BEIJING, May 31 -- There's one scene in Hollywood disaster movies I've always hated: Oblivious to death and chaos all around and at great peril to himself and others, the hero jumps to the rescue of his own pet.
It must have been a nice touch of humanitarianism
when it was first depicted on the big screen.
But by the end of the millennium, it had become so
trite it was an inevitable laughing stock.
That is why no disaster movie, however well crafted,
can hold a candle to real-life events.
In the Sichuan earthquake, pets were not just the
objects of rescue.
In a few cases, they were the heroes who saved
people.
The story of Wang Youqiong, a 61-year-old caught in a
landslide in the mountains, is a case in point.
After her lower body was stuck under giant rocks, she
survived on raindrops and the help of two dogs for eight days.
They licked her face clean to provide her with much
needed moisture on her parched lips.
They also barked vigorously whenever they sensed
human movement nearby.
Eventually they were able to attract rescuers.
That was 196 hours after the May 12 quake, which may
have claimed 80,000 lives.
In a Beichuan police station, a pug-dog dragged
43-year-old Li Guolin out of a fourth-floor room when the quake hit.
Another dog was a "professional rescuer", not a pet.
We know only the name of his breeder, a soldier
surnamed Li.
Li's "best friend" worked for several days and helped
locate 35 survivors.
But in one search for survivors, he was crushed to
death when a building collapsed.
Li was heard crying into the night.
Of course, more common were soldiers who snatched
pets out of danger's way.
That gives rise to a moral dilemma: Should humans
save animals - pets and livestock - in the wake of such a mammoth natural
disaster?
Opinions differ: Some say pets offer priceless
companionship and therefore justify extra effort to save them, while others
resent the sacrifice of soldiers to save "stupid animals".
There is no doubt that saving human lives has been
the top priority - and rightly so. For those who take it for granted, there was
a time when we held the value of some property - a building, a log - above human
life.
It sounds callous to calculate what is more valuable
because there has been a fundamental shift in evaluating human life in the past
three decades.
We now have more respect for human lives regardless
of demographics.
To some animal lovers, pets are just as valuable as
human lives.
It's not something we should measure with money. The
laughter and companionship a pet brings are something you can never quantify
with a purchase price. You give a pet love, and it requites - it's a magical
bond.
I believe it's wonderful that rescuers have dug out
pets trapped in rubble, but I don't think a soldier or volunteer should risk his
life to do it.
If a little extra effort can bring out a pet alive,
then why not?
Both Aesop and Liu Bei of ancient China said: "No act
of kindness, no matter how small, is ever wasted".
It is reported that people have adopted stray dogs
and cats in the disaster zone and given them a new home, or temporary shelter in
the event their owners come to retrieve them.
Well, for one, I won't wince at the screen heroes
retrieving pets any more.
(Source: China Daily/Raymond Zhou)