7 with four other Elephant Hospital volunteers who specialize in TTouch, an effective form of animal bodywork that relieves pain and assists with animals’ recovery from illness or injury.  We’re hoping it helps landmine survivors, too.

I’ll wrap up the trip by attending the International Campaign to Ban Landmines conference in Laos, November 8-12. This will enable me to get the global perspective on landmine removal, as well as interview Yeshua Moser-Puangsuwan and Nobel Prize-winner Jody Williams, key voices for landmine and cluster bomb removal.

To date we’ve raised US $530 of the US $3,000 needed to accomplish this 16-day documentary trip. Last summer we raised $3,000 in one weekend to get me back to Thailand to film Mosha and Motala getting their prostheses, so I’m confident we can raise that much before October 14th, but I need your help. This time there are two ways you can help:

  1. Donate through the film’s fiscal sponsor, the San Francisco Film Society. All donations are tax-deductible and you can donate using a debit or credit card through a secure link via The Eyes of Thailand web site: http://eyesofthailand.com
  2. Transfer stock to the film via the SF Film Society. It’s also tax-deductible.

I need to purchase my ticket (at the very latest) by October 14, 2010, so please contact me if you have any question or would like more details about the above options. Additionally, if you have any leads to family foundations or corporate sponsorships, please email me directly as listed below.

In recognition of your support, I am offering the following VIP perks to donors:

  • $25 = Personal thank you note from yours truly, plus a signed promotional postcard—it’ll be a collector’s item one day!
  • $100 = All of the above, plus thanked in the film’s credits.
  • $500 = All of the above, plus “Special Thanks” in the film’s credits and a signed DVD of the finished film.
  • $1,000 = All of the above, plus listed in the Partners section of The Eyes of Thailand web site.
  • $5,000+ = All of the above, plus a private screening for you and friends, plus a Q&A with me about the film.

I will be blogging and posting updates on Facebook and Twitter from Thailand and Laos, so please follow my progress.  You can access all the updates via The Eyes of Thailand’s web site: http://eyesofthailand.com

Thank you for continuing to support my quest to tell the world about the plight of the Asian Elephants and the ongoing threat of landmines. I could not do it without you!

With immense gratitude,

Windy Borman

Director/Producer, The Eyes of Thailand

Eyes of Thailand, LLC | P.O. Box 420395 | San Francisco, CA 94142

windy@dvaproductions.com

http://eyesofthailand.com

P.S. Donations of any size help and all donations are tax-deductible when made through the San Francisco Film Society. You can donate by either clicking the “Please Donate” link on the The Eyes of Thailand web site or by mailing a check to the address above. Please make the checks payable to the “San Francisco Film Society” and include “The Eyes of Thailand” in the Memo Line. Thank you so much! Krup kum ka!

ACTION ALERTS: Tell President Obama to Ban Landmines

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

July 7, 2010– A letter signed by 68 U.S. senators, asking the administration to join the Mine Ban Treaty, was delivered to President Obama on 18 May 2010. The fact that there are 68 signatories is especially important given that accession to the treaty must be ratified by a two-thirds majority in the Senate. “Congress adds its voice to that of the American people in calling on our government to join our NATO allies—and all of the nations that have joined this treaty—and eliminate the use of landmines once and for all,” said Zach Hudson, Coordinator of the United States Campaign to Ban Landmines.

The U.S. has not used antipersonnel landmines since 1991, has not exported them since 1992 and has not produced them since 1997. Surely if we have been able to defend our country for the last 18 years without using landmines, we have already found alternative solutions. Now it’s time to commit to not using the 10.4 million landmines currently stockpiled in U.S. arsenals—if not for moral reasons, then also to save the enormous amount of taxpayer money spent on stockpiling and maintaining these stigmatized weapons.

U.S. participation is important to the universalization of the treaty. Even though landmine use has been significantly reduced worldwide, a few countries refuse to join—and even continue to use landmines—under the cover that they will not join if the U.S. has not joined.

Given President Obama’s recent selection as the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize recipient, joining the Mine Ban Treaty would also confirm and show concrete evidence that the Obama administration is serious about a renewed emphasis on multilateralism and disarmament.

Please join me in signing the following petitions to encourage President Obama to sign the Mine Ban Treaty:

Avaaz.org

US Campaign to Ban Landmines

Human Rights Watch

Sincerely,

Windy Borman

Director & Producer, The Eyes of Thailand

2 Days Left to support “The Eyes of Thailand” Elephant Documentary

Monday, June 28th, 2010

Soraida Salwala, founder of FAE's Elephant Hospital in Thailand, comforts Motala, an elephant landmine survivor, as the Prostheses Foundation fits her with a prosthetic limb.

June 28, 2010– In order to help independent films reach their fund-raising goals, IndieGoGo has offered to donate an additional 5% to any film that hits its goal by June 30, 2010.

We’ve set a goal of $2,000 and we think we can make it–especially since we’re already a 75% of the way there!

While this goal will not cover ALL our expenses, it will help us:

  • transcribe all 50 hours of footage,
  • pay to finish our web site upgrades, and
  • start writing the script for the video editor

We’ve raised $1,570 to date, so we only need $430 to go to hit our goal.  Do you have $5, $10, $25 or $50 to help us reach $2,000 by June 30, 2010?

I know many of you have already donated to The Eyes of Thailand via financial and/or in-kind donations, so you are aware that ALL Donations are tax-deductible via our fiscal sponsor, the San Francisco Film Society. But can you find it in your heart and your wallet to help us reach this new milestone?

We still have a long way to go if we want to be able to release a high-quality film on par with other Academy-Award winning films, such as The Cove (2009), but with your help I’m optimistic we can do it!

Every donation brings us one step closer to releasing The Eyes of Thailand and educating the world about the plight of Asian elephants and the on-going threat of landmines. Please show your support by donating TODAY!

Sincerely,

Windy Borman

Director & Producer, The Eyes of Thailand

P.S. Thank you for supporting our quest to produce and distribute “The Eyes of Thailand” elephant documentary. As always, if you have any leads to family foundations, corporate sponsorships or would like to discuss investing in the film, please leave a comment and I’ll contact you off-blog. Cheers!

ACTION ALERT: Tell India to keep its promise to elephants

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

June 23, 2010– Last year I reported the landmark policy change in India that would send Indian Elephants in zoos, circuses and private collections to sanctuaries.  Unfortunately, it looks like that never happened. Please join me in signing this petition, started by Clare Cassar on Change.org:

Last year, the Central Zoo Authority (CZA) in India promised to re-home 140 elephants living in zoos across India to safari parks and sanctuaries where the normally free-roaming animals can graze openly. But this week, The Times (UK) reported that, several months later, not a single elephant has been transferred.

The Central Zoo Authority issued an order to India’s 26 zoos to shift the animals to more spacious environments where they would be supervised by elephant keepers. Elephants in 16 circuses across India were also to be moved to new location after an evaluation revealed sub-standard living conditions.

At the Aurangabad Municipal Zoo, one elephant – an animal that in the wild would spend up to 18 hours a day roaming, feeding, bathing and socialising – had both front legs tethered permanently with a spiked chain.

That information is all the more shocking as India’s zoo elephants fare relatively well. The worst treated are those kept in circuses, followed by temple elephants, working elephants and those used for begging.

Saturday June [19th was] The International Day of Action for Elephants in Zoos – so please join me in writing to the Central Zoo Authority of India to keep its promise to the elephants.

Thank you and I’ll keep you posted on what I hear!

Sincerely,

Windy Borman

Director & Producer, The Eyes of Thailand

ACTION ALERT: Int’l Day of Action for Elephants in Zoos, June 19th

Friday, June 18th, 2010

June 18, 2010– The International Day of Action for Elephants in Zoos (IDAEZ) takes place this Saturday (June 19, 2010), with more than 30 events in five countries. You can help the elephants, even if you don’t live near a zoo, in two ways:

  1. Send a message to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) that they must put animal welfare over zoos’ interests. Sign the letter here.
  2. Participate in the Virtual Demonstrations on Facebook and Twitter. Details here.

As I wrote last week, the plight of elephants in zoos around the world is tied to the plight of elephants in the wild in two ways. First, if wild elephants are threatened by poachers, environmental devastation, and human encroachment, then many zoos feel that the only hope for conservation is to remove elephants from their natural habitat and imprison them in small enclosures.

Secondly, elephants in zoos die (sometimes decades) earlier than if left in the wild. Part of this is due to infections and diseases they contract in their small enclosures; the other reason is elephants are too intelligent and emotional to be caged or fenced for life, which can lead to depression or violent behavior. Nevertheless, to keep the zoo populations high for “conservation” and “education” reasons, they need to have a steady supply of elephants from the wild, thus fueling the poachers or governments to capture the endangered wild elephants they are trying to conserve.

It’s a depressing cycle, but we can make a difference by:

  • Educating our friends and families not to attend zoos or circuses that involve elephants
  • Demanding that our local zoos ban importing any wild elephants to their zoos
  • Demanding that elephants in zoos and circuses be allowed to “retire” to sanctuaries, like The Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee or PAWS, the Performing Animal Welfare Society, in California, instead of being passed around and mistreated.

In Defense of Animals (IDA) needs our help to make this year’s Day of Action an even greater success. For more information please visit their web site.

The Facebook event can be found at http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=102256893153605&ref=mf

We’ll see you (virtually) tomorrow!

-Windy Borman

Director/Producer, “The Eyes of Thailand