Ancient India The
Vedas, the first scriptures of
Hinduism (originating in the second millennium BCE), teach
ahimsa or nonviolence towards all living beings. In Hinduism, killing an animal is regarded as a violation of
ahimsa and causes bad
karma, leading many Hindus to practice
vegetarianism. Hindu teachings do not require vegetarianism, however, and allow
animal sacrifice in rare religious ceremonies.
Jainism was founded in India in the 7th-5th century BCE, and
ahimsa is its central teaching. Due to their belief in the sanctity of all life, Jains practice strict vegetarianism and many go to great lengths even to avoid harming insects.
Buddhism is the third major religion to emerge in India, and its teachings also include
ahimsa. Buddhism teaches vegetarianism (though not as strictly as Jainism), and many Buddhists practice
life release in which animals destined for slaughter are purchased and released to the wild. Despite the influence of Hinduism, Jainism, and Buddhism, meat-eating was still common in ancient India. In 262 BCE, the
Mauryan king
Ashoka converted to Buddhism. For the remainder of his reign, he issued edicts informed by the Buddhist teachings of compassion for all beings. These edicts included the provision of medical treatment for animals and bans on
animal sacrifice, the
castration of roosters, and hunting of many species.
British India Animal experimentation began in India in the 1860s when Britain began introducing new drugs to the colony. Moved by the suffering of Indian strays and draught animals,
Colesworthey Grant founded the first Indian
Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) in 1861 in
Calcutta. The Indian SPCA's successfully lobbied for anti-cruelty legislation in the 1860s, which was extended to all of India in 1890–91. An obelisk was established in memory of the Colesworthey just in front of the
Writers' Building. While the anti-vivisection movement grew in Britain, it failed to take hold in India. British officials and (British-led) SPCAs both opposed the introduction of the British
Cruelty to Animals Act 1876 – which established regulations on animal experimentation – to the Indian colony. The
cow protection movement arose in the late 1800s in northern India. While the SPCAs were led by colonists and associated with Christianity, cow protection was a movement of native Hindus. Cow protectionists opposed the slaughter of cattle and provided sanctuaries for cows. However, cow protection was largely an expression of Hindu nationalism rather than part of a larger native Indian animal welfare movement. Cow protectionists did not, in general, oppose (and often supported) animal experimentation, and the antivivisectionist groups established in India in the late 1890s died out due to lack of interest. The Indian branches of the
Humanitarian League, an English organization which opposed vivisection and the mistreatment and killing of animals, focused on vegetarianism and cow protection while ignoring vivisection.
Mahatma Gandhi was a vegetarian and advocate of vegetarianism. In 1931 Gandhi gave a talk to the
London Vegetarian Society entitled
The Moral Basis of Vegetarianism in which he argued for abstinence from meat and dairy on ethical (rather than health-related) grounds.
Post-independence India India's first national animal welfare law, the
Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act (1960), criminalizes cruelty to animals, though exceptions are made for the treatment of animals used for food and scientific experiments. The 1960 law also created the
Animal Welfare Board of India to ensure the anti-cruelty provisions were enforced and promote the cause of animal welfare. Subsequent laws have placed regulations and restrictions on the use of draught animals, the use of performing animals, animal transport, animal slaughter, and animal experimentation. The Breeding of and Experiments on Animals (Control and Supervision) Rules, 1998 sets general requirements for breeding and using animals for research. A 2006 amendment specifies that experimenters must first try to use animals "lowest on the phylogenetic scale", use the minimum number of animals for 95% statistical confidence, and justify not using non-animal alternatives. A 2013 amendment bans the use of live animal experiments in medical education. In 2014 India became the first country in Asia to ban all testing of cosmetics on animals and the import of cosmetics tested on animals. In 2013 India made it illegal to use captive dolphins for public entertainment. India has a grade of C out of possible grades A, B, C, D, E, F, G on
World Animal Protection's Animal Protection Index. There are a number of
animal welfare organizations operating in India. == Animals used for food ==