Why to use Cruelty free products & list of cruelty free products

Now-a-days you can see lots of products are tested on animals before they are launched in the market and the animals used for testing are treated cruelly using physical harassment to them. Animals are forced, pulled and beaten to do the testing. So I would request people to not to use those companies product that do testing on animal. This would be one of the best ways to help the animals to not be treated cruelly for testing the products.
Here, I will list some companies that do testing on animal and some companies that do not do testing on animals. This list will surely help you in selecting the product that are animal cruelty free.

Companies That Do Not Test on Animals are:
4mula, A Wild Soap Bar, ABBA Pure & Natural Hair Care ,Abercrombie & Fitch, Abra Therapeutics, Absolute Miracle,Acquarella Polish, Active Life Pet Products, Advanage Wonder Cleaner, Advanced Botanical Research, Advanced Research Labs, Affordable Mineral Makeup, Afrumos After Inked, LLC, Afterglow Cosmetics,AG Hair Cosmetics, Agape by DK, Ageless Fantasy, Alaska Glacial Mud,Alba Botanica, Alexandra Avery Purely Natural, Alima Cosmetics, Inc., All-Nutrient (Chuckles, Inc.), Allens Naturally, Almay Aloe Up, Aloe Vera of America, Aloette Cosmetics, Amazing Cosmetics, Inc., Amazon Premium Products, America’s Finest Products Corporation, American Beauty, American Formulating & Manufacturing, American International, American Safety Razor, Amoré Pet Services, Inc., Anastasia Beverly Hills, Ancient Formulas, Andrea International Industries.. Etc.

These are the few companies that do not test product on animals. To know about more companies check out here – companies that do not test on animals

Some companies that do test on animals are:

Aim (Church & Dwight) ,Always (Procter & Gamble), Armor All (Clorox), Arrid (Church & Dwight), Aussie (Procter & Gamble), Aveeno (Johnson & Johnson), Axe (Unilever), Bain de Soleil (Schering-Plough), Banana Boat (Playtex Products), Bic Corporation, Biotherm (L’Oreal), Cacharel (L’Oreal), Church & Dwight (Arm & Hammer), Clairol (Procter & Gamble), Clean & Clear (Johnson & Johnson), Clorox Close-up (Church & Dwight), Colgate-Palmolive Co. Coppertone (Schering-Plough)… etc.

To know about more companies check out here – companies that do test on animals

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Stop This firing squad and save the donkey from it

What we desperately need at this time of financial crisis is certainty. Certainty is that this Christmas we have support to prevent the unnecessary suffering of donkeys, mules, horses and other working animals. Some of the horrifying thing is face the prospect of the firing Squad.

Firing squad doesn’t really mean that they will be lined up and shot. They will be fired with a red hot iron in the mistaken belief that it will cure the wound. The picture below shows Humar only one animal that have suffered this, a very ineffective treatment to cure the wound.

Humar use to carry heavy loads for his owner for many years. But now they are suffering so terribly. There are many medicines which can actually reduce the pain and inflammation of the donkey. The only thing they need is some rest to recover.

Like many other people in Morocco, Humar’s owner had little to afford so he turned to a traditional cure. This traditional treatment involves continuous laying of hot iron on to Humar’s shoulder. His suffering didn’t stop there and the cure failed then he later poured the hot boiled engine oil all over Humar. He was in a very dreadful state. They were in need of some immediate relief from this dreadful pain. Much of the skin was dead. But hopefully Humar is unrecognizable today at the distressed donkey pictured.


This Christmas, more than ever we really need your support. Because we don’t want to treat the animal, which has suffered needlessly the Humar did. We want to prevent them in better way. The only way we can prevent this harmful traditional practice is to replace this with the better knowledge that can be passed on from one animal owner to other.

Children who visit our refugees are often responsible for caring for a poor family’s donkey. Through our education programme this children learn to be vigilant to changes in feeding, drinking habits or any other sign of distress. A child who cares for animal well today is the owner of the future.

Practise Gandhigiri and Go Vegetarian – Go Vegan campaign on Gandhi Jayanthi

To honour Mahatma Gandhi’s birthday and mark World Vegetarian Day, members of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) India’s youth arm, petaDishoom, will join with the World Alliance for Youth Empowerment (WAYE), which is the youth arm of H H Sri Sri Ravi Shankar’s Art of Living and ProSoya Foods, as well as hundreds of concerned citizens in Pune on Tuesday with a vital message: go vegetarian! The demonstrators will congregate in a field and position their bodies to form the words “Go Veg”. Then, wearing animal masks and holding signs and banners emblazoned with pro-vegetarian messages, they will march towards Sambhaji Park on Junglee Maharaja Road. petaDishoom has tied up with College Of Engineering Pune’s Technical Fest, Mindspark 2008 for the March for Animals.

The makers of Staeta soya milk – a healthy and humane alternative to cows’ milk, which is often adulterated and cruelly obtained – will provide soya milk to the participants:

Date: Tuesday, 30 September

Time: 12 noon

Place: Boys Hostel, College of Engineering, Pune, Shivaji Nagar

As Gandhiji said, “The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the ways its animals are treated”. Today, India would not want to be judged by the treatment of chickens and cows raised and killed for food. The animals are confined to filthy sheds, or tabelas, and they are denied everything which is natural and important to them. Their slaughter is crude, terrifying and often painful, and they are sometimes dismembered while they are still conscious.

Eating animals is also bad for your health and the environment. Consumption of meat and other animal products has been conclusively linked to strokes, heart disease, diabetes, obesity and some types of cancer. And a recent UN report concluded that raising animals for food causes more of the greenhouse-gas emissions blamed for global warming than all the cars, trucks, trains, ships and planes in the world combined.

PETA and ProSoya Foods, the makers of Staeta soya milk, have had a long and happy partnership. When the company began marketing Staeta soya milk in 2004 and sought vegans’ support, PETA was the first vegan organisation to try out the product. PETA endorsed Staeta’s superior taste and nutrition value and urged its members to give the product their wholehearted support.

In 2005, ProSoya Foods and Staeta won PETA’s Proggy Award for the Best Soya Milk Company. Both PETA and Staeta have organised several road shows across India to spread awareness of animal suffering and the availability of soya milk as a dairy alternative.

“[Soya milk] is more than an issue of nutrition in a country where more than 70 per cent of people cannot digest lactose, the milk sugar present in dairy milk and its products”, says N Jagirdar, ProSoya Foods’ vice president of marketing. “There is also the larger issue of animal welfare and of assisting people to inflict no harm to our fellow creatures who inhabit this Earth with us. That’s why ProSoya and PETA are working together to raise awareness in peoplefor aharmonious co-existence with animals. Soymilk is a healthy and nutritious alternative to dairy milk to other seekers of good health”

As the youth branch of The Art of Living Foundation, WAYE states that its mission is to work “towards empowering young people physically, spiritually, economically and socially for enabling their participation and leadership towards taking active responsibilities to work towards contemporary issues and challenges facing their communities and societies at large”. When asked his thoughts on vegetarianism, Khurshed Batliwala, director of WAYE, quipped, “I don’t eat my pets – why do you?”

“Gandhiji would be saddened to see how the millions of animals who are killed for food are treated in our country, and the simplest and easiest formula to Gandhigiri is to give up eating animals”, says Simran Kodesia, PETA India’s youth marketing coordinator. “It’s a fact: the best thing you can do for your health, animals and the Earth is to go vegetarian.”