The Jewish Chronicle

‘We must battle to protect kashrut and brit in Europe’

- BY FELIX POPE BUDAPEST

JEWS ACROSS Europe face a major battle to stop the ban of both circumcisi­on and imports of kosher meat, community leaders have warned.

Speaking in Budapest at the European Jewish Associatio­n (EJA) annual conference, rabbis and politician­s said religious freedom was increasing­ly under threat. EJA chair Rabbi Menachem Margolin said Jews had been protecting their religious traditions “for many years”.

He said: “Too many states acted or are acting to ban ritual slaughter.

The ban on ritual slaughter is very problemati­c.

First it was restrictio­ns then a ban and later they will ban exports of kosher meat and even ban imports.”

Belgian Holocaust survivor and former restaurant owner Regine Suchowolsk­i-Sluszny told the JC that the ban imposed by two out of three of her nation’s regional authoritie­s on kosher slaughter was making Jewish life harder. Frozen kosher food could be imported for the time being from Poland, she added, but its quality was worse.

Polish Senator Michal Kaminski claimed his country’s status as a kosher meat exporter would help Jews convince its government not to ban the practice.

He said: “In Poland’s history, religious slaughter was always legal except during Nazi occupation. For almost 1,000 years it was legal… it was a part of Polish tradition.”

Belgian MP Michael Freilich said defenders of religious slaughter could not rest on scientific arguments alone.

“Regular scientific consensus says kosher slaughter means the animal does feel pain,” he said, “even if it’s found out that shechita is less humane we should be allowed to do it because it’s fundamenta­l to our religion.”

He warned religious circumcisi­on was the next big fight: “We are preparing ourselves for that battle. Starting a debate is a very difficult thing because you risk alienating people.”

Israel’s ambassador to Hungary warned there were “stormy days” ahead for European Jewry. Yacov Hadas-Handelsman said the community was facing: “[The] rise of antisemiti­sm around the world and a threat towards Jews to continue living in their traditiona­l ways, with kosher slaughter and circumcisi­on in Jewish communitie­s.” Hungarian Chief Rabbi Slomó Köves insisted that while fighting hatred, Jews must not forget “the freedom to thrive”.

Too many states acted or are acting to ban ritual slaughter

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