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Message from Rabbi Dr.
Tzvi Hersh Weinreb, OU Executive Vice President, and Rabbi Menachem Genack,
OU Kashrut Rabbinic Administrator
An animal rights group known as People
for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) recently released an
undercover video showing scenes of cows staggering in apparent agony for
several minutes after their throats were cut by the shochet. PETA focused
its attention on one particular plant, AgriProcessors, Inc., but these
accusations have implications for all kosher shechita, particularly
because the video has received attention in the media world, beginning
with an article in The New York Times, on Tuesday, November 30th, 2004.
The Orthodox Union is very concerned about these accusations. We are
sensitive to the inhumane treatment of animals, and empathize with those
who are upset by the images of apparent cruelty recorded on this video. As
is well known, Judaism abjures cruelty to animals and enjoins us to be as
humane as possible in our legitimate utilization of them. That shechita is
a very humane method of slaughtering animals has been substantiated over
the past century by numerous scholarly articles and scientific opinions.
After carefully studying the video, Rabbi Menachem Genack, Rabbinic
Administrator of the OU Kashrut Division, and Rabbi Yisroel Belsky, one of
its distinguished poskim (rabbinic decisors), traveled to Postville, Iowa,
to review the procedures at the AgriProcessors plant. They found that
these procedures meet all OU standards to the highest degree, and that the
shochtim (rabbinic slaughterers) are all highly proficient, skilled and
knowledgeable. Nevertheless, the OU and AgriProcessors, Inc. have worked
together to make certain changes, namely that the trachea will no longer
be removed following shechita, and that any animals that appear to have
survived the procedure will be promptly stunned or shot. These changes are
described more fully below.
The following facts will help provide a perspective on this matter:
1. Slaughtering animals for human consumption is never a pretty sight. An
abattoir is obviously a place where one will see living, vibrant animals
transformed into meat. This is generally a bloody and unpleasant
experience, but this is universal. Indeed, PETA acknowledges that the
shechita process is better than most general slaughtering.
2. While unnecessary cruelty to even one animal is intolerable, one has to
look at the total picture before judging the matter. To those unfamiliar
with the slaughter industry—kosher or non-kosher—scenes showing post-shechita
movement of several animals, such as are shown on the video, can be very
disturbing. But it must be realized that during the six or seven weeks
during which the video was taken, approximately 18,000 animals were
slaughtered by the plant in question. With such numbers, it is inevitable
that aberrations do sometimes occur, and those shown in the video
represent only a tiny percentage of the total number processed in that
time span. Viewers of the video will also note that it does show regular
instances of shechita where the animal expired rapidly, without the
apparent suffering observed in other animals.
It is also important to understand that such occurrences are not unique to
the AgriProcessors plant, but happen in every abattoir, whether kosher or
non-kosher. According to the USDA, a slaughterhouse in which up to 5% of
animals killed by any method—including the “humane bolt” and shechita—survive
the first shot or cut, is still considered an approved plant. From now on,
however, when this occurs at AgriProcessors, Inc., the animal will be
promptly stunned or shot, so as not to prolong its suffering. Such animals
will not be sold as kosher.
3. The Orthodox Union is committed to maintaining the highest ritual
standards of shechita without compromising the halacha one whit. In
keeping with these standards, we will strive to the best of our ability to
see to it that animals are treated humanely and to see that, at all the
plants we supervise, any halachically unnecessary practices which may be
seen to be objectionable, are ceased.
During shechita, the carotid arteries,
which are the main supplier of blood to the brain, are severed. This
results in an immediate and massive drop in blood pressure, which renders
the animal insensate in a matter of seconds. At AgriProcessors, Inc., as
at other plants, a second cut is made in the carotid arteries to
facilitate and accelerate the bleeding. This secondary cut is both
approved and encouraged by the USDA. The OU and AgriProcessors, Inc. have
concluded that this cut will now be made without excising the trachea.
4. The United States Department of Agriculture, with which we have a very
cooperative working relationship, supervises this slaughterhouse and has
found nothing amiss in its practices. Its on-site inspector, Dr. Henry
Lawson, has confirmed to us his opinion that the conditions there are
humane and that the shechita method of slaughter employed there renders
the animal insensate. Other USDA officials have also visited the plant
subsequent to the release of the video, and will be issuing a report.
5. We continue to vouch for the kashrut of all of the meat prepared by
AgriProcessors, Inc., which was never compromised. Like all the more than
6,000 plants—producing all kinds of foodstuffs—that are certified by the
OU, it has always been under our regular supervision. When this story
broke, several rabbis, in Israel and Europe as well as in the United
States, at first commented negatively on the kashrut of this shechita.
Almost all of them, including the Israeli Chief Rabbinate, have now said
that their initial statements were based on misinformation, and have
retracted them.
Rabbi Dr. Tzvi Hersh Weinreb
Executive Vice President |
Rabbi Menachem Genack
Rabbinic Administrator, OU Kashrut Division |
www.ou.org |