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Rabbi Yerachmiel Morrison |
OU Profile:
Rabbi Yerachmiel Morrison
A Rabbinical Coordinator with All the Right Ingredients
By Bayla Sheva Brenner
Upon entering Rabbi Yerachmiel Morrison’s corner office, which faces
Broadway on one side and Manhattan’s East River on the other, an array of
pastries and chocolates greeted me. Decoratively arranged on a cabinet
amid assorted liquors, including a classic bottle of Cherry Heering, the
display of good taste and elegance served as a fitting introduction to the
decorous rabbi seated behind the desk, focused on an involved phone
conversation about figs. He welcomed me with his veddy proper South
African accent. “Please help yourself,” he motioned to the abovementioned
goodies. “My son just got engaged,” he explained and continued with his
fig call. I turned down the offer, but wished him mazal tov. “Give me a
report on the process you are using as soon as you can, won’t you? Thank
you.” With that he hung up. As the honking below us receded from earshot,
I felt I had officially entered the hectic, essential world of the OU’s
Director of the Ingredient Approval Registry (IAR).
Rabbi Morrison began his work at the OU over a decade ago. Before entering
the field of kashrut, he served for seven years as Rav of the Springs
Hebrew Congregation, a suburb of Johannesburg and for six in South
Africa’s Port Elizabeth community. Among his other varied rabbinical
responsibilities, he oversaw both areas’ kashrut needs. This wealth of
experience proved invaluable for the formidable demands placed on the
Rabbinical Coordinator (a.k.a. RC) at the helm of the OU’s ingredients
registry. “This is the grassroots, the absolute foundation of kashrut,”
says Rabbi Morrison. “You can’t have kashrut unless you are going to start
off with kosher ingredients.” According to Rabbi Morrison, the procedures
he and his adept staff implement daily leave no room for error (as much as
humanly possible). The OU’s database contains 200,000 products from food
companies across the globe, of which it keeps close track. “We have to
review constantly what we are accepting and rejecting, as well as what we
are uncertain about,” says the rabbi. “This meticulous surveillance and a
lot of siyata d’Shamaya (Divine assistance) insures that we are able to
certify products that are meeting the highest standards.”
How the Jews Got to South Africa/The Errant Flight of the Fig Wasp
Born in Johannesburg to
native South Africans, Rabbi Morrison actually comes from Lithuanian
ancestry. “My grandparents emigrated from Lithuania, as did the forbearers
of most South African Jews,” he says. “The story goes that a lone
Lithuanian Jew, named Sammy Marks, ventured to South Africa back in the
1870’s, made a fortune, and then single-handedly rebuilt his shtetl’s old
shul back home.” Apparently, this made quite an impression on the
Lithuanian Jewish community. Enough so that many others followed his
mazaldik lead. “I think there’s a more persuasive reason they settled
there,” says Rabbi Morrison. “With its small villages at the time, South
Africa most likely reminded them of the shtetlach of home.”
“Mazal tov! Mazal tov! You should have nachas.” More delighted partakers
of the sweet offerings, among them a fellow RC. “Please make a bracha;
don’t hesitate.” The pressing fig issue came up again. “Figs have reached
a point that many times I opened them and I did in fact find insects, a
worm or a fly,” said Rabbi Morrison to his colleague happily munching on a
cookie. “Something you definitely don’t want to eat. I haven’t eaten figs
for decades.” His colleague heartily agreed. “There’s actually a fig
wasp,” he said, supporting the Rabbi Morrison’s case. “Enzymes dissolve
much of it, but the wing parts often remain.” He finished up his chocolate
delicacy, wished the father of the chatan well and left.
Rabbi Morrison attended the local yeshiva high school and at 17 flew to
Cleveland, Ohio (his first trip to America) to attend the Telshe Yeshiva,
where he learned for six pivotal years under the brilliant Torah tutelage
of Rav Mordechai Gifter, Rav Boruch Sorotzkin, and YBL”H Rabbi Chaim
Stein. “What a zechut it was,” says Rabbi Morrison. “to be in the same
institution as so many outstanding minds and to be able to study under
such giants as were the Rashei Yeshiva of Telshe, past and present. They
were people of tremendous depth and character and brought with them a
wealth of history – a world my parents and grandparents often spoke
about.” Rabbi Morrison maintained a strong connection with the Rashei
Yeshiva over the years. “The Telshe outlook was believing one should not
position himself in a secluded ivory tower, rather, they stressed that one
has a responsibility towards the wider community – a community
consciousness.”
Rabbi Morrison brought that community consciousness back to South Africa
and accepted his first rabbinical position. Not yet married, he traveled
to Israel on vacation and met his future wife through her brother-in-law,
who happened to be the rabbi’s friend. He returned to South Africa and
continued his congregational duties as he took on the added station of
husband and soon father.
Next Stop – OU
After 13 productive
years in the pulpit, Rabbi Morrison heard about and applied for the
position of RC at the OU. The job entailed approving or rejecting
ingredients that OU-certified companies and plants wished to use. “It’s a
task that requires a close liaison with all the other certifying agencies
and attaining a comprehensive familiarity with each of their kashrut
standards,” says Rabbi Morrison. “I have to make absolutely certain that
these various agencies’ standards meet those of the OU’s.” He explains
that many products under OU supervision use ingredients certified by other
agencies and that there are hundreds of these agencies throughout the
world. “One product might have a hundred different ingredients used along
the production line certified by all sorts of agencies,” he continues. “We
have to make absolutely sure each one of these components and
sub-components are meeting our criteria. When a consumer buys a product
with an OU on the label, he is entitled to expect that everything that
went into making that product meets OU standards.” If necessary, Rabbi
Morrison sends an OU kashrut rabbi to a factory in order to review the
processes and hashgacha associated with a particular ingredient or
sub-ingredient.
The world’s ever-advancing technological blitz does not only determine
what our minds ingest, but our bodies as well. Food production has become
an increasingly complicated business and OU kashrut rabbis require a
significant measure of scientific knowledge. They frequently consult with
professionals within the industry to clarify the precise chemical makeup
of products under consideration. A typical company’s products may contain
a few hundred ingredients and Rabbi Morrison’s rabbinical crew carefully
educates and guides those unfamiliar with the intricacies of kashrut
through the process of producing kosher products. “When we have the facts
and know the minute details involved in the manufacturing process, we can
then determine how it impacts upon the product’s kashrut status,” says
Rabbi Morrison. Once a product and/or ingredient passes, all the pertinent
details are recorded and takes its place among OU’s massive files. “We
have a long hallway wall lined with files,” says the OU’s ingredients
maven. His department employs a worker who files full-time, seven people
busy entering the nonstop flow of data, and additional staff to process
new company applications.
Although this intensive investigative process keeps most of his moments
occupied, the rabbi manages to invest some quality time with his family,
as well as in Torah learning and teaching. He also enjoys a classical
music break, with a preference for Bach. He wants his children to be happy
and to find self-fulfillment as good, committed, and loyal Jews. “That’s
what we all pray for.”
As director of the IAR,
Rabbi Morrison has seen many interested cases come across his desk.
“Anything that can potentially be used in the production of food is going
to come through the Registry,” he says. The rabbi asked me to pick up a
Styrofoam container amid the important documents before him. “Do you know
what that is?” I gazed at what looked like tiny, translucent flower
petals. “Those are scales. We are examining if a particular fish is kosher
or not,” he explained. “We picked the scales off a fresh King Clip and
brought it in for our poskim to have a look in order to determine if they
are halachically considered to be scales.” Apparently, this is not a fish
generally found in the USA and other countries are now attempting to
export it.
The rigorous research continues. As Rabbi Morrison said, “This is the
grassroots, the absolute foundation of kashrut.” And the main ingredient
that formulates that solid start is the managerial finesse of a dedicated,
seasoned Rabbinical Coordinator.
“I came to wish you a mazal tov, rabbi.”
“Thank you and you yours. Please make a bracha; take some Cherry Heering!”
Bayla Sheva Brenner is Senior Writer in the Communications and Marketing
Department at the OU.
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Shabbat Shalom
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