Citizens Protest Circus Cruelty at Champlain Fair

Citizens Protest Circus Cruelty at Champlain Fair
Activists gathered on the opening day of the Fair, August 2010, to voice concern about the "Nerger Tiger & Lion Shows" with its sorry record of infractions of the Animal Welfare Act.

Sunday, August 30, 2009

Video Shows Fair Entertainers Whipping Tigers

Anyone who’s ever owned a cat knows you don’t own a cat. And you don’t train them to do stupid animal tricks, either, like standing on their hind legs while walking backward. It’s not part of the feline character.


That’s even more true of big cats like lions and tigers, who aren’t domestic house pets but wild predators with no inborn impulse to bond with humans or please a two-legged audience.


So circus events like the “Nerger Lion and Tiger Show,” currently running at the Champlain Valley Fair, that feature lords of the jungle doing sit-ups and jumping through flaming hoops require rather drastic training methods, namely, bullying, whips and physical intimidation.


Of course, circus performers say they love their animals and would never abuse them. According to a Burlington Free Press article in yesterday’s paper by Sam Hemingway, “the Nergers … said they do not harm the animals to make them perform.”

“It takes a lot of patience, a lot of treats,” Judit Nerger said as she stood outside the pen of a 3-month-old tiger cub at the fair Friday afternoon, according to Hemingway. “You never mistreat an animal like that. The training methods these days have nothing to do what they did 20 or 25 years ago.”


But unlike the Nergers, pictures don’t lie. To learn the truth, watch a video of Juergen Nerger using whips to control his big cats on YouTube at the following link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gaKrXvgFb9k.


During the performance, the animals do the waltz, snake walk and even play leap frog—not normal feline behaviors, but unnatural acts performed out of fear.


On the McKay Entertainment website that books their shows, the Nergers say they consider their lions and tigers to be like part of their family.


Maybe those would be family members that they whip?

2 comments:

  1. It is obvious in the video that the cats are extremely fearful and stressed. Laying back the ears, squinting the eyes and shying back from the whip all tell the trained observer that these cats have been brutalized since they were cubs. Even when he is giving a treat, the cat is shying away from his embrace. This is not love; it is fear.

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  2. I do agree that the small cages they keep the tigers in are a concern, but I feel like I need to clarify: I did not see the whip hitting the animals at all. It, rather, is used to guide their actions. This doesn't mean that everything they do is right, but please be careful before making accusations of brutal whipping when that is clearly not the case. At most, I see neglect as the issue here, not physical abuse.

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Contact Your Town Officials

If you live in Essex or Essex Junction, you are especially encouraged to contact your local reps to request a stop to wild animal shows in the village limits.

Essex Junction Trustrees:
Lawrence Yandow: YANDOWJR@myfairpoint.net
Deborah Billado: dabillado@aol.com
Peter Gustafson: LCPBGUSTAF@Yahoo.com
John Lajza: vze39ncx@myfairpoint.net
George Tyler: ga55tyler@msn.com

Essex Selectboard:
Irene Wrenner: imwren@aol.com
Max Levy: MaxGLevyinEssex@aol.com
Bruce Post: bruce.post@yahoo.com
Linda Myers: themyers@attglobal.net
Dave Rogerson: drogerson@myfairpoint.net

Sign an online petition at http://www.thepetitionsite.com/188/Stop-Animal-Cruelty-at-the-Champlain-Valley-Fair
to make your voice heard. We especially need signers from Essex and Essex Junction, Vermont, to have an impact on local elected officials.