A viral video circulating on social media has captured a controversial ritual involving the tossing of baby goats into the air in Tamil Nadu, South India.
The footage, which has garnered millions of views, has reignited a fierce national debate over the intersection of religious tradition and animal welfare.
In the clip reviewed by TNX Africa, a massive crowd is seen cheering as several participants repeatedly hurl young goats high into the air.
The event appears to be a festive celebration, with onlookers filming the spectacle on mobile phones in a densely packed public square.
The tradition has sparked widespread condemnation online, with many users demanding immediate legal intervention.
Meanwhile in South Asia
⚠️ Warning – Trigger warning clip ?‼️
It should abundantly clear by now – that not all cultures are the same. pic.twitter.com/iNIhZCBVlM
— Concerned Citizen (@BGatesIsaPyscho) March 4, 2026
Social media user @OdinMoksha, a farm owner, expressed disbelief at the footage, “The sheer callousness toward life here is shocking and appalling. Especially for baby goats, which are one of the most charming lifeforms. A quick, respectful death of livestock for food is one thing. This is soul-less behavior.”
Others echoed these sentiments, citing India’s own philosophical history.
“To say the very least, shocking!” wrote @Niekie888. “I think Gandhi once said that to get a good idea of the state of a nation is to look at the way it treats its animals.”
According to reports from NDTV, such rituals are not isolated incidents. Similar ceremonies have been documented in Telangana’s Jagtial District, where men were recorded biting the throats of goats.
In other regions, animals have been thrown from heights into rivers as part of local vows.
Authorities have historically moved to suppress these practices, notably during a 2013 crackdown on “goat tossing” at the Mailarlingeshwara fair in Karnataka.
Officials confirmed that cases are now being registered under the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) and the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act.
While some local groups defend the acts as essential ancestral traditions, animal rights activists have in the past maintained that no cultural precedent justifies extreme cruelty.
