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Shark fin soup

Scuba diver helps get shark fin soup off menu

(From signonsandiego.com)- Some local scuba divers and an executive chef combined this week to eliminate a controversial seafood item from a menu for a Chinese New Year celebration. Scuba-diving enthusiast Carl Robbins noticed the menu in an advertising flyer from Barona Valley Ranch Resort & Casino. Among the offerings was shark fin soup, the controversial Asian delicacy that relies on the fins of sharks, some of which are finned and released in a mutilated state back into the sea. The practice is being blamed for a decrease in shark populations around the world.

The Year of the Ox, which commences Jan. 26, was going to be started with some fin of the shark, which traces its beginnings to the Ming Dynasty in the mid-1300s.

Outraged, Robbins sent e-mails to Barona and alerted fellow scuba divers and watermen. Robbins, citing Web sites and documentaries, detailed why it’s inhumane to offer such a menu item. It’s been estimated that every year tens of millions of sharks die a slow death because of finning. Robbins’ e-mail to Dean Thomas, executive chef at Barona, explained his stance.

“Today we live in a world that often places the interests of people far above those of the majority of other creatures that share planet Earth with us,” Robbins wrote.

“The negative impact seen in our world’s oceans through the ruthless slaughter of sharks for nothing more than their fins has been well-documented. It is a practice that has been long identified with organized crime not to mention the inhumanity towards the sharks as well as the enormous impact to our oceans and therefore to our world.”

Robbins’ plea to chef Thomas extended to the American Indian tribe at Barona.

“The Native Americans associated with the Barona culture often emphasize their natural heritage and strong association with the natural world,” Robbins wrote. “As their ancestors would never tolerate such blatant waste and destruction neither should the living sons and daughters of the Barona Band of Mission Indians. You can help make a difference in maintaining healthy oceans and therefore a healthy world through the simple act of not purchasing and then providing shark fins at this celebration.”

Robbins’ e-mail and others drew an immediate response from Thomas, who removed shark fin soup from the Barona Chinese New Year celebration menu.

“Thank you sincerely for expressing your beliefs with the concerns on shark fins,” Thomas said via e-mail. “I can only state embarrassment in this year’s decision to menu this ‘culture’ item with our Asian New Year Celebration. I totally agree with the belief and can assure you (I) will support the education of our planet’s sustainability in all the ways possible as a chef. Please forgive my mistake and oversight on this occasion. We have removed shark fin soup from our menu.”

Thomas pointed out that the Barona Resort’s culinary department is “strongly active in many sustainable supported efforts such as saving the seals in Canada, SLOW FOOD Members in San Diego, Chefs Collaborative activists and using MANY local/regional ingredients to reduce greenhouse gasses; to the extent of our own produce and herbs Chef’s garden on property. We do educate our staff of these world topics also through our Barona Culinary Institute.”

Satisfied that he has helped prevent shark abuse for the Barona event, Robbins has turned his attention to the rest of California. He has e-mailed Don Koch, director of the California Department of Fish and Game, requesting an appearance before the state Fish and Game Commission to “establish a law that prohibits the use of shark products in California.

“I am not a ‘soapbox type’ nor a shark lover per se,” Robbins said. “But rather I am a planet Earth lover and recognize that there are complicated interactions between all species that when combined provides the life that we all enjoy and because of that I’ll be willing to step-up-to-the-plate and take my shot at contributing my modest effort in a way that, hopefully, will make this world just a little bit better.”

(By Ed Zieralski)

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