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Last update - 00:00 11/08/2008
Is being kosher about the way you treat your workers as well what you eat?
By The Associated Press
Tags: Agriprocessors, Kashrut 

Very little goes unexamined in the kosher world. From meat and poultry to the coating on vegetables and the ingredients in mouthwash, rabbis who determine whether a product meets Jewish dietary laws scrutinize the most minute details about all things consumed.

For religiously observant Jews, that concern has rarely extended beyond the product itself.

But now, allegations of worker abuse at America's biggest kosher slaughterhouse have some Jews demanding that food companies be judged not just by the purity of their products but by the way their treat their employees.
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"How can you sit at your table and eat a product packaged by a pregnant woman who has been standing on her feet all day?" asked Rabbi Morris Allen of Minnesota.

He is developing a certification program that aims to protect workers and the environment in the kosher industry.

Interest in Allen's hekhsher tzedek, or certificate of righteousness, has
ballooned since a May 12 immigration raid at Agriprocessors in Postville,
Iowa.

Nearly 400 illegal immigrants were arrested at the plant in the biggest such raid on a single work site in U.S. history. State officials say dozens of underage workers were employed there in violation of child labor laws.

Agriprocessors has denied any wrongdoing.

Many Jews are embarrassed and angered by the allegations and, along with some religious leaders, are rethinking what it means to be certified kosher.

The hekhsher tzedek would be awarded to companies that pay fair wages, ensure workplace safety, follow government environmental rules and treat animals humanely, among other criteria.

The program, which could begin as soon as next year, would be separate from the traditional certification process that measures compliance with Jewish dietary law. A company that fails to obtain a hekhsher tzedek could still get its food certified as kosher.

Allen, of Beth Jacob Congregation in Mendota Heights, is developing the
program through the United Synagogue for Conservative Judaism and its
Rabbinical Assembly, to which he belongs. Conservative Judaism holds a middle ground between the liberal Reform and strict Orthodox traditions, allowing some innovation in Jewish law to adapt to modern times.

But it's unclear how much of an effect the certificate would have.

The majority of kosher consumers and certifiers are Orthodox, and they drive the multibillion-dollar U.S. market. Kosher meat is more expensive than standard food, and since large families are the norm among the Orthodox, some fear any changes could increase the cost.

Rabbi Menachem Genack, chief kosher executive of the Orthodox Union, the
largest kosher certifier in the U.S., called Allen's idea unreasonable and unenforceable. He said the Orthodox Union relies on federal and state agencies - who have both the expertise and authority - to monitor plant conditions.

Yet, pressure for change is coming from more than just Conservative Jewish leaders.

Within the Orthodox community, there are signs that Jews in their 20s and 30s are gaining interest in what the Torah says about social justice.

Last year, young Orthodox Jews in New York formed Uri L'Tzedek, an advocacy group on issues such as immigration and labor rights. Leaders of the group, whose name means Awaken to Justice, collected about 2,000 signatures in support of a boycott of Agriprocessors.

They suspended the action when the owners hired a former federal prosecutor as a compliance officer, but are still going ahead with a fact-finding tour of the plant this week, where they will also meet with immigrant workers.

"The younger generations of modern Orthodox Jews are seeking new meaning to their religious expression, going beyond survival and anti-assimilation and just text study," said Shmuly Yanklowitz, a rabbinical student and co-founder of Uri L'Tzedek.

"There have been countless individuals who have felt estranged from the Orthodox community who have been in touch with us. We're getting hundreds of e-mails saying that this has filled a gap."

Despite sharing the ideals of the hekhsher tzedek, Yanklowitz said his group does not support the proposal. He said any systemwide change in kosher production will have to come from within the Orthodox world because of its overwhelming commitment to following Jewish dietary law and the buying power that brings.

Still, Conservative Jewish advocates for the justice certification believe they can bring moral pressure for change.

Rabbi Avram Reisner of Baltimore, a member of the panel of religious law
scholars that guides Conservative Judaism, has written a 20-page analysis of Jewish law on wages, working conditions and other business issues in support of the hekhsher tzedek.

"The Conservative movement has hauled the Orthodox establishment out in a way they hadn't anticipated," Reisner said.

"We're not looking to horn in on the business. We're looking to expand the envelope so the kosher consumer can buy things that they feel good about."

Related articles:
  • U.S. kosher meat prices likely to soar after raid on Iowa plant
  • Repairing a sacred relationship
  • Coming soon - kosher financial instruments
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      1.   For more info... 00:50  |  W 12/08/08
      2.   Not just food but every product needs supervision 05:22  |  Ilan 12/08/08
      3.   Leftist agenda 05:23  |  Joe 12/08/08
      4.   Rabbi Alen & his movement do not keep Kosher 05:52  |  moshe 12/08/08
      5.   Orthos and justice 09:34  |  Avi-former Orthodox 12/08/08
      6.   Orthos and justice 09:34  |  Avi-former Orthodox 12/08/08
      7.   Not a leftist agenda 10:29  |  TruthMonger 12/08/08
      8.   ABSOLUTELY!As reported this is not kosher behaviour 11:39  |  PETER SM 12/08/08
      9.   Kosher? 11:39  |  Cyclist 12/08/08
      10.   To Avi the non orthodox 12:15  |  Joe 12/08/08
      11.   About time!!! 12:16  |  Chani 12/08/08
      12.   TruthMonger? 12:24  |  Joe 12/08/08
      13.   Response to Cyclist #9 13:24  |  Avi-former Orthodox 12/08/08
      14.   Eating kosher is another display of hypocrisy 14:11  |  Ulf 12/08/08
      15.   Kashrut and Social Justice 16:44  |  Howie 12/08/08
      16.   Well done! 19:31  |  Dafna 12/08/08
      17.   Rabbi Morris Allen of Minnesota - Canj you dissolve Judaism? 19:46  |  NoTo OutOfDate Rules 12/08/08
      18.   Kol hakavod to the Conservatives 19:47  |  David 12/08/08
      19.   Kosher! 20:28  |  Paul 12/08/08
      20.   TO No 14 20:52  |  RICHARD 12/08/08
      21.   TO No 14 20:57  |  RICHARD 12/08/08
      22.   I forgot to add something... 23:44  |  Avi-former Orthodox 12/08/08
      23.   David 00:14  |  Sol 13/08/08
      24.   Maternity leave for working mothers 09:20  |  Susan 13/08/08
      25.   Most conservative Jews don`t even keepkosher 09:22  |  Susan 13/08/08
      26.   Sol #23 09:27  |  Avi-former Orthodox 13/08/08
      27.   #21 Kosher: worth tradition? 14:20  |  Ulf 13/08/08
      28.   Not being kosher, but being worth buying 23:20  |  Arieh Lebowitz 14/08/08
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