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Setting The Record Straight On Kosher Slaughter
By
Rabbi Menachem Genack
Rabbinic Administrator, Kosher Division, Orthodox Union
Many people expressed concern about
the standards for humane treatment of animals at a kosher slaughterhouse
after viewing a well-publicized video of kosher slaughter at the
AgriProcessors plant in Iowa, which was released by the animal rights
organization PETA. Any slaughterhouse, whether kosher or non-kosher, is by
definition a disconcerting, blood-filled and gruesome place. Torah law,
however, is most insistent about not inflicting needless pain on animals
and in emphasizing humane treatment of all living creatures.
Kosher slaughter, shechita, involves cutting the trachea and esophagus
with a sharp, flawless knife. At the same time, the carotid arteries,
which are the primary supplier of blood to the brain, are severed. The
profound loss of blood and the massive drop in blood pressure render the
animal insensate almost immediately. Studies done by Dr. H. H. Dukes at
the Cornell University School of Veterinary Medicine indicate that the
animal is unconscious within seconds of the incision.
After the shechita at AgriProcessors, an additional cut is made in the
carotid arteries to further accelerate the bleeding. This is not done for
kashrut reasons, for after the trachea and esophagus have been severed the
shechita is complete, but rather for commercial reasons, to avoid blood
splash, which turns the meat a darker color. The carotid arteries are
attached to the trachea and at AgriProcessors the trachea was excised to
facilitate the bleeding.
In the overwhelming number of cases the animal is insensate at that time.
However and inevitably, particularly when it is considered that 18,000
cattle were slaughtered during the seven-week period when the video was
shot, there was a tiny percentage of animals whose carotid arteries were
not completely severed so they were not completely unconscious. Although
this is very infrequent, the removal of the trachea immediately after the
shechita has now been discontinued.
It should be kept in mind that in a non-kosher plant, when the animal is
killed by a shot with a captive bolt to the brain, it often has to be
re-shot, sometimes up to six times, before the animal collapses. The USDA
permits up to a five percent initial failure rate.
At AgriProcessors and at other plants it supervises, the Orthodox Union is
committed to maintaining the highest ritual standards of shechita without
compromising the halacha (Jewish law) one bit. The OU continues to vouch
for the kashrut, which was never compromised, of all the meat prepared by
AgriProcessors,
As I indicated previously, images of slaughter – especially selected
images in an abbatoir -- are jarring, particularly to the layman.
Statements by PETA that animals were bellowing in pain after the shechita
are an anatomical impossibility. After the animal’s throat and larynx have
been cut, it cannot vocalize.
PETA is well known for the passion it brings to the issue of animal
rights, but it is an organization devoid of objectivity. PETA’s comparison
of the killing of chickens to the Holocaust is, at a minimum, morally
obtuse. So to whom should we turn for an objective view about the
situation at AgriProcessors and about kosher slaughter in general? Here
are the opinions of some experts:
1. Iowa Secretary of Agriculture Patty Judge inspected the plant. She
found the handling of the animals to be humane and commendable. She said,
after viewing the shechita, that the animals were unconscious within two
to three seconds. She also said that chickens were handled more carefully
by the rabbis than by her own “grandmother on the farm.”
2. AgriProcessors is under constant USDA inspection. Dr. Henry Lawson, the
USDA veterinarian at the plant, told me that he considers the treatment of
the cattle at AgriProcessors to be humane and that the shechita renders
them unconscious within a matter of seconds. He determines this by certain
physiological criteria related to the eyes, tongue and tail of the animal.
3. Earlier this week, Rabbi Dr. I.M. Levinger, a veterinarian and one of
the world’s foremost experts on animal welfare and kosher slaughter,
called the shechita practices at AgriProcessors “professional and
efficient,” emphasizing the humane manner in which the shechita was
handled. Dr. Levinger was also highly impressed with the caliber of the
ritual slaughterers. He issued his evaluation following a thorough two-day
on-site review of shechita practices and animal treatment at the plant. He
viewed the kosher slaughter of nearly 150 animals.
4. AgriProcessors has hired an animal welfare and handling specialist to
evaluate the plant processes. The specialist was recommended by both Dr.
Temple Grandin, a foremost expert in animal welfare, and also by the
National Meat Association. In reviewing the shechita process last week,
the specialist made the following observations:
- The shechita process was performed
swiftly and correctly;
- The shechita cut resulted in a
rapid bleed; and
- All animals that exited the box
were clearly unconscious.
The OU and AgriProcessors are
committed to the Torah principles of humane treatment of animals. At the
OU we constantly review our procedures, evaluate them, and if necessary,
improve or correct them. We don’t want ever to be wedded to a mistaken
procedure. AgriProcessors has been completely cooperative in working with
the OU and shares our philosophy.
As Torah Jews, we are imbued with the teachings which require animals to
be rested along with people on the Sabbath and fed before the people who
own them, and that the mother bird must be sent away before her young are
taken to save her grief. These and similar statutes make it clear that
inhumane treatment of animals is not the Jewish way.
Kosher slaughter, by principle, and as performed today in the United
States, is humane. Indeed, as PETA itself has acknowledged, shechita is
more humane than the common non-kosher form of shooting the animal in the
head with a captive bolt, for reasons noted above. The Humane Slaughter
Act, passed into law after objective research by the United States
government, declares shechita to be humane. For Torah observant Jews, it
cannot be any other way.
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