Hagrid: The Unsung Animal Welfare Activist
Meghna 'Phoenix' Ghatak
Harry Potter has been
an inseparable part of many a millennial's life since 1997 when the first book
came out or latest when the first movie was released in 2001. The scar faced
boy with round glasses became a household name in India and kids like me hid
his tales between our school books and devoured them over and over. Now 500
million and counting worldwide fans recognize with this benevolent boy and his
gang so much so that their merchandise simply fly off the shelves.
But did you know that
Rubeus Hagrid, a half giant who is a gamekeeper and Keeper of Keys and Grounds
of Hogwarts, is an animal welfare activist and an unsung one at that. He has,
throughout the books, made the lives of many a magical beasts' lives better by
simply treating them better and providing better habitats for them. Here are
three such selfless examples set by Hagrid.
1. Norbert: the Norwegian Ridgeback Dragon -
Hagrid acquired him as an egg from a hooded stranger who let him win a drunken
board game in a tavern called the Hog's Head. Harry, Ron and Hermione
brainstorm the stranger to be Professor Quirrell, the henchman of Lord Voldemort in the first book. Hagrid lovingly helps Norbert hatch in his boiler
and endures all his angst and tends to him like his own mother. However, given a
dragon's nature, when Norbert bites Ron, infused with poison, causing him to be
hospitalized and the cause almost discovered, the gang was driven to one
conclusion - letting him go. Hagrid is hysterical to the plan of sending
Norbert to Ron's older brother, Charlie who dealt with dragons in Romania, but
he agrees in the end. So Harry, Ron and Hermione tiptoe Norbert to their
astronomy tower and hand him over to Charlie's friends waiting there. The trio
sadly is given detention by Professor McGonagall when she is tipped by Draco
Malfoy about students being out of bed. Norbert, which in German means bright North,
is revealed to be a girl in the 7th book by Charlie (now renamed Norbert) which
elucidates the aggression displayed in her infancy. Norbert enters and exits in
entirety in just one chapter in the 1st book which is named solely after him
and focuses on his relationship with Hagrid, just enough to establish Hagrid as
an animal activist.
2. Aragog: The Acromantula - in the second book,
Harry is given a glimpse of a giant spider being perceived as the monster
dwelling in the chamber of secrets by Voldemort's diary. This large hairy
spider was kept hidden as a pet by Hagrid, who was himself a student in the
wizarding school during Voldemort's studenthood and upon discovery by
Voldemort's younger self, Tom Marvolo Riddle, is blinded in a murder attempt.
Thereafter, Hagrid is expelled and mercifully hired by the headmaster
(Professor Dumbledore), but Hagrid doesn't stop caring for his pets. Hagrid
relocates the now blind Aragog to the Forbidden Forest and finds him a wife,
Mosag and they beget hundreds of children. Aragog forever remains loyal to Hagrid
and his brood even fights against Voldemort in the great battle at Hogwarts but
they are scared of the Basilisk living in the chamber of secrets. Despite
considering humans as food, he briefly acknowledges Harry and Ron as Hagrid's
friends and delays his children from feasting on them and relays precious
information about his master's innocence. His burial takes place in the sixth
book and is attended by Harry and Professor Slughorn besides Hagrid. It is here
when it's revealed that the venom of an Acromantula is extremely expensive and
Harry uses it to persuade Professor Slughorn to reveal a crucial memory of young
Voldemort. Hagrid's grief during the burial shows the depth of his love for
Aragog.
3. Buckbeak/Withwings : The Hippogriff - We meet
this proud amalgamation of an eagle's head,
front legs and wings with a horse's torso, hind legs and tail in
Hagrid's 'Care of Magical Creatures' class in book number three. He also had
'cruel, steel-colored beak and large, brilliant orange eyes while the talons on
its front legs were half a foot long and deadly looking'. Hagrid brings this
majestic haughty creature to his first class as a Hogwarts professor with
Harry's courageous volunteering, to impress his students and he succeeds when
Buckbeak lets Harry ride him. Harry however had to agree to his rules such as
bowing down politely, unblinking, waiting for his permission and then once on
his back, Harry couldn't pull any of his feathers. This class is however foiled
by Draco Malfoy's jealous actions, which included swearing and threatening
agitated Buckbeak, provoking him to attack him, cost Hagrid his job. Buckbeak
is sentenced to death but is miraculously rescued by Harry and Hermione (with a
little help from Professor Dumbledore and a time turning device) so much so
that he and the former prisoner of Azkaban (Sirius Black) become fugitives of
the wizarding law. Buckbeak returns back to Hagrid after Sirius Black's death
in book seven with a new name and is loyal to Harry as he fights for his cause
against Voldemort in the battle at Hogwarts. Hagrid gets busy with his care and
practices calling him by the new name for Buckbeak's safety, happily.
Post book four, Hagrid
becomes busy with a woman, a tournament, a half brother and then running from
death eaters to fighting in the wizarding battle where he has to carry the
supposedly dead body of Harry to his supporters. This distracts him from animal
welfare as he barely has a home or a job to sustain himself for quite some time
and led a bereft life. But the first three books glorify Hagrid as a gentle
giant who had given up his needs and stature for the welfare of his otherwise
intimidating mystical pets. Despite being a literary character, Hagrid is much
of an inspiration for the millennial and also the new generation Z, to be
kind and generous to even the beasts who
are less than kind to us, perhaps as a result of their natural disposition.
Amazing😻. This is just an untouched part of it. Only be discovered by an animal lover & a keen literature person 🔬
ReplyDeleteThankyou
ReplyDeletenice and knowlegable article wright u https://healthgyan360.blogspot.com/
ReplyDelete