Friday, 8 May 2009

EU Moves to Approve Kosher Slaughter


(IsraelNN.com) The European Parliament voted to allow religious animal slaughter (shechita) as part of an amendment on new animal welfare regulations to prevent unnecessary suffering. According to the proposal, animals must be slaughtered in a way the kills them instantly or after stunning. Cases of religious ritual were granted full exemption from these conditions.

"This vote represents the first time that shechita has been recognized as a legitimate form of animal slaughter by any European institution," said Henry Grunwald, president of the Board of Deputies of British Jews and chairman of Shechita EU. Shechita is currently forbidden in Sweden, Norway, Finland, Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania. While Jewish groups have pushed for the legalization of shechita, animal rights groups have called for its ban, claiming that is inflicts severe suffering upon animals. The proposed amendment to the EU laws will be brought before the Council of the European Union next month.

 

 
Fight on Kosher Slaughter in European Union is Not Over


(IsraelNN.com) Despite the European Parliament vote on Wednesday to allow Jewish religious animal slaughter (shechita), a critical vote next month will determine if European Union countries can effectively get around the approval by demanding pre-stunning, which violates Jewish dietary laws as part of an amendment on new animal welfare regulations to prevent unnecessary suffering. According to the proposal approved Wednesday, religious ritual was granted full exemption from a requirement that animals must be slaughtered after stunning or in a way the kills them instantly.

The vote on pre-stunning worries European Jews. "The [proposed] regulation must not be drafted to allow governments in Europe to threaten our culture and our freedom to observe our religion," said Philip Carmel of the Conference of European Rabbis. Serge Cwajgenbaum, Secretary General of the European Jewish Congress, added that “the Jewish community takes seriously the issues of human rights and the humane treatment of animals.”

Shechita is currently forbidden in Sweden, Norway, Finland, Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania. Switzerland allows the method for poultry but not for other animals.

 

 
EU Legalizes Kosher Slaughter, Pro-Animal Groups Want Ban
by Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu   Iyar 13, 5769 / May 7, '09   http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/131239

(IsraelNN.com) The European Union Parliament on Wednesday voted to legalize kosher slaughtering, which has been outlawed by six countries -- but a critical vote next month will determine if EU countries can effectively get around the approval by demanding pre-stunning, which violates Jewish dietary laws.

The European Jewish Congress and conference of European Jewish Rabbis lobbied heavily for the bill and defeated efforts by animal rights groups to ban kosher slaughtering, which demands swift death to the animal by use of a sharp knife at the throat.

Animal rights groups have claimed the method is cruel and have succeeded in banning kosher slaughtering in Latvia, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Estonia and Lithuania. Switzerland allows the method for poultry but not for other animals.

Rabbi Michael Melchior, former chief rabbi of Norway and currently an Israeli Knesset Member, has said that kosher slaughter is actually more humane than the practices in slaughterhouses. "The Torah forbids cruelty to animals, and the shechitah [slaughter] process ensures that the animal loses consciousness immediately," he explained. "We have been dealing with this issue for many years, and there are many scientific studies that back us up."

The EU vote “represents the first time that ‘shechita’ has been recognized as a legitimate form of animal slaughter by any European institution," said Henry Grunwald, President of the Board of Deputies of British Jews and Chairman of Shechita EU, which also fought for the new legislation.

The crucial vote on pre-stunning worries European Jews. "The [proposed] regulation must not be drafted to allow governments in Europe to threaten our culture and our freedom to observe our religion," said Philip Carmel of the Conference of European Rabbis. Serge Cwajgenbaum, Secretary General of the European Jewish Congress, added that “the Jewish community takes seriously the issues of human rights and the humane treatment of animals.”

The anti-kosher slaughtering bills have been viewed as anti-Semitic by many Jews in Europe, where Hitler banned the method as one of his first steps against Jews.

When Holland called kosher slaughtering "cruel" in 2003 but allowed Jews to continue using the method, Rabbi Melchior responded, "They simply don't want foreigners, and they don't want Jews. I won't say this is the only motivation, but it's certainly no coincidence that one of the first things Nazi Germany forbade was kosher slaughter.”

Attempts by Swiss Jews to lift its 100-year-old ban on kosher slaughtering caused an anti-Semitic backlash. In Sweden, there have been attempts to forbid circumcision, a Jewish law that has bound Jews for 3,500 years.

Abraham Foxman, the national director of the U.S.-based Anti-Defamation League, has said that anti-Semitic politicians “aid and abet” animal right activists. “What other issues of animal rights have they engaged in to prohibit cruelty? When they begin and end with kosher slaughter, that's when it becomes suspect,” he stated.

 
 
 
From comments:
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No, the EU did NOT approve of kosher slaughter because, of course, kosher slaughter is not kosher when an animal has to be pre-stunned, which is what they will vote on next month.  Just in case you are wondering why that would be a separate vote--consider the fact that most Muslim authorities consider electrical pre-stunning of Halal meat to be OK.  So, the EU can make Halal meat legal but keep Jews from having Kosher meat.  Why are we surprised? The rights of chickens, sheep, and cattle have always been more important to the EU than the rights of Jews.  Nothing changes.
 
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Please be advised that the EU's animal rights advocates are not disclosing their failed attempts to slaughter humanely. For example, when their "stun-guns" miss their mark or are ineffective, they simply club the animals on the head or shoot them to finish their failed job.