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Bad Hare Days [Kindle Edition]

John Fitzgerald
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

In Ireland the humble hare has been the subject of great controversy.

After years of an abusive sport, which resulted in its child-like death screams being heard regularly throughout Ireland, a result was achieved.

For those few dedicated people trying desperately to save the gentle creature from the horrors of the cruel sport of hare coursing, the struggle was painful and fought against great odds.

Author, John Fitzgerald, writes about his experience of a campaign against this barbaric blood sport, focusing mainly on a controversial phase in the 1980s when the State deployed a police heavy gang to suppress anti-coursing activism.

The author's own peaceful and non-violent action and that of, initially, a few others did arouse the public and achieve what at first appeared to be a hard-won benefit to the hare. But the hare's troubles were - and are -far from over.

Though it can no longer be torn apart by greyhounds, now muzzled, it can still be mauled, injured, and tossed about like a rag doll on the coursing field.

In addition to highlighting the hare's sad plight, this is also a campaigner's story. The author recounts vividly the ups and downs of his own fight against animal cruelty. He and others paid a major price for their role in the campaign.

The gentle hare, apart from its use and abuse in coursing, has now become an endangered species in Ireland, and this book reinforces its right to be protected.

Editorial Reviews

About the Author

John Fitzgerald is a free-lance journalist and writer living in Callan, County Kilkenny, Ireland. Before taking up these twin pursuits, he had worked for almost a decade in a farmers' Co-operative, during which time he wrote hundreds of letters to newspapers exposing cruelty to animals in general, but hare coursing in particular, as part of a national campaign against blood sports in Ireland. He has been involved for almost three decades in Ireland's anti-hare coursing movement and the present book focuses on a tumultuous phase in the campaign that had a devastating immediate and long-term impact on his life. John Fitzgerald has contributed articles to a number of national and provincial Irish newspapers and to the popular Ireland's Own magazine. He is also the author of four previous books, all dealing with aspects of his native county's heritage, history, and folklore: Kilkenny-People Places Faces, Kilkenny-A Blast from the Past, Callan in the Rare Old Times, and Callan through the Mists of Time.

Product Details

  • File Size: 2020 KB
  • Simultaneous Device Usage: Unlimited
  • Publisher: Callan Press (February 8, 2012)
  • Sold by: Amazon Digital Services, Inc.
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B0077D1BC4
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • X-Ray: Not Enabled
  • Lending: Enabled
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,387,666 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
From his teenage years, John Fitzgerald has been a committed campaigner against blood sports. Bad Hare Days is his recollection of life as a campaigner.

Fitzgerald paints a vivid picture of what the sport of hare coursing entails: greyhounds chasing hares and viciously mauling them to death. He compares the cries of the dying hares to the sobs of a baby or the wail of the Banshee.

The story is explicit, honest and at times disturbing. Fitzgerald shows the analogy between the cruelty he was subjected to at the hands of coursing supporters and the cruelty these same people inflicted on hares.

Bad Hare Days is also an account of a turbulent time in the history of hare coursing in Ireland and the events that brought this cruel sport to national attention. The author details opposition that former President Mary Robinson and Senator Noel Browne encountered when they made their case in favour of banning hare coursing in the Irish Parliament.

Bad Hare Days gives an interesting insight into Ireland in the mid-1980s. Fitzgerald shows how money, power, and establishment figures such as priests and farmers influenced parishioners and people in the surrounding neighbourhoods where the story is based.

Fitzgerald appeared in court on a number of occasions, accused of threatening and harassing hare coursing officials. On each occasion he was found either not guilty or the case collapsed.

For all Fitzgerald's efforts to raise public awareness of the cruelty of hare coursing there has been little change in legislation governing the sport. Had the 1993 Gregory Bill been passed, it would have banned hare coursing in Ireland.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars This man should be nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize December 19, 2009
Format:Paperback
Though I am honoured that John Fitzgerald is now my friend on facebook, I wish very much that I had read his book earlier, for he and his book are inspirations to those of us who have been battling the barbaric 'sport' of hare coursing for years.

I feel so inspired by John Fitzgerald's story of courage against almost unimaginable odds in his native Ireland that I think that he should be nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize.

Unlike Barack Obama who has done little thus far, John Fitzgerald has done much for the humble hare and for humanity and he deserves greater recognition - at least from all lovers of wild animals.

'Bad Hare Days' describes in extremely graphic and horrific but almost matter-of-fact detail John Fitzgerald's nigh-on-three-decade campaign against cruelty, against bigotry, against hypocrisy and against much of the Irish 'establishment.'

I say cruelty because, whilst some people regard greyhounds chasing and tearing apart hares as a 'traditional' British (and it is and has been predominantly British) 'sport,' others have long since seen it as sheer cruelty.

I say bigotry because, whilst the cruel 'sport' of hare coursing has been practised in both England and Ireland by out-and-out rogues and ruffians, it appears that in Ireland, even the Catholic priesthood and others in the countryside otherwise looked upon as 'respectable' and 'respected' have supported it and, worst of all, have participated in it. These people are neither respectable nor respected and they are bigoted in their opinions and practices. The priests and the politicians, in particular, should have known better - much better.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Ireland's shame June 23, 2012
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
A very interesting book written by a man of uncommon decency and exceptional courage. The author hails from a rural district of Ireland; hardworking, modest, unassuming -- the furthest thing imaginable from an "activist." However two things that distinguish Mr. Fitzgerald from his rural compatriots are his detestation of hare coursing and his personal bravery in publicly speaking-out against it. Hare coursing, as the book makes abundantly clear, is an inherently cruel blood sport that is especially objectionable because it targets one of the meekest, least offensive members of the animal kingdom (the degree of degeneracy associated with animal abuse always seems inversely-proportional to the capacity of the victims to resist it). The author's reward for being "different" has been public shunning and hostility from the local yokelry, including physical assault, and years of abuse by the Garda (Ireland's national police force) and a kafkaesque legal system worthy of a comic opera. Before reading this book I had a moderate degree of respect for the Irish judicial system, but Bad Hare Days will disabuse the naive of any such misconceptions.

Irish devotees of hare coursing apparently run the gamut from your standard, run-of-the-mill cowardly hooligan to truly sociopathic thugs. All looked after by a solicitous stable of fawning politicians in government, from all of the major political parties, arguing that Ireland's quaint peasant traditions, from public intoxication to ecclesiastical pederasty, deserve protection from meddling urban do-gooders and overseas cultural imperialists. Fortunately, there are a few good men, like John Fitzgerald, out to rescue Ireland's honor from the mud.
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