This website is archived by the National Library of Australia and Partners
circulated to universities and libraries around the world.

The RSPCA Yagoona Shelter

Many people here today will be familiar with the work of English parliamentarian William Wilberforce, especially since the release last year of the film about his work against the slave trade called Amazing Grace. Another social reform Wilberforce championed was the founding of the first Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, an institution that has been replicated around the world and which is a very important part of our community here in New South Wales, reflecting the compassion of people through the humane treatment of animals.

The Royal Society for the Protection of Animals has a shelter at Yagoona in Sydney, which is the largest animal shelter in the southern hemisphere. This facility not only cares for and protects thousands of animals in Sydney every year, but also acts as the central facility for regional animals transported here from all the shelters around the state. That is because the abandoned cats, dogs and other family pets have a better chance of being re-homed here.

The busy shelter at Yagoona has been in operation for over thirty years now, and it desperately needs an upgrade. The RSPCA hopes to build a new state-of-the-art facility, to function as their “Centre for Animal Rescue and Education Services”.

The new centre would focus on the growing need for education in the community, as well as providing new kennels and catteries, a new animal hospital, and upgraded staff facilities.

The Yagoona shelter has not been seen as a priority by the NSW government so it has unfortunately continued to deteriorate over the decades, and without funding may be forced to close. That would be tragic, as the RSPCA provide a vital service there.

With all the urgent demands on the tax dollar it is understandable that human welfare almost always comes before animal welfare, but the two are not mutually exclusive. The welfare of people often depends on the welfare of their companion animals, working animals and domestic animals. Our human community would not be complete without our animals, which are intricately interwoven with our lives. Animals are beloved, and important to us, and they need to have an adequate hospital, and the services of a proper shelter when people let them down. In Proverbs 12:10 the Bible says, “the righteous man cares for the needs of his animal”, and as a society of righteous people we are responsible for making adequate provision for the needs of animals.

This has become an urgent issue for the animals of NSW. Recent incidents of unspeakable cruelty to animals on the part of children and young adults around the state need to be addressed. Studies have shown that children who experiment with cruelty to animals often progress to cruelty to fellow human beings when they grow up, even to the point of torture and murder: skills they practiced on defenceless animals. The tortured and slaughtered birds and koalas in the news recently deserve better. We are called to be good stewards of the natural world, and the creatures in it.

We urgently need to begin educating all children to be respectful of their fellow creatures, both animal and human. This growing indifference to our fellows is a destructive quality of modern life and the RSPCA would like to take comprehensive action to address it. (This ‘respect for the creation’ used to be taught in church and Sunday School. Isn’t it telling that this now falls to the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals?)

The hoped-for outcome, of more considerate children and adults, will be of great importance to both the human and the animal communities.

We all benefit from and continue to need the wonderful work done by the RSPCA, and I, as a long time supporter and admirer, hope that we are able to support them with funding for the much needed and long delayed upgrading of their Yagoona facilities here in Sydney.

Comments are closed.