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Statement
of Rabbis and
Certifying Agencies on Recent Publicity
on Kosher Slaughter
As rabbis and certifying agencies
involved in the supervision of kosher meat
slaughter in the United States, we are deeply concerned that the
recent publicity surrounding the
videotape released by a group called People for
the Ethical Treatment of Animals may lead to
misconceptions about the practices
depicted on the videotape and, more generally, about the shechita
process itself. We therefore wish to state as
follows:
1. Shechita involves the slicing or cutting of the trachea and esophagus
with a sharp knife without nicks in a
manner which has been established over
centuries to be the most humane form of animal slaughter.
Shechita typically renders the animal insensible almost
instantaneously.
2. After the animal has been rendered
insensible, it is entirely possible that
it may still display certain reflexive actions, including those
shown in images portrayed in the video.
These reflexive actions should not be mistaken
for signs of consciousness or pain, and they do
not affect the kosher status of
the slaughtered animal's meat. There may be
exceptional circumstances when, due to
the closing of jugular veins or a carotid artery
after the shechita cut, or due to the
non-complete severance of an artery or vein, the
animal may rise up on its legs and
walk around. Cases when animals show such
signs of life after the slaughter process are
extremely rare, and even such an event would not
invalidate the shechita if the trachea and esophagus were severed
in the shechita cut.
3. With the act of shechita, it is common to cut the carotid arteries, a
practice designed to facilitate bleeding and accelerate
unconsciousness. Excision of the trachea,
however, is not common practice. We wish to make
clear that nothing in any such post-shechita
"second cut" or excision in any way
undermines the validity of the shechita itself
or the kosher status of the slaughtered animal's
meat. We further note that regulations of the
U.S. Department of Agriculture
explicitly approve a second cut to facilitate bleeding.
4. We reaffirm our commitment to the Jewish mandate of avoiding "tzaar
baalei chayim," unnecessary pain to any creature. We reiterate that
the shechita process embodies this very mandate.
We rededicate ourselves to the ongoing
responsibility of ensuring strict compliance with all
religious and federal laws governing kosher slaughter.
Rabbi Yisroel Belsky
Halachic Consultant
Orthodox Union
Rabbi Sholem Fishbane
Kashruth Administrator
Chicago Rabbinical Council
Rabbi Menachem Genack
Rabbinic Administrator
Kashrus Division
Orthodox Union
Rabbi Asher Hatchuel
Rabbinic Head
Sephardic Beth Din of America
Rabbi Moshe Heinemann
Rabbinic Administrator
Star-K Certification
Rabbi Emanuel Holzer
Chairman, Kashrus Committee
Rabbinical Council of America
Rabbi Chaim Kohn
Rabbinic Administrator
Khal Adas Jeshurun
Rabbi Gedalia Dov Schwartz
Head of Beth Din
Chicago Rabbinical Council
Rabbi Yitzchok Stein
Rabbinic Head
Beth Din of Karlsburg
Rabbi Yechiel Steinmetz
Rabbinic Judge
Monsey, NY
Rabbi Aaron Teitelbaum
Nirbater Rav
Rabbinic Supervisor
Alle Processing Corporation
Rabbi Menachem Meir Weissmandl
Rabbinic Head
Nitra Beth Din of Monsey
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