Politics.be

Politics.be (https://forum.politics.be/index.php)
-   soc.culture.belgium (https://forum.politics.be/forumdisplay.php?f=112)
-   -   Belgium considers kosher slaughter ban (https://forum.politics.be/showthread.php?t=38987)

Heinrich. 21 augustus 2005 21:35

Belgium considers kosher slaughter ban
 
BRUSSELS, Aug. 21 - As a small group of voters in this country of 10
million people, Belgium's 30,000 Jews generally keep a low profile.
But the community recently sent representatives to Senate hearings on
a proposed law affecting shechitah, the traditional Jewish method of killing
animals for meat consumption.

Shechitah has been legal in Belgium since 1808, when Napoleon granted
Judaism the status of an official religion. However, because of the size of
the Jewish population in Belgium, not many animals are killed according to
shechitah: Of a total of 549,000 cattle killed in Belgium in 2004, just 382
were killed by kosher slaughterers.

The law under discussion doesn't single out the Jewish practice - it
also targets dhabiha, the Muslim method of slaughter - but the legislation
clearly is aimed at reining in religious slaughtering.

Belgium's chief rabbi, Albert Guigui, one of two experts representing
Belgian Jewry at the hearings, said the proposed law "stigmatizes meat that
was killed for Jews and Muslims."

The second representative, Pinchas Kornfeld, a community leader from
Antwerp, claimed that the law "mainly tried to attack the Muslims, but the
Jews will also feel the effects of it."

The law was proposed nearly a year ago by Jean-Marie Dedecker, a
senator from the Flemish Liberals and Democrats, a center-right political
party. The legislation is a private initiative, however, as Dedecker's party
refuses to support it.

Dedecker's main support has come from an unexpected corner: the Vlaams
Belang, a far-right Flemish political party that some accuse of racism.

The law was created after Global Action in the Interest of Animals, a
local animal-rights group, brought the issue of ritual slaughter to Dedecker
's attention.

The legislation urges the government to crack down on animal slaughter
outside of government-inspected abattoirs. Illegal killings occur yearly
around Id al-Adha, a Muslim festival that traditionally involves the
slaughtering of a sheep for each family.

As many as 22,000 animals are slaughtered illegally for the festival
each year, and Dedecker said he wants to pass the law before next January's
festival.

Kornfeld said the Jewish community has no problem with restricting
slaughter to legal abbatoirs.

"All kosher meat is slaughtered in the official abattoirs and by
certified employees of the Jewish community," he said.

But the community does take issue with other parts of the law: It
proposes mandatory stunning of animals before slaughtering, and labeling all
meat that was "ritually slaughtered."

Stunning an animal before slaughter is against halachah, or Jewish
law, so making stunning mandatory effectively would ban shechitah.

Philip Carmel, Brussels-based international relations director of the
Conference of European Rabbis, said that according to halachah there's no
need for stunning: "The act of shechitah immediately stuns the animal. If we
didn't believe that this method stunned the animal, then we wouldn't have
this method of slaughter. We have a method of slaughter that is humane."

Belgium is not the first country where mandatory stunning has been
proposed. The United Kingdom last year explored the option of introducing
such a measure. The European Commission in 1993 issued a directive that
recognized religious exceptions to regulations calling for mandatory
stunning.

Sweden, a European Union member since 1995, currently is the only E.U.
country that doesn't allow shechitah. Norway and Switzerland, which aren't
E.U. members, also prohibit kosher slaughter, forcing the Jewish communities
there to import kosher meat.

The proposed legislation also focuses on the labeling of meat that was
slaughtered according to religious tradition. Many animals killed according
to the rules of shechitah do not pass additional strict inspections required
for meat to be declared kosher.

Meat that does not pass these additional tests, as well as the hind
quarters of slaughtered animals - which are difficult to make kosher - is
sold to regular butchers. Labeling the meat as slaughtered under religious
guidelines would make clear to consumers that the animal was intended for
Jewish consumption.

"Labeling does not seem so bad at first glance, but in fact it
stigmatizes Jewish slaughter," Kornfeld said. "It's like putting a yellow
star on the animals. If this goes through, it's the end of kosher slaughter
in Belgium."






Hyppelehtivä Karhu 21 augustus 2005 22:15

Re: Belgium considers kosher slaughter ban
 
Belgium is considering slaughter of idiots unable to fu properly their
posts.

--
PGå

Tony Halme presidentiksi!




Alle tijden zijn GMT +1. Het is nu 02:19.

Forumsoftware: vBulletin®
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Content copyright ©2002 - 2020, Politics.be