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Nathan Runkle feature

How One Piglet Changed My Life

Growing up on a farm in a small Ohio town, I shared my childhood with animals of all kinds. I was enchanted by the wildlife I discovered near my home, and my family’s dogs and cats were my best friends. They were the first to teach me that like humans, animals have needs, desires, curiosities, and individual complexities and quirks.

I came to realize at a very young age, however, that when it comes to other creatures, human compassion is not always logically allocated. My family members cared deeply for the animals they saw as companions but gave little consideration to those they farmed, hunted, trapped, and fished.

Though I had unwillingly witnessed cruelty to animals throughout my childhood—acts others considered mundane realities of rural life—one particular instance of abuse ultimately led me to found Mercy For Animals (MFA), a nonprofit dedicated to preventing cruelty to animals farmed for food in the U.S.

The Piglet That Started It All

The incident took place in 1999, when I was 15 years old. A teacher at a local high school, who was also a pig farmer, brought a bucket of day-old piglets from his farm for the students of his agricultural class to study and dissect. He had attempted to kill the piglets on his farm that morning, but one was still alive. In an effort to finish her off, a student who had worked on the teacher’s farm grabbed the piglet by her hind legs and hurled her headfirst into the ground.

His attempt failed; the piglet did not die, though her skull was broken and blood streamed out of her mouth. Horrified, a few students grabbed the dying piglet and took her to another teacher, who transported the piglet to a vet to be euthanized.

Both the student and the farmer were charged with animal cruelty, and the event generated a great deal of media attention and controversy in my small farming community. Sadly, the case was immediately dismissed on its first day in court. It turns out that slamming piglets headfirst into the ground is standard agricultural practice—and therefore exempt from anti-cruelty laws.

An Advocate for the Animals

This event motivated me to correct what I viewed as a grave injustice, and MFA was born the same year. While originally intended to expand protections for all animals, MFA naturally came to focus on those raised and killed for food. Farmed animals not only suffer in the greatest numbers, but as a group they endure abuses far worse than other animals we exploit. Shuttered away from the public eye, animals on factory farms and in slaughterhouses needed an ally to speak on their behalf, and we were determined to be their voice.

MFA’s early projects focused on raising awareness about factory farming by distributing literature and staging demonstrations. Eventually we began conducting undercover investigations and open rescues on factory farms—bringing cameras in and animals out to expose the truth about this ugly system.

Undercover Investigations

Undercover investigations remain one of our core strategies today, forming the backbone of our organization and the foundation for many of our efforts. Through undercover investigations, we act as the world’s window into an industry that has arguably become one of the most destructive to animals, our health, and the planet we all share.

Like laws and policies, major food companies also control the fate of billions of animals. Our dedicated corporate outreach department focuses on improving these companies’ welfare standards to eliminate the worst of the worst industry practices: standardized abuses like gestation crates and battery cages.

Mercy For Animals, by the Numbers

  • 22 million animals spared from cages and mutilation, thanks to our corporate policy victories.
  • 90 countries impacted by our corporate policy victories.
  • 31 million animals freed from cages annually, thanks to new laws promoted by MFA and partner organizations.
  • 5 million animals spared from misery annually as our videos, outreach, and education department inspire people to reduce or eliminate meat consumption.

MFA’s incredible growth over the years has been paralleled by an immense cultural change I could not have dreamed of just a decade and a half ago. Every day brings more progress for our fellow creatures, and I believe a world in which all animals are treated with kindness and compassion is coming into view.

Watch this video to learn more about Mercy For Animals, from past to present:

About the Author

Headshot of Nathan Runkle

About the Author

Nathan Runkle

Nathan Runkle is the founder and president of Mercy For Animals. Since founding MFA over a decade ago, Runkle has overseen the organization's growth into a leading national force in the prevention of cruelty to farmed animals and promotion of compassionate food choices and policies. Through his work with MFA, Runkle has been an outspoken advocate for animal rights, featured in hundreds of television, radio, and newspaper interviews, including on ABC's World News Tonight, Nightline, 20/20, CNN, and National Public Radio, and in USA Today, The New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, and the Chicago Tribune. In 2009, at the age of 25, Runkle became the youngest person ever inducted into the U.S. Animal Rights Hall of Fame. Find him on Instagram and Facebook.
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