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Shining World Compassion Award:
Sara Tuppen’s The Horse Refuge - P1/2
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Everywhere in the world,
we can observe
and be touched
by acts of kindness.
People from all walks of
life, faiths, and cultures
extend themselves
beyond the call of duty
to help others
unconditionally.
Through their noble deeds,
humanity as a whole
is elevated.
To commend
virtuous actions and
encourage more people
to be inspired
by their examples,
Supreme Master
Ching Hai
has lovingly created
a series of awards,
including the Shining
World Leadership
Award, Shining World
Compassion Award,
Shining World Hero and
Heroine Awards, Shining
World Honesty Award,
Shining World Protection
Award, Shining World
Intelligence Award,
and Shining World
Inventor Award,
to recognize some
of the most exemplary,
generous, caring,
and courageous people
who walk amongst us.
I’m Sara, and
this is The Horse Refuge
and we’re situated near
Maidstone in Kent (UK).
And basically
we’re a home for sick
and unwanted animals.
It started off with horses,
but we have a huge variety
of animals now.
And I should think
we’ve got about
150 permanent residents.
And we have quite a lot
in foster homes, but here
we have horses that sadly,
through no fault
of their own, can’t
be re- homed because
they’ve had a bad time
or they’re very ill,
or they’re old.
They’re here
for the rest of their life.
Once the personal assistant
to Lord Houghton
of Sowerby,
Sara Tuppen worked
in the British Parliament,
focusing on
animal welfare legislation.
Mixing and mingling
with politicians,
she enjoyed the privileges
of her position:
private dinner parties
in the house
of the prime minister,
dining in haute cuisine
restaurants and shopping
for designer dresses
in London’s fashionable
Chelsea district.
Today, however,
Ms. Tuppen is living
a different story.
She renounced it all
in 1995 when she set up
the Horse Refuge
for the animals she loves.
Currently
without a true home,
she lives on a farm
in an outbuilding
with 20 animals –
dogs, feral cats, parrots
and an owl –
having sold her residence
that was worth
more than US$300,000,
jewelry, furniture, and
nearly everything else
she owned for the sake of
saving her animal friends
from exploitation
and slaughter.
There is no central heating
or hot water in the shed
and all her cooking is done
on a camping stove.
Before when I was,
living and working
in London obviously
it was a completely
different lifestyle.
It was a round of parties
and lunches and dinners
and going to
posh hairdressers
and buying
good, expensive clothes.
And now it’s a question
of getting clothes
from the charity shop
and how warm
is it going to be?
It was very cold
in the winter
and it was very damp
and it was
minus seven (Celsius)
and it was quite tough.
And you kind of
expect certain things
in life like a bath
or a washing machine
or somewhere to cook,
and being warm
and it was difficult
to say the least.
With frostbitten fingers
and painfully purple feet,
her heart pulls her
out of bed at 5:30
every morning to tend to
50 fragile horses and
other vulnerable animals.
Teary sleepless nights,
worrying about
their wellbeing,
she curls up in bed
with a woolly hat, gloves
and two pairs of socks…
but must get up
every couple of hours to
medicate some residents
like Good Girl the horse.
I mean, poor Good Girl,
because of the way she is,
I’m up every three
or four hours in the night
to make sure she hasn’t
fallen or anything,
and to make sure
she gets an extra feed
and she gets round
the clock medication.
She’s got
serious liver damage
due to ragwort poisoning,
and sadly, I mean
if she was a human,
she would be
on the transplant list.
She’s taken
to having the odd fit,
which isn’t very good
at all and we’re using
milk thistle and various
other things to try and
kick-start the liver again.
We just hope we can
get the liver going again,
that’s what we hope.
She’s fallen down
several times now,
and it’s me and
a couple of other people
who’ve helped her up
several times,
and it’s hard
and it’s sad the fact
that she’s gone down,
but I’m always happy
we brought her back up
and it’d be nice if
she carried on surviving.
Horses skeletal
from starvation,
arthritic from old age
and subjected to
severe neglect and abuse,
these are the equines
she takes in.
Saint-hearted,
she patiently heals
their wounds and
brings them back to life…
and to love.
This is Casper the Great,
who’s very dirty,
he’s been rolling in the mud,
but very, very handsome.
He’d obviously eaten
a lot of ragwort
when I got him, and
his eyes were sealed up
with blisters and
he had seeping wounds
coming from everywhere
and we stopped
a lot of the problem
with milk thistle and stuff.
In the summer
he can’t really go out
in the daylight,
because it burns him,
and basically
his skin will bubble up
and blister again,
and he’d probably
get melanomas,
so he goes out at night,
but he’s quite handsome.
He’s got eyeliner on.
And this is Echo,
poor Echo has
got something
called Marie’s disease.
Sadly it’s affected
the growth on her legs,
her legs are misshapen
where the new bone
has formed,
and her eyesight’s gone.
But she comes in and out,
and she seems
to be quite happy
and she is kept on
a low dosage
of a medication
that keeps her pain-free.
But they gave her
three months to live
five years ago,
but she’s still with us,
and she’s still showing us
she wants to be here
at the moment, bless her.
Tragically,
more and more horses
are being forsaken
in British fields each year.
But mercifully,
the refuge is a caring cradle
that offers
a sparkling miracle
of hope and vitality.
At the moment we’ve got
about 60 horses
in permanent residence.
The people are just
turning their horses away
and there’re
so many starved horses
in the fields,
just thin skeletons.
And also sadly,
terribly sadly, dead horses
I’ve found this year
we’ve had to go and see.
But, all the horses here
are individuals, there’re
no sort of two cases
or two personalities
that are the same.
And they all need
a lot of special care.
Tilley was
a total starvation case.
The vet thought she’d died.
The first
three or four weeks
she couldn’t even stand,
she was so weak,
she couldn’t eat properly.
I mean
it was heartbreaking.
Nobody really thought
she would turn the corner.
And one year later nearly
she’s a picture of health.
As you can see
she’s a very, very
beautiful girl now.
She’d make anybody proud.
She’s bouncing
full of energy.
Aren’t you, Tilley?
Well people don’t believe
it’s the same horse
because it was too terrible
for words.
She’s fantastic now.
I mean she’s living a life
that any pony
should live really.
She goes out and
runs around in the day
and eats a lot
and she comes into a
nice warm stable at night.
The Horse Refuge
tries its best to find
new homes for the horses,
but in most cases
the equines will stay
with Sara Tuppen for life.
Where we can,
we find homes for horses,
but most of the ones here
are permanent residents
because they’ve had
a lot of trauma in their life,
or they’re old, or they’ve
got physical problems
and they’re not suitable
for re-homing obviously.
They’ve got to be a horse
that’s completely safe
when you re-home it.
We were privy
to experience
the special friendship
Ms. Tuppen has
with the animals,
how she showers them
with warm words
and treasures them
with doting affection.
This is Bandit in the barn
here, Bandit’s one
of our very old residents.
He had quite a tough life,
didn’t you, Bandit?
And he’s one
that’s in his 40s now,
but as you can see he’s
in quite good condition.
He’s a great favorite,
he’s a real character
is Bandit.
He’s a very funny boy.
He’s got his pajamas
because the temperature
really drops at night,
doesn’t it?
And he’s old, and
he needs to be kept warm.
Don’t you, my darling?
Sadly for us all,
we lost our beloved
old Shire horse James,
last week, aged about 44.
And he was Bandit’s friend.
But I have to say, Bandit
seems to be coping with it
a lot better than we are.
I don’t know why, maybe
he’s just old and wise
and he knows more
than we do.
And he knows that
James is in a better place.
As a little girl,
Ms. Tuppen set up
an animal hospital
in the family kitchen
nursing injured pigeons,
mice and hedgehogs.
Now the sanctuary is home
to a colorful family
of approximately
150 animals: horses,
dogs, cats, chickens,
pigs, peacocks, parrots,
geese, ducks,
deer, a cow, a goat
and an owl – each
christened with his or her
own charming name.
One of the most popular
residents is Colin the goat,
who thinks he’s a dog
and waddles
next to Sara Tuppen
everywhere she goes.
We know lots of people
who love Colin.
He sticks to me like glue.
Well, this is
an ex farm cow,
called Honey.
And Honey is quite elderly,
I think she’s about 18,
and she’s
very, very friendly, and
very friendly with people.
And although we’re not
a cow sanctuary as such,
I thought it was just nice
so that people can come
and maybe stroke her
and brush her, and learn
how special she is
and then, then
maybe would be a bit less
inclined to eat cows
is the plan.
Hopefully if people can
interact with the animals
and the wide variety
we have here, they will be
less inclined to eat them.
Please join us again
tomorrow on
Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants for
the concluding episode
in our two-part series
on The Horse Refuge
when we will meet
some of the other
lovely residents
of the Refuge and
celebrate Sara Tuppen
receiving the prestigious
Shining World
Compassion Award.
For more details
on The Horse Refuge,
please visit
Gentle viewers,
thank you for joining us
for our program.
Coming up next is
Enlightening Entertainment,
after Noteworthy News.
May all people
and animals
live in everlasting peace
and harmony.
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