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                                                            |  All mammals at the time of parturition secrete collostrum from their nipples. It is a thin yellowish milky fluid rich in antibodies and consists largely of serum
 and white blood cells.  It precedes the production of true milk and is just
 sufficient for and meant exclusively for the just delivered baby. High in energy, protein, vitamins (especially A D E and B12), minerals and most importantly containing high levels of imunoglobulins, by suckling the collostrum, passive immunity is transferred from the mother to the newborn thus enabling it to fight off infections during its life time.
 
 Called bovine colostrum, beestings or foremilk, this super-nutritious liquid is secreted for the first day or two by the cow or buffalo after she has calved. Although it is a vital food for newborn calves, it is taken away by humans and usually consumed as a steamed pudding. Commonly known as khees in India, colostrum is also called gau-piyush and cheek in Hindi, junnu in Telegu, seem paal in Tamil, geena in Konkani, kharwas in Marathi, bari in Gujarati, and palethi
                                                              in Punjabi.
 
 Beauty Without Cruelty classifies colostrum as non-vegetarian: a product derived upon depravation and cruelty to calves, it positively needs to be shunned – whether as khees or processed into capsules/powder and marketed as a supplement. Bovine colostrum is meant to build immunity in calves, not humans.
 
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 Stolen  Milk 
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                                                            | The ultimate cruelty in the dairy  industry now set to be perpetrated in a big way in India too, is to feed calves  with milk replacer and take away the milk from cows and she-buffaloes for human  consumption. Common ingredients in commercial milk replacers include a  combination of ingredients such as whey, protein concentrate (from whey, soy,  wheat, potato, whereas the most recent abroad consists of red blood cell,  plasma and fish proteins), animal and vegetable fat, vitamins, minerals  and amino acids. Ingredients such as skim milk, butter milk and whole milk are  not usually included in the formulation due to their cost and if they are used  they are less than 1%. A programme launched under the Maharashtra State Animal  Husbandry and Dairy Commission Committee in October 2005 by the Kolhapur Zilla Sahakari Dudh Utpadak Sangh  Ltd (known for its Gokul brand milk) for enhancing milk productivity  promotes its patented milk replacer and calf starter for calves thereby  reducing their rearing expenditure by a third. The milk replacer that contains  protein 25% & fat 7% reduces the first three months feeding expenses of the  calf. The calf starter contains protein 23% & fat 4% and stimulates the  ruminal activity in calves. (Mothers’ milk not allowed to be drunk by calf is  sold to humans.) In short, it is downright unethical to  steal the milk meant for the calves, unnatural to feed animal products to them  and increase their weight at the rate of up to 700 grams per day.
 
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 Calf  Care? 
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                                                            | In 2012 the Dairy Development Board of  Punjab began aggressively promoting a milk powder substitute obtained from  Holland for “better growth of calves”. They recommend that calves should be  switched over to this formula milk substitute after 5 days of consuming their  mother’s milk.  Furthermore, Punjab’s dairy farmers want to rent out  sheds where calves can be taken care of because they admit that their dairies  are congested and calves are neglected. A project to implement this idea was  submitted by the Ludhiana Dairy Association to the Dairy Development Board.
 It is an economic strategy focusing on female calves: a  cow costs Rs 60,000 whereas it costs about Rs 75,000 to rear a calf, but if the  milk substitute is given it will cost less to rear the calf; and the milk that  the calf does not consume can be sold to humans.
 
 Sad, there’s no mention of unwanted male calves.
 
 Sadder still, is this true story: a she buffalo,  separated from her calf, became hysterical and throughout the night  continuously banged her head against the tree truck to which she was tied with  a short chain. When released the next morning, she ran towards her calf,  slipped and died. The owner mourned the loss of a “cash buffalo” – not the loss  of a life – and even called the animal mad.
 
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                                                        | Page last updated on 16/01/15 |  |  |  
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