Become a Member
Simon Rocker

BySimon Rocker, Simon Rocker

Opinion

Beans, not burgers

January 7, 2013 10:47
1 min read

Should the 21st century ideal of kashrut include giving up eating meat altogether? A recent article in the JC has reignited the debate between veggies and fleishniks.

In a letter in this week’s JC, Masorti’s Rabbi Jonathan Wittenberg, puts the meat-free case.

“I care deeply about kashrut. I appreciate the importance of shechitah as truly intended — the way to respect animals and cause them the minimum of suffering at their death. Were the right to practise shechitah again in jeopardy in the UK, I would of course join the community in defending it.

“At the same time I am a non-meat-eater by strong and increasing conviction. Kosher slaughter does not on its own address all the issues involved in the production of meat. Key among these is the principle of tsa’ar ba’alei chayim, avoiding animal suffering, which most rabbinic authorities regard as a Torah-based injunction. There are also wider ecological and economic concerns in regarding meat as a staple food.