Protests near the Metra occurred on Friday and Saturday, with organizers claiming the circus animals deserve freedom, not chains.
"It's time for the circuses to reinvent themselves," said Meglena Wahrlich, one of the protest organizers, on Saturday. "It's time to innovate. Send those wild animals to sanctuaries."
"When I saw the video of Viola escape for the third time now, it just broke my heart," said Kelly Navarro, another protest organizer, on Saturday. "She just seemed sad."
Protestors hoped to sway passing vehicles.
"I'm not here to completely say the circus is bad, that they abuse their animals. But there's just other circuses that are out there that are thriving with animal-free circuses," Navarro said. "It's just outdated. We need to move on. (Circuses) can thrive without the animals."
The 10,000-pound Asian elephant shocked Butte residents, lumbering through traffic after she got away from her handler.
"She shows signs of distress and has foot problems and joint problems," said Navarro.
MTN News reached out to Jordan World Circus requesting an interview regarding the protests to which it declined. But Armando Loyal, Viola’s handler, did respond to a few of our questions via email. Below is his response:
"This is the United States of America the greatest country in the world, it is their right to protest. If there was something I did not like, I would have the same right. They can voice their opinion and that is what...is their opinion. Our animals are well cared for above and beyond any regulations or statuses. They receive love, affection and attention to the utmost. Viola has never been retired, contrary to what is being said.”
"I’m the caretaker, handler, trainer, dad, everything for the elephants here,” Loyal said on Tuesday. "They get the best of care. All the love and attention we can give them. So for any naysayers, please just come see for yourself."
After the circus wraps up in mid-June, Loyal said the elephants are heading back home to Oklahoma where they have 200 acres to roam.
But that isn’t enough for protestors like Wahrlich and Navarro, who believe Viola and other circus animals deserve freedom:
"Most elephants in circuses in the US have been performing since the '70s. So they're in their 50s. They're older animals," Wahrlich said. "Most of the time, they're traveling. They're in trailers. They spend 20-plus hours on the road. While in the wild, or in a sanctuary, they have the opportunity to roam."
"For 34,000 miles, Viola has to travel for ten months in a semi-truck with another elephant," Navarro said. "That is no way to live for a wild animal as large and beautiful as her."
To read MTN's initial report on Viola's escape, click here.
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