( 3 happy end videos) The Australian grandmother Mary Hutton founded 'Free the Bears': she had seen horrifying footage showing extraction of bile from traumatized bears in Asia
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1993, Perth grandmother Mary Hutton saw a television report that changed the course of her life. The footage showed the horrifying extraction of bile from traumatised moon bears held in coffin-sized cages, a cruel practice used in traditional medicine across parts of Asia.
With no previous background in wildlife conservation, Mary began collecting signatures for a petition at her local shopping centre in Perth, Australia. What started as a small community effort quickly grew into a movement.
By 1995, Mary had founded Free the Bears.
Over the next three decades, her determination, and the support of thousands of people around the world, helped transform that grassroots effort into a leading conservation organisation protecting bears across Asia.
Today, Free the Bears operates the largest moon and sun bear sanctuary network in Southeast Asia and has supported the rescue of more than 1,000 bears from bile farms, illegal wildlife trade and other forms of exploitation.
An impressive rescue
Imagine spending your entire life staring at metal bars — never feeling grass under your feet, never seeing open skies above you. Then one day, after 27 long years, you finally step outside and look up for the very first time. That was the reality for a moon bear named Sen.
According to a report by The Dodo, Sen was taken from the wild as a baby and confined to a tiny cage on a bile farm in Vietnam. For nearly three decades, he lived in extreme confinement. Bear bile farming — a practice in which bile is extracted for use in traditional medicine — had kept him imprisoned. Recently, however, bile farming was officially outlawed in Vietnam, opening a path to freedom for bears like Sen.
Animal welfare group Animals Asia negotiated Sen’s surrender and transported him to their sanctuary. For the first time in 27 years, he had space to move, natural ground beneath him, and something most of us take for granted — the sky.
Rescuers described how Sen couldn’t stop looking upward. He stared at the sky again and again, almost as if trying to understand its vastness. Think about the last time you walked outside after being indoors all day — the sunlight feels refreshing. Now imagine being indoors for nearly three decades. That moment becomes overwhelming, almost magical.
Although bile farming is now illegal in Vietnam, more than 150 moon bears are still awaiting rescue. Organizations like Animals Asia continue working to free them, offering them a second chance at life. Sen is now learning how to simply “be a bear” again — exploring grass, splashing in water, relaxing in the sun. These are small joys to us, but for him, they are entirely new experiences.
His story is a powerful reminder of resilience and the importance of compassion. Freedom, fresh air, and sunlight are things we rarely think about — yet for Sen, they marked the beginning of a brand-new life.
Stay connected with Content Analysis for more inspiring stories that highlight both the challenges animals face and the hope created by rescue efforts.
Reference
The Dodo. “He Lived In A Tiny Cage For 27 Years — Now He's Seeing The Sky For The First Time.” By Caitlin Jill Anders, Published February 28, 2026.
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