The Edmond Sun

Features

November 2, 2009

Woman works to stop violence by helping animals, people co-exist

CHICAGO — Any puppy training class will have its share of “eureka” moments. With endless repetition and a big enough bag of treats, even the most unmanageable dog eventually gets it.

But this, this was special.

Two high-school-age brothers were putting their 10-week-old pit bull through his paces. It was obvious that the brothers had been working closely with O.J. He maintained eye contact with the boys, responded to their commands, did well on leash and got along with his frisky classmates.

For Cynthia Bathurst, watching from the back of the room, it was one of those eureka moments times two.

Bathurst, of Chicago, is co-founder and principal director of Safe Humane Chicago, an ambitious 2-year-old effort to fight violence by promoting compassion for animals as well as people. The program uses schools, churches and community groups — more than 60 organizations have lined up behind her — to get the anti-violence message to citizens in high-crime areas.

Especially young citizens: Get kids to treat animals with care and respect, and you’re on the right track. Clearly, O.J. and the two youngsters were getting the message.

The classes are just one part of Safe Humane Chicago’s strategy. It also works with Cook County, Ill., government agencies and Chicago’s community policing network, and it advocates for stronger animal welfare legislation and the enforcement of laws already on the books.

Ending violence and animal abuse is an uphill battle being fought on many fronts, but always with Bathurst leading the way. One day she’s making a presentation to 50 felony assistant state’s attorneys at 26th and California. The next she’s on the phone, lining up a location for an event. The next she may be at one of the classes, working with the dogs and cleaning up some puppy spillage. Or, as was the case recently, she accomplished all three in one long afternoon.

If dogs are man’s best friend, Bathurst likely is a dog’s best friend.

Take O.J., for example. In a worst-case scenario, he could have ended up on the streets or involved in dog fighting. But thanks to Safe Humane Chicago (safehumanechicago.org) and through the efforts of his two young handlers, he is fast becoming what Bathurst calls a good canine citizen.

“We’re training them to be socialized and toward being star puppies, with the goal that they’ll become ambassadors for their neighborhoods,” Bathurst says during a lull in class.

The animal welfare and law enforcement communities have long pointed to statistics that show people who are abusive to animals are more likely to be violent toward people. Bathurst’s efforts may tell us if the corollary is also true.

“If we’re kinder to animals, will we be kinder to one another?” says Steve Dale, a dog and cat behavior consultant, author and WLS-AM Chicago radio host who has worked with Bathurst. “Working to help make Chicagoans kinder to animals is working to help make Chicagoans kinder to one another. And that is what Cynthia is doing.”

The nonprofit Safe Humane Chicago is one of several animal-welfare programs that Bathurst has championed. There was also a first-in-the-nation court advocacy program for cases involving animal abuse. And there’s an ongoing study that looks at the abused, homeless and at-risk pet populations from a municipal planning perspective, which will be presented to the Chicago City Council later this year.

Bathurst, who recently received the American Veterinary Medical Association’s 2009 Humane Award for her work, has been a driving force behind these groundbreaking initiatives, always on a volunteer basis. Over a quarter-century, she has built relationships with law enforcement and child and animal welfare officials, government and church leaders, and people in the business world, and she draws on that pool of expertise when there’s a problem to be solved. Maybe even more impressively, she not only can bring a variety of people to the table, she gets them to work together and reach solutions. When dealing with animal issues, that is no small feat.

“Really, all I am doing is bringing around a lot of these networks that I know,” she says. “And saying, ‘You know this, you know this, let’s do this.’ Organizing it, which I love to do, to make a difference. I’ve been lucky enough, blessed enough, whatever, and people have trusted me and it’s come as far as it has.”

Interestingly, this highly motivated animal advocate doesn’t have a dog. Or any pets.

“I have a great rapport with dogs and cats,” she says. “I grew up with horses, all kinds of animals. I have great relationships with animals and find it important.”

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