Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Belgian region’s kosher-slaughter ban to take effect on New Year’s Day

Additionally, slaughter in accordance with Islamic law will be banned under the new law.

Shechita (kosher slaughter) of a chicken. Credit: Yofial via Wikimedia Commons.
Shechita (kosher slaughter) of a chicken. Credit: Yofial via Wikimedia Commons.

A ban on kosher slaughter in Belgium’s Flanders region will take effect on Tuesday after a law prohibiting religious animal slaughter was passed last year in the local parliament.

“That provinces within Belgium—the law-making capital of Europe—have passed this type of anti-religious measure is an affront to the European values we all hold so dear,” said Pinchas Goldschmidt, president of the Conference of European Rabbis and Moscow’s chief rabbi.

“Time and again, the Jewish community is told by senior European Union officials that there is no Europe without the Jews, [but] these bans undermine those statements and put Jewish life at risk,” he continued. “We urge E.U. leaders to address this directly to the governments of member states.”

“Words are weak when actions hurt,” added Goldschmidt. “We will continue to make those points to officials when we bring together hundreds of rabbis for our biennial conference in Belgium this spring.”

Jewish law mandates that an animal be healthy and not injured before kosher ritual slaughter, or shechita, and that rendering it immobile (or pre-stunning it) is prohibited; hence, the animal cannot be used.

Additionally, slaughter in accordance with Islamic law will be banned under the new law.

The Wallonia region in southern Belgium passed similar legislation in May 2017 that will take effect in September 2019.

Sweden, Norway, Iceland, Denmark and Slovenia all ban religious slaughter without pre-stunning.

Excluding poultry, Lichtenstein and Switzerland also require pre-stunning.

Poland proposed legislation earlier this year banning kosher slaughter until it was removed from the parliamentary agenda.

Law enforcement thanked the general public for help finding the man in question just one day after the incident.
It comes as the Israeli Foreign Ministry claimed that the paper published a “shameful attack” on the Jewish state before the release of a report on sexual violence on Oct. 7.
“Jewish New Yorkers constitute a minority of New Yorkers across the five boroughs and yet constitute a majority of New Yorkers who face hate crimes in this city,” the New York City mayor said.
“These disturbing incidents further reinforce the importance of clear and transparent safe-access policies,” said Mark Treyger, CEO of the Jewish Community Relations Council of New York.
“Let’s stand together for public safety, common sense and the future of our city,” Michael Novakhov, a Brooklyn representative, said.
“Since our nation’s founding 250 years ago, Jewish people have played an important role in America’s story,” the statement issued by the Republican Governors Association read.