THREE TIME OLYMPIC GOLD MEDALIST CAUGHT…
In the world of dressage, few names shine brighter than Charlotte Dujardin.
A three-time Olympic gold medallist, Dujardin is often hailed as a paragon of harmony, grace, and mastery between horse and rider.
But behind the polished performances and standing ovations, a disturbing truth surfaced in July 2024 — one that shattered the illusion of gentle artistry in elite equestrian sport.
Footage emerged of Dujardin repeatedly whipping a horse on the hind legs, not during a race, not in a high-adrenaline moment — but in a training session…
Cold. Calculated. And caught on camera.
THE FOOTAGE NO ONE CAN UNSEE
The video showed Dujardin striking the horse multiple times — the whip cracking against sensitive flesh. The horse’s body language was unmistakable: distress, avoidance, a visible attempt to escape the escalating punishment. This wasn’t a miscommunication. It wasn’t a moment of “firm correction.” It was cruelty, laid bare.
The response from the International Equestrian Federation (FEI) was swift — and rare.
Dujardin was fined CHF 10,000 (approximately A$18,867) and handed a 12-month suspension.
In a sport notorious for protecting its own, this was a public rebuke of one of its brightest stars.
But what does it say about the culture that allowed it to happen in the first place?
DRESSAGE: A SPORT OF BEAUTY BUILT ON PRESSURE
Dressage is often described as “ballet on horseback.” Its devotees speak of lightness, trust, and communication.
Yet, behind the scenes, many horses are subjected to harsh bits, spurs, tight nosebands, and, as this footage confirms, whipping — all under the guise of precision and discipline.
Dujardin’s actions are not an isolated failure of character. They reflect a broader truth in elite equestrianism: performance is demanded at any cost, and horses are expected to comply, or else.
We’re told these animals are “partners.” But what kind of partnership relies on fear to function?
WHIPPING IS NOT TRAINING – IT’S TRAUMA
Just like Nico, the horse in the Heath Ryan case, the horse in this footage doesn’t appear to be defiant.
The horse appears confused, overwhelmed, trying — and failing — to avoid pain.
The term many equine behaviorists use is “learned helplessness” — when an animal no longer reacts, not because it understands, but because it has given up trying to escape the inevitable.
And yet the whip comes down again.
WHAT WE THE FALLOUT & THE SILENCE THAT FOLLOWED
Dujardin issued a carefully worded apology and quietly returned to competition after serving her suspension.
Media coverage faded. Sponsors stayed silent. Fans largely forgave.
And the horse? Forgotten.
No one asked what long-term effects that moment of “discipline” might have had on the animal.
No one demanded a deeper reckoning from the sport that enabled it.
No one seriously questioned why whipping is still considered acceptable in training at all.
But we will.
IT’S TIME TO END THE WHIP
Charlotte Dujardin’s case proves that cruelty doesn’t just happen in backyards or slaughter pipelines.
It happens in Olympic arenas.
It happens in training rings behind closed doors.
And it happens wherever horses are seen not as sentient beings — but as tools.
At Meet Our Horse Meat, we fight to expose these truths. And we fight not just with words, but with action — by supporting real horses in need, pushing for policy change, and calling out cruelty wherever it hides.
BE THE VOICE. SUPPORT THE WORK.
Every story like this one reminds us why we do what we do. But we can’t do it alone.
Your donation supports:
Investigative advocacy to expose abuse
Care for at-risk horses we help rescue
Campaigns to ban whipping and other abusive practices
Public education to shift the culture of equestrian sport
If you believe horses deserve better — stand with us.
Because gold medals should never be stained with suffering.
#MOHM THREATENED?
We’ve been threatened by those in the horse racing industry and those who benefit from horse slaughter more times than we can count.
But we are not going away.
We are going to persist until horse slaughter no longer exists for any purpose within Australia -- and until the horse racing industry makes drastic changes.
We are going to continue our hands-on work to offer lifelong sanctuary to as many horses as possible. We generally have 20 at just one of our locations - at any given time.
We have the acreage to take on more horses as financial support allows.
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