真相集中营

The Washington Post-Welcome to Chinas Cat Island where lucky strays wait for a new home

February 26, 2024   9 min   1877 words

这篇报道展现了中国猫岛为流浪猫提供庇护的努力,以及中国年轻一代对宠物领养的增加。猫岛的创意解决了上海庞大的流浪猫问题,通过捕捉、绝育、释放,以及提供领养机会。然而,仅有130只猫在18个月内被领养,反映了问题的庞大。文章指出,社会观念变化缓慢,一些上海居民更愿意购买纯种猫,而非猫岛提供的普通流浪猫。报道也涉及到2022年的封锁期间,宠物被遗弃或杀害的问题,引起社会关注。最后,文章提到对于建立动物保护法的呼吁,强调教育和处罚对于解决问题至关重要。总体而言,这是一篇反映社会进步和问题的报道,呼吁更多关注和改变。

2024-01-31T19:54:39.540Z

SHANGHAI — The happiest place on Earth for cats might just be here, on Cat Island, a feline playground just a few miles from Shanghai Disneyland. While humans whoop and whirl at the latter, the 400-plus kitties who call Cat Island home rest in the shade of specially constructed grass-covered play tunnels or loll about in pagodas. They cross a wooden bridge to stalk through pear orchards, the intrepid among them even venturing into the horse stable.

The pampered residents here were once strays in downtown Shanghai, a city of 25 million people and somewhere between 400,000 and 1.5 million stray cats. But efforts are underway to stem the exploding feral population in the metropolis, and find homes for at least some of the newly neutered cats.

Cat Island’s entire population is up for adoption. Many at “cat cafes” in the city do a similar thing: Provide a space where people can befriend and potentially take home a neutered, if shy, kitty.

There’s no equivalent of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals in China. Instead, it’s left to grass-roots organizations like these to step in to save cats — from the streets, or from people who think they’re better off culled.

“Cat adoption has become quite popular in recent years, especially among the younger generation,” says Erica Guo, owner of all-rescue cat cafe More Meow Garden.

The entire population of Cat Island, on the outskirts of Shanghai, is up for adoption. (Photos by Yufan Lu for The Washington Post)
There are 400-plus felines now living at Cat Island, where they can spend their days lolling about in pagodas.
Cat Island is on remote, grassy site outside Shanghai, a semirural location chosen to avoid angering neighbors.
Most cats at Shanghai's Cat Island are nameless. There are too many cats to give each one a name, said sanctuary manager Chen Hao.

The very idea of having a cat, or a dog for that matter, as a pet is a relatively new one in China. With most Chinese people just a couple of generations removed from rural life, many people still viewed animals as livestock or rat catchers, not companions.

But as living standards have risen, so has the view of animals changed. Younger Chinese are increasingly sharing their homes with pets — often instead of having babies — and can regularly be seen walking their cats in clear backpack carriers or on leashes.

Now, analysts estimate there are as many as 51 million pet dogs and 65 million pet cats in urban China. It has generated an enormous furry economy — China’s pet industry was worth $44 billion in 2020.

This popularization of pets became very — often tragically — obvious during the covid-induced lockdowns of 2022, which were particularly long and draconian in Shanghai. When humans were shipped off to quarantine centers, their pets were often killed or left to die.

Shanghai’s covid siege: Food shortages, talking robots, starving animals

At the end of 2022, a few months after Shanghai’s longest lockdown ended, a government-affiliated nonprofit foundation opened the 130-acre Shanghai Pet Base facility which encompasses Cat Island.

It is concentrating on trapping and neutering strays, then returning them to the communities where they were found. When that’s not possible, they’re rehomed to Cat Island.

“This is what we are able to do, here and now,” said Zha Zhenliang, the foundation official responsible for Cat Island and the Pet Base. “We hope every [apartment] compound can have their own ‘cat island’ of a safe place for the cats to be,” and their feeders can operate openly, he said. Feeding strays can be a controversial activity, resulting in conflict between cat lovers and neighbors who just want them culled.

To adopt a Cat Island cat, people must first trek to the remote, grassy site outside Shanghai — a semirural location chosen to avoid angering neighbors — then complete a pet-care course and have their home inspected by video call for suitability. The precautions mean adoption numbers are barely denting the problem: In 18 months, only 130 cats have moved to new homes.

One-year-old Banya is the “cat manager” of the organization that runs Shanghai Adoption Day.

Homes for garden-variety cats

There are also more accessible places for interacting with cats — and potentially taking one home. Shanghai has seen an explosion in the number of “cat cafes,” where customers can play with some cats, and sometimes even drink a cup of coffee.

Guo, who started More Meow Garden — actually an office with vertical climbing and sleeping shelves for the felines — in downtown Shanghai five years ago, said her cafe was populated entirely by rescued strays.

“A cat cafe is not only a place for cats and humans to play together, but also provides an opportunity for prospective adopters to fully contact with cats and help them understand whether they really want to choose a companion animal to join their family,” says Guo, who rehomes about one cat per month, for a total of 64 so far.

Most of the cats at this cat cafe in Shanghai are strays or have been abandoned. Their rescuers are hopeful of finding them new homes.
Life in a cat sanctuary, whether a cafe or an open-air island, is much more luxurious than life on the streets.
Cat cafes provide an opportunity for prospective adopters to spend time with cats and get used to the idea of a companion animal, says Erica Guo of More Meow Garden.
Privately run rescue operations, including this cat cafe in Shanghai, offer visitors the opportunity to spend time with cats and perhaps adopt one.

A key hurdle to increasing that number: Many status-conscious Shanghai residents want cats they can brag about on social media — buying or adopting purebreds, not the garden-variety strays that Cat Island and More Meow are offering. “The average person here sees a cat and thinks, are they worth money or not, are they clean or not, when actually the only difference is the cats’ conditions,” Zha says. “So we need to manage the people even more than the cats.”

Independent rescuers and unofficial organizations do the lion’s share of caring for Shanghai’s street animals, ranging from collaborations in every neighborhood to feed strays to about 50 formal rescue groups.

Visitors look at cats during a Shanghai Adoption Day event at a Shanghai shopping mall.
Cats adorn the staircase of the organization that runs Shanghai Adoption Day.
Profiles of the cats waiting for new homes inside the organization that runs Shanghai Adoption Day.

“I estimate there are hundreds of private shelters big and small in Shanghai,” says Angelika Ma, founder of the private Nekoshelter in western Shanghai. (Neko is the Japanese word for cat.) “The problem is they are often operated by poor elderly people who lack the ability to provide stable shelter and to find a home for the animals,” Ma says.

Some independent rescue organizations target particular niches, but most focus on the Sisyphean task of finding animals homes. Groups like the one that runs Shanghai Adoption Day take rescue cats to public spaces like malls to try to find them new homes, while online adoption platforms resemble dating apps, with pets’ personalities and glamour shots.

Tushetou (literally “sticking out the tongue”) is one of the oldest stray cats in the Jing’An Sculpture Park. After battling some illnesses, it is now healthy and fat, according to Xiao Bai, a member of the volunteer group that helps cats in the park.

Zorro’s galvanizing death

While many of those people who feed stray cats in compounds and parks do so under cover of night, a particularly organized effort has emerged at Jing’an Sculpture Park downtown. More than 130 cat-lovers coordinate feeding shifts and crowdfund food and medical care for the park cats. They also try to find homes for the friendlier kittens.

The park has about a hundred cats, estimates volunteer Bon Wen, and the group has neutered more than 90 of them.

The park management tacitly approved of their efforts but was forced into a more active role after the murder last May of Zorro, a black-and-white “cow” cat who had become famous on social media. Zorro’s fans made a candlelit shrine where his body was found.

Chinese man caught with 500 imprisoned cats destined for restaurants

A stray cat in the Zhongshan North Road campus of Shanghai's East China Normal University.
A stray cat in Shanghai's Gucheng Park.
A stray cat in Shanghai's Jing’An Sculpture Park.
A stray cat at Shanghai's Donghua University.
A stray kitten outside a Shanghai hospital.
Two kittens in Shanghai's Jing’An Sculpture Park. When asked for their names, volunteer Xiao Bai quickly thought of two: Pangpang and Dudu, combined together the word “Pangdudu” means “fatty,” embodying her wish for the two kittens to grow fatter soon.

There have been other killings and maimings too. “There is no good way to prevent people from hurting cats,” says Wen. “We all have to go to work and have our own lives. It’s impossible to stand guard in the park 24 hours a day.”

Zorro’s death, together with a growing market for animal torture videos, have sparked nationwide social media outrage and renewed calls for an animal protection law. China has no laws against animal cruelty or abandonment, and existing agricultural laws only prohibit selling strays to slaughterhouses, not against recreational abuse. Netizens and some lawmakers have proposed extending wildlife animal protections to companion animals.

But as society changes, Zha sees an animal protection law as essential. “Without a protection law, we must establish a social standard that isolates and blacklists animal abusers,” Zha said.

Stone, a well known cat catcher, at a Shanghai residential compound.

Stopping strays from making nine (or more) lives

Attitudes are changing, but too slowly, says Nekoshelter’s Ma. Education about caring for animals as pets, plus punishment for people who abandon animals, is needed. Then authorities should tackle the over-breeding of pedigree cats and dogs. “They have to start to try go to the root of the problem.”

As efforts to rehome neutered cats continues, slowly, animal advocates’ main effort is focused on desexing Shanghai’s stray cats to bring the population down. The trap-neuter-release program is central to that effort, and one of the heroes of the movement is Yin Xiaojun, a renowned cat catcher better known as Stone.

Stray cats that have been caught await transportation to the veterinary hospital.
A veterinarian puts the trapped cats inside cages before they are neutered.

Yin, a business administrator by day, is called upon almost nightly to retrieve pets from roofs, free kittens stuck down drains and convince ferals unenthusiastic about a trip to the vet.

​Yin says he has caught more than 4,000 animals a year for the past five years, almost all of them so that they can be neutered. “I taught myself. Hunting is the most primitive masculine skill, it is natural, and the thrill of a successful catch is addictive,” he says.

Once caught, the thrashing felines quickly calm down for the trip to the vet for desexing surgery. After several days of recovery, the felines return to the bag or cage for the trip back home, ears now notched for future identification. One down, a million more to go.