SOCIETY: WILL THE DESI DOG HAVE ITS DAY?
After receiving a distress call from a friend a few days ago, I visited his place to check on his dogs — two Huskies brought to Pakistan from his recent trip to Europe. The dogs were clearly suffering from heat exhaustion, as it was their first summer in Pakistan. I quickly ran some cold water over them and advised my friend to keep them indoors in air-conditioned rooms and only take them out at night.
After hearing of countless similar encounters with Pakistani dog owners, I think it is cruel that just because one loves an exotic breed, one should make them suffer by bringing them to an unsuitable climate and expect them to adapt. Our local dog breeds are well-built and adaptive but they are considered lowly and shunned by the general public. It is befuddling that we would rather keep a disease-prone dog instead of healthy, robust local animal as a pet.
Dogs were oginally bred for function rather than form. However, in the modern age, they are being bred for cosmetic reasons and companionship. While research on domestication is ongoing, it is generally considered dogs were domesticated in a single domestication event occurring between 20,000 to 41,500 years ago in two distinct groups, one in Asia and the other in Europe. This friendship resulted in the evolution of both humans and dogs. With the passage of time, selective breeding produced several morphologically and behaviourally distinct breeds, which were bred for a purpose or a specific job.
With Pakistani dog lovers hung up on foreign breeds, native breeds have little recognition despite being very intelligent, low-maintenance and better suited to the local climate
Pakistan is among the regions where initial domestication took place and great breeds were developed, but immense population pressure, with shrinking living quarters and lowering incomes, along with religious sentiments, forced people to say goodbye to an old friend. Though colonisation made it fashionable to keep dogs, people wanted to keep dogs which our colonial overlords favoured. As a result, local breeds never stood a chance.
If I am to generalise, I can say that dogs are either kept by the elite or by people living in rural areas. Since our nobility was impressed by the white ‘master’ race, we imported most of the European breeds into Pakistan and saturated dog shows with pedigree breeds from mainly Germany and the United Kingdom. Just to give an idea of diversity, in my neighbourhood alone there is a pair of Great Pyrenees mountain dogs and three Shar Peis (originating from China).
I know the struggle faced by the owner of the Pyrenees in Lahore, who just wanted to have a large, white dog. Shar Peis suffer from an assortment of skin diseases which require frequent visits to the vet for treatment. These ailments are not limited to exotic breeds alone; German Shepherds and Rottweilers are rather common breeds but if they survive the initial canine parvovirus, they may be afflicted with a variety of genetic issues, such as hip and elbow dysplasia and arthritis. Severe line breeding over an extended period of time to strengthen cosmetic features of these breeds robs them of their health and virility. It’s not easy to watch them suffer and the inability to save them is a crushing feeling. Also, those fat, pudgy Labradors with diabetes just fill your heart with immense sadness.