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The Honolulu Advertiser
Updated at 3:03 p.m., Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Big Island man wants to save chickens

Associated Press

ON THE WEB

Love The Animals: Hen Sanctuary: www.myspace.com/homes4hens

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HONOMU, Hawai'i — A Big Island animal rights activist hopes to save thousands of chickens from slaughter when Hawaiian Fresh Egg Farm near Waimea closes later this year.

Tony Marasia doesn't have the resources to buy all 8,000 hens currently left at the farm. But he's hoping people will be willing to step up and adopt a few.

The 33-year-old thinks of the hens as friends or individuals, rather than pets or animals.

Marasia says two farm hens he recently rescued, Meepa and Beepa, have personalities. Meepa likes to sing and Beepa is the sunbather.

"They have likes; they have dislikes," Marasia said, sitting in a green plastic chair as Meepa and Beepa strolled around their new home, a 20-by-30 foot pen in the backyard of a vacant home.

Marasia built the pen himself and is renting the backyard for $100 a month.

As a vegan, Marasia swears off eating animals and animal products, including seafood and eggs. Vegans also avoid animal products, like leather.

Saving Big Island farm animals from slaughter wasn't always his goal.

Marasia grew up in Pennsylvania and came to Hawaii a decade ago with the intention of studying eastern religions and pre-veterinary medicine at the University of Hawai'i at Hilo, to become a zookeeper.

Instead, he became "sidetracked" by other ventures and didn't enroll. For a time he worked as a security guard at the Panaewa Rainforest Zoo.

After the death of his goldfish Goldie in 2005, he swore off eating fish. A short time later, Marasia watched the video "Meet Your Meat," produced by the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, about the cruel treatment of animals in modern farms.

Six months later, in mid-2006, Marasia met Pono, the cow when the Holstein was restrained by a 10-foot-long chain. Marasia started a successful campaign to raise money to buy the animal, sparing Pono from a trip to the slaughterhouse.

He's marking the anniversary of that effort by starting the hen rescue campaign.

Marasia has set 100 hens as an initial goal. He relied on Internet donations to get Pono, and hopes to draw on donors from around the world again for this venture.

"To me, with each hen that is rescued ... the world changes a little bit," Marasia said. "With each hen, for them the world has changed."

Hawaiian Fresh Farm Eggs is winding down production and is looking to close in October.

David Davenport, the farm's owner, supports the idea of a safe haven for the hens.

"I think it's a good thing, if people want to do it," he said.

Marasia said a woman in Washington state has already expressed interest in adopting a hen and will come to Hawaii in the fall to pick it up.

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