Stop Canada's Cruel Seal Hunt
 
 
Home DONATE Sign Up for Seal Updates Press Room Action Toolkit Learn More
 

Don't Buy While Seals Die: Boycott Canadian Seafood!

Make your personal pledge below.

"I pledge not to buy seafood products produced in Canada—such as snow crabs, cod, scallops, and shrimp—until Canada ends its commercial seal hunt for good."


   Please leave this field empty
Why boycott Canadian seafood?

Seal hunting is an off-season activity conducted by fishers from Canada's East Coast. They earn a small fraction of their incomes from sealing—primarily from the sale of seal pelts to European fashion markets. But the vast majority of the sealers' incomes are from commercial fisheries. Canadian seafood exports to the United States contribute $2.4 billion annually to the Canadian economy—dwarfing the few million dollars provided by the seal hunt. The connection between the commercial fishing industry and the seal hunt in Canada gives consumers all over the world the power to end this cruel and brutal slaughter. Click here to learn more.

* You will receive periodic email alerts from The Humane Society of the United States and its affiliates. This is extremely important, since taking action online is critical to the success of our campaigns. However, you can unsubscribe at any time.

Already signed?

It is critical that you tell five friends NOW, while we have the world's attention. Click here.

Consumers:

check markTell Clearwater – the largest exporter of seafood from the sealing provinces – that you will be boycotting Canadian seafood until seals are safe.

check markUrge your grocer to join the boycott.

check markAsk other restaurants and businesses to join the boycott.

check markFind out which restaurants, chefs, and businesses have already joined the boycott.

check markDownload our pocket guide to boycotting Canadian seafood (and share it with friends).

Businesses:

check markLearn how you can join the Boycott

Advocates:

check markSign up to receive text message updates from the ice on your cell phone

check markAsk your U.S. senators to cosponsor the seal hunt resolution

check markUrge the Canadian Minister of International Trade to end the hunt

check markSign the Petition on Facebook to ban the trade of seal products in the EU

check markJoin our Stop the Seal Hunt Cause on Facebook

check markFollow us on Twitter for real-time updates from the ice

check markSpread the word: Download our web badges and banners

check markUse the toolkit to find more ways to help

What It Means to Survive

March 27, 2009

by Rebecca Aldworth

Observing the world's largest slaughter of marine mammals has always been—and until we end it, will continue to be—the hardest times of my life.  In these 11 years of documenting Canada's commercial seal hunt, I've observed thousands of baby seals die violent deaths at the hands of those who put profit above compassion.

It's devastating to watch intelligent, beautiful, innocent creatures being clubbed and shot to death for their fur. The slaughter instills a sense of powerlessness and victimization like only the worst kinds of violence can. But it's the other observers on the ice who weigh heaviest on my heart. Sometimes a small number of seals manage to cheat death, either by staying out of sealers' sights or because they are a few days too young to kill. They witness the graphic death of sometimes hundreds of their former companions. Both survivors and victims, these seals are the exceptions.


These are the few seals left on the ice after Wednesday's slaughter.

During the “hunt,” sealers typically race to kill as many animals as quickly as possible—doing whatever it takes to meet their quotas. They bear down on entire groups of baby seals at a time, and then one by one, they beat them to death. The seals desperately try to escape, to no avail. But occasionally a few will be too young to kill, still covered in white fur. The sealers spare them, knowing the pups will have shed all their white fur within days—at which point the sealers can return to kill them.

They are the ones left to crawl—alone and terrified—through the blood and bodies of their former companions. Just three weeks old, many have not yet taken their first swim. Others haven't eaten their first solid meal. Yet they've witnessed levels of violence few adult humans can bear to watch. The gruesome nature of this "hunt" breaks my brain.

On Wednesday, shortly after the sealers had met their quota and the killing had finally stopped, we walked across the now silent ice floe, awash in blood. We saw one pup who had crawled into a small cave formed by ice. He hid his head as we approached, clearly terrified. I tried to talk softly to him, to let him know that it would be ok. But he just lay there, hiding his head and trembling. I realized that—as a human—the only thing I could do to comfort this seal would be to leave. I represented trauma and fear to him, and perhaps if he just hid his head for long enough, I'd go away. The feeling of helplessness was absolutely overwhelming.

This is just one of the tragedies of Canada's commercial seal kill. It's a senseless slaughter, rife with waste and pain. But as excruciating as it is to know what the pups face, I also have hope in my heart. Every day we are closer to ending this cruelty for good.  More than ten countries have ended their trade in seal products in recent years. The boycott of Canadian seafood in the U.S. grows stronger, and around the globe people are raising their voices against the kill. In remembering the faces of those lucky few seals—and the thousands who've died already—I look toward a year very soon when they're all survivors. A year when only decency, mercy, compassion, and little baby seals exist out here on the ice.

Please help us save the seals»

Rebecca Aldworth is director of Humane Society International Canada (HSI Canada). For more than a decade, she has observed firsthand Canada's commercial seal hunt—escorting more than 100 scientists, parliamentarians and journalists to the ice floes to bear witness to the largest marine mammal slaughter on Earth.


   
Printer Friendly

 
Protect Seals

To contact The HSUS about our ProtectSeals campaign, email us at protect-seals@humanesociety.org or call 1-800-536-8173
Copyright © 2009 The Humane Society of the United States. All rights reserved. | Privacy Policy | Contact Us

How we calculate the number of seals killed.