Welcome excellent viewers
to Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants.
The Animal Rights
and Rescue Group,
an Australian non-profit
organization founded by
Barbara Steffensen
in 1995, seeks to
rescue homeless, abused,
abandoned and unwanted
animal companions
and place them
with foster carers
until they can be taken in
by a suitable home.
It is the only
no-kill rescue group
in the Northern Rivers
region in the state of
New South Wales.
No-kill means that no
animal is ever euthanized
unless they are
so seriously injured or ill
that they cannot be saved.
I moved to the region
about 20 years ago
and then, just in a matter
of a few years, I realized
there were situations here
that needed action to do
with animal welfare
and cruelty.
I’ve been involved with
animal welfare issues
and animal rights
for many, many years
and I wanted the message
to get through that
it wasn’t only about
rescuing animals,
unwanted animals
and abused animals;
it was representing
their rights too; because
without their rights
then this can continue.
And so it was important
for me to let the people
know that there was
an element of fighting
for their rights, as well as
rescuing them from
their current situation.
Ms. Steffensen began small,
using her own home
to house animals
for a number of years.
We always knew
we wanted to expand
the program.
I mean this region is
a large region that we
deal with and,
you always feel as if
you are only helping
such a small number,
that you want to do
so much more.
And originally we
operated from my home
for eight years and
I had turned a lot of
the outdoor areas into
areas for the foster dogs.
So a lot of them
lived with me.
And then the foster
care program grew and
we got more foster carers
on board, cats and dogs.
And for eight years
we operated from
that private home.
But we had planned,
we always had a goal of
building a center and
the next step was in 2005
we moved into our center
here that we built
in Lismore.
Non-kill in itself is still
very new in Australia.
They are still very geared
towards the traditional
shelters, which have
a deadline date, instead
of having the belief
that all animals
given individual care
can be rehabilitated
and re-homed.
Our animals live in
foster care homes, which
is very different, so they
get individual treatment.
Sadly a lot of them are
abused and it takes a while
for them to recover
and so that’s part
of our program.
The rescue involves
whatever they need
to recover; whether it’s
veterinary treatment
or emotional healing.
And foster homes are the
only way you can do that.
Since its humble beginnings,
the Group has rescued
and re-homed over
10,000 animal companions.
How many animals
do they save
on an annual basis?
The number has grown
every year, from 1995.
And so the current figure
is well over 1200,
closer to 1500 last year.
And they go into
foster care.
All the animals live in
private homes, which is
a wonderful system.
There’s an organization
in America that has
a wonderful slogan, that
every day the animal is
with that organization
and with their
foster carers, they
will be even more ready
for their adoption, they
will be more adoptable.
And that’s true because
you bring training in and
the socialization and you
just get them ready
for that new home.
And also it gives us
a great insight into what
they can deal with
for their new home.
And we match the home
to the animal’s needs and
not the other way round.
Let’s now meet Jennifer,
a volunteer with the Group.
I decided to come up here
once a week and
do what I could to help.
It’s just a very
worthwhile cause.
It makes you feel
really good working for
an organization that
doesn’t euthanize animals.
What Barbara and all
of her foster carers and
volunteers do here
is really worthwhile
and wonderful.
Animals have no voice
and so we have to speak
for them and so many
of them are abandoned.
As you can see
all these animals here are
absolutely beautiful
little things and they are
so dependent on us
for their welfare
like beautiful Ruby.
It’s a really great place.
The Group also assists
local residents
in re-homing their
animal companion if they
feel they are unable to
care for them any longer.
Sometimes the Group
can resolve issues so that
re-homing is not
necessary.
We also help with people
that ring and they feel
that they have to
re-home the pet.
So we’ll then tell them
the truth about
the statistics and what’s
happening in shelters and
pounds, the high number
of animals that are killed.
And they are often
very shocked when they
realize that they might be
even putting their own dog
into that same situation.
So we start talking
about how can we help.
We even have gone out
and built fences,
numerous times,
where they say they are
having problems with
the dog jumping.
We do temporary care;
we get dog training
for them, we go out there
and visit the pet
and see what’s going on
with the situation.
We give them
some confidence
and some faith again,
because that’s what
they often need and also
we tell them, “If you
still feel you can’t cope,
we will re-home your pet,
but we do it safely.”
Please stay tuned to
Supreme Master
Television.
We’ll be right back
with more
on the wonderful work
of the Animal Rights
and Rescue Group
in New South Wales,
Australia.
Welcome back to
Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants
featuring
Barbara Steffensen, vegan
founder and president
of the Animal Rights
and Rescue Group
in New South Wales,
Australia.
Another way the Group
assists the community
is by taking care of
the animal companions
of those
who are hospitalized.
So we looked at how we
could expand, reaching
to the pets to help them
through people,
and so we developed
a relationship with
the local agencies here
such as the hospital,
the women’s refuge,
the Richmond
Mental Health Clinic,
and so we found that
their programs don’t
actually include
any assistance
for their client’s pets.
And so we’ve worked
with them closely for
about eight years where
we’re often going into
people’s homes to
look after their pets
while the people are
hospitalized, or
while they going in
for regular treatment
and some of those
social workers actually
just call us the moment
they know that
their client is going into
the hospital or had
a (mental) breakdown,
or is in need for some
treatment, and while
that’s helping people
it’s still reaching the pets
that need help.
One of our main aims is
to do everything we can
to keep a pet in their home.
Because otherwise
in the alternative they
may end up in a shelter
or in a pound.
And so it’s vital that
you provide assistance
and support if that pet
has got a loving home
and a person that cares
about them, but if they
are having a crisis
or are ill, then you do
everything you can to
keep that pet there
until the person is back
on track again.
Some people may feel
a need to talk to someone
about whether
they should adopt
an animal companion.
Ms. Steffensen now
relates a touching story
about a Group volunteer
who assisted an elderly
gentleman named Keith
who was undergoing
challenging times.
We’re always here
to talk to people.
And I think that’s how
we manage to see some
of the most wonderful
stories, because a lot of
people don’t know
who to talk to.
There are not a lot of
places you can go
to talk about
companion animals.
You’ve got your vet clinics,
but that obviously
if you don’t have a pet
you can’t go there.
So they can come here
and talk to us.
And we find an area that
we’re often helping
is with the senior people.
They get to an age where
they feel they shouldn’t
have another pet,
and maybe they’re not
getting the support from
their family
to have another pet.
And there’s one story
that just epitomized
the whole thing.
A dear gentleman rang us
and he was very unsure
of himself on the phone
whether he should be
doing this,
but he just wanted to
talk to somebody.
And he’d sadly lost
his wife and his old dog
in a very short space of
time, and he was just lost,
and he was ready
to give up.
And he’d just thought
he’d feel his way and see
if we could talk to him,
and so of course we did.
And we encouraged him
to consider and to look at
a few of our little dogs.
He wanted a little dog
and we just had one
really perfect for him
and that was Reggie.
So anyway, our
volunteer, Louise, and
our volunteers take a lot
of time with each case,
took that case on.
And she went to his home
and talked to him and
explained, and checked
the garden and whatever.
And then she helped
Reggie and Keith;
she did the introduction.
And Reggie and Keith are
absolutely inseparable.
It’s beautiful to see.
I drive home through
a particular part of
Lismore every day
from work here, and
I go up this particular
main road, and
nearly every afternoon,
there’s Keith and Reggie
marching down the road
with the lead on,
having their walks.
And he is just so bright
now, well both of them
are very bright, and
Keith brings Reggie
over here in a taxi
every couple of weeks
just to see us and to
have someone to talk to.
And that’s just a person
that would have not have
had a friend, who would
not have had company,
and would have just, lived
the last few years alone.
So taking the time
to talk to people about all
sorts of different kind of
adoptions really works.
We greatly appreciate
Animal Rights
and Rescue Group’s
deep dedication to
finding abandoned and
unwanted companion
animals new homes.
Please join us again
tomorrow
on Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants
for Part 2 of our program
where we will feature
the presentation of
the Shining World
Compassion Award
to Barbara Steffensen.
For more information
on the Animal Rights
and Rescue Group,
please visit
Good friends,
it was a pleasure
having your company
on today’s program.
Up next is
Enlightening Entertainment
after Noteworthy News
here on
Supreme Master Television.
May Love always
encompass our planet.
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.
The Animal Rights
and Rescue Group,
an Australian non-profit
organization founded by
Barbara Steffensen
in 1995, seeks to
rescue homeless, abused,
abandoned and unwanted
animal companions
and place them
with foster carers until
they can be taken in
by a suitable home.
It is the only
no-kill rescue group
in the Northern Rivers
region in the state of
New South Wales.
No-kill means that no
animal is ever euthanized
unless they are
so seriously injured or ill
that they cannot be saved.
This is Omega.
Every year
about November,
the summer breeding season
starts and sadly within
a month there are many
mother cats pregnant
and cats with litters.
And then as it gets into
December, January lots
of kittens are abandoned.
So Omega was abandoned
with four kittens.
Because they were
abandoned and frightened
and left underneath
a house, possibly people
frightening them off,
their mum becomes
very defensive and
often passes that on
to the kittens that humans
aren't their friends.
And it does take a while
to settle them in.
Obviously they're defensive;
they don't trust anymore.
So, they stay with us until
they've got the confidence
back and it's a matter of
putting a lot of effort
into re-homing them
and the shy ones do get
a little bit left behind.
And our foster carers
are kept very busy for
about four, five months.
Until a suitable home
can be found, the Group
lovingly allows
the rescued animal
to continue their stay
at their center.
We got what we call
the “long termers,” and
it just means that
every animal that
we rescue, we take them
unconditionally.
Once they are in,
they stay with us and
they will be re-homed
depending on what
they need; they may be
considered as a
“special need pet,”
that’s how we refer to them.
When we’re re-homing
them and on our website
we will state clearly
what they need.
They may need lots of
patience and love
and time to settle in,
in the initial period.
It may mean that
they need a home
with no small children
because they’ve been
overwhelmed
and frightened.
So they might be here
for three or four years.
There isn’t a time;
we don’t think
in terms of timeframe.
It’s a whole life and
they will be with us until
they find a home,
and that’s the non- kill
movement and we don’t
see the need to explain
or put a timeframe
on the animal.
Let’s now meet Boy,
a resident
at the Group’s center.
He’s actually called
“Boy” while he’s been
with us, but he was
known as “Phantom.”
He was a case
that was reported to us
from Byron Bay.
He was a local on beaches
at Suffolk Park
near Byron Bay.
He is a dingo or possibly
a dingo cross, but was
a well known character
that used to wander
the beaches, and he
used to survive off
the barbeque areas and
didn’t really cause
any trouble at all.
But a few residents
noticed he was getting ill
and losing a lot of weight
and they were concerned.
They were taking food
regularly there;
he wouldn’t take it from
them but he’d come
fairly close.
So we went up to
have a look and yes, he
was in a pretty bad way.
So we eventually got him,
and he went off
for vet work, and
this is in 2000, and then
he came to live at my home
and was there until we
moved on to the center.
He loves the other dogs.
He’s never been aggressive;
he used to treat all
the puppies and animals
that came into my home
as his. He used
to supervise them all.
And he and I have had
a great relationship
and I learned from him.
Ursula is his carer here.
Ursula is the lady that
stays on the premises
here and he transferred
his trust onto Ursula.
Fleur is his housemate;
Fleur’s been in care for
about 14 years, obviously
she’s permanent here,
because she was
badly abused.
And Ursula walks them
every day and cares
for them and they have a
good life here and they’re
happy and well loved.
And they’re safe,
they’ll stay here,
for the rest of their days.
We’ll take care of them.
Please stay tuned to
Supreme Master
Television.
When we return we will
feature the presentation
of the Shining World
Compassion Award
to Barbara Steffensen.
Welcome back to
the Shining World
Compassion Award series
on Supreme Master
Television.
To increase the chances
of an animal being taken
in by a loving family,
the Group occasionally
hosts an adoption day.
We do have adoption days
at the center.
That’s the beauty of
having a center of course
because we can bring
the public in here.
Obviously
the more people come,
the more chance we’ve
got of meeting the people
we want for our adoptions.
And it is easier
for the public because
they can look at
a number (of animals)
at one spot, and also
we get the chance
to talk to the public.
Even if they don’t adopt
from us, they can come
and talk to us about what
adoption is about, what
it means to have a pet,
the responsibilities,
and the (pet) laws
that affect them.
Hi, I’m Adelaide and
I‘m a volunteer at
Animal Rights and Rescue.
I have been here
for about six months and
I have adopted two and
they are called
Alice and Jock.
And they are doing really
well at our place but
I’ve got little Ash here.
She was dumped
at our gate with
her brothers and sisters.
There was five of them,
and hopefully they will
get adopted and have
a nice fulfilling life.
Why is it better to adopt
an animal companion
from a shelter rather than
purchasing one at a pet
store or from a breeder?
Well adopting from
shelters and rescue groups
is a really good place
to go because there is
such beautiful animals
waiting there and you’ll
get a lot of advice.
Most rescue groups will
already include the
vaccination and de-sexing.
Let's just
do the right thing,
buy them at shelters
and pounds, and we need
everybody's help to get to
that day where we see
zero animals killed
in shelters and pounds.
For Ms. Steffensen’s
years of benevolent work
on behalf of
the animals,
Supreme Master Ching Hai
recently honored her
with the Shining World
Compassion Award.
The following is
an excerpt from
a warm letter
she received from
Supreme Master Ching Hai:
Dear Barbara,
It is with great pleasure
and gratitude that
we present to you
the “Shining World
Compassion Award.”
This Award is presented
in recognition of the
caring love you extend
to all beings, for your
selfless spirit of service
to the community and for
your outstanding efforts
to create a humane world
through
your benevolent passion
to save innocent animals.
As a vegan,
you have embodied
the true meaning of
compassion, living it
every day of your life
and now, with ever loving
care, you are a vessel
of safe passage for these
noble creatures who
have found solace and
a second chance at life
under your attentive
care and protection.
Thank you for caring for
the animals and acting
as their voice - people
are starting to listen!
For uplifting our world
with your inspirational
example of unconditional
love in action,
for your empathy,
kindness and
heartfelt generosity,
and for being a dedicated
and noble role model,
we hereby applaud
and celebrate the great
compassionate deeds of
Ms. Barbara Steffensen,
Founder of
the Animal Rights
and Rescue Group.
Ms. Steffensen was
presented with a beautiful
crystal Award plaque,
which reads as follows:
In Recognition of
Exceptional
Humane Concern,
Kindness and Dedication,
Devotedly Protecting
our Precious Pet Companions
And for showing
Your Love in Action
With Compliments
and Gratitude,
For Your Inspirational
Sacrifice and Compassion,
Lovingly Caring
for the needs of animals
It’s a great privilege;
an honor to be given
this award.
The volunteers are
a hard-working band.
They need this kind of
boost and recognition.
To support Animal Rights
and Rescue Group’s
selfless mission
of protecting
vulnerable animals,
Supreme Master Ching Hai
also made
a kind contribution
in the form of a check
for US$10,000.
Thank you so much,
Master Ching Hai
for recognizing our work
and for your
generous support.
This comes at a vital time
for the organization.
This will really help us
help so many more
animals and also give us
the moral boost to our
spirit that we really need.
A number of
Supreme Master Ching Hai’s
books and CDs
including the #1
international bestsellers,
“The Birds in My Life,”
“The Dogs in My Life,”
and “The Noble Wilds”
were also given
to Ms. Steffensen.
To close,
Barbara Steffensen
has the following
message for
Supreme Master Ching Hai.
We thank you for
all the work you do
for the animals
around the world and
for saving our planet.
You’re an inspiration to
many people and you’re
certainly an inspiration
to us and this is
such a great honor.
Thank you very much!
And also can I thank
Supreme Master
Television for giving us
this opportunity to
tell the world what we do
and what the animals
need from all of us.
And we totally admire
everything you do.
Thank you so much.
We offer our
heartfelt thanks to
Ms. Barbara Steffensen
and the volunteer staff
of Animal Rights
and Rescue Group
for their wonderful care
of so many animals.
May Heaven continue to
bless to their altruistic
efforts to secure
a better future
for our animal friends.
I’d like to say,
"Be Veg,
Go Green,
and Save the Planet!"
For more details on
the Animal Rights and
Rescue Group,
please visit
www.AnimalRights.org.au
Gracious viewers,
thank you for joining us
for this edition of
the Shining World
Compassion Award series.
Up next is
Enlightening Entertainment
after Noteworthy News
here on
Supreme Master Television.
May peace be upon you.
In honor of International
Women’s Day celebrated
on March 8 each year,
Healthy Living
will explore health issues
important to women –
from preventing
osteoporosis to keeping
one’s brain cells young.
So getting out there and
getting some fresh air,
the vitamin D that we get
from the sunshine affects
the health of the brain,
affects the immune
system of the body.
So it’s a package;
to have a healthy brain
means having
a healthy lifestyle.
Please watch “In Honor
of International
Women’s Day 2010:
Women’s Health,”
this Monday, March 8
on Healthy Living.