International Respect for Chickens Day

“A Day to celebrate the dignity, beauty and life of chickens and to protest against the bleakness of their lives in farming operations.”

two chickens

Today May 4, activists the world over will be celebrating International Respect for Chickens Day—an event organized by United Poultry Concerns—to take action for the most abused animal on the planet.

Here are a few fascinating facts about chickens:

  • Chickens understand sophisticated intellectual concepts, learn from watching each other, demonstrate self-control, worry about the future, and even have cultural knowledge that is passed from generation to generation.
  • Chickens comprehend cause-and-effect relationships and understand that objects still exist even after they are hidden from view. This puts the cognitive abilities of chickens above those of small human children.
  • When in their natural surroundings, not on factory farms , chickens form complex social hierarchies, also known as “pecking orders,” and every chicken knows his or her place on the social ladder and remembers the faces and ranks of more than 100 other birds.
  • People who have spent time with chickens know that each bird has a different personality that often relates to his or her place in the pecking order—some are gregarious and fearless, while others are more shy and watchful; some chickens enjoy human company, while others are standoffish, shy, or even a bit aggressive.

The United Poultry Concerns’ holiday is another reminder that today, and every day, is a great day to go vegan.

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