Last week The Jew & The Carrot posted an article about the ”shackle and hoist” scheitah (kosher slaughter) methods used to produce much of the kosher meat imported to Israel. Yesterday, YNet reported the response from The Israeli Chief Rabbinate and OU Chairman. Thanks to The Jew & The Carrot reader, Joshua, for bringing this article to our attention.
Rabbinate: Import Meat Only if ‘Morally Slaughtered’
YNet - 2.20.08
By: Neta Sela
PETA and the Torah? Following the lead of The Society for Prevention of Cruelty to animals, which has long protested against cruel “lift and bind” slaughter techniques practiced in many United States and South American slaughterhouses, the Israeli Chief Rabbinate has also decided to work to eliminate such techniques.
At a recent conference involving the Chief Rabbitate’s Kashrut Committee as well as Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi Yona Metzger, a decision was made to only sanction meat imported to Israel as having undergone a kosher shechita (ritual slaughter) if the animal was killed utilizing the relatively more humane “boxing” technique.
The “boxing” method involves capturing the animal in a crate and “flipping it over” before slaughtering it. This is a more modern technique, commonplace in today’s slaughterhouses, and which undeniably causes the animal far less grief.
The Chief Rabbinate also vowed to “consult with experts and find other, practical solutions that will ease the pain and suffering on animals undergoing shechita.”
Leading to the Chief Rabbinates decision was an appeal by Orthodox Union (OU) Chairman, Rabbi Menachem Genack. The OU is the largest body in the United States overseeing kosher certification.
The OU contacted Chief Rabbi Metzger after numerous pleas by animal rights’ groups in the United States, protesting what they deemed are cruel and inhumane “bind and lift” techniques practiced in kosher slaughterhouses.
In a letter to Genack, the chief rabbi noted that the pictures coming from these kosher slaughterhouses, which clearly document the animals’ pain and suffering, were indeed “extremely painful to look at”.
Also noting the political power held by animals’ rights groups in the US, Metzger also highlighted the PR damage that could be caused should such cruel shechita techniques persist. “There is undoubtedly here that extends far beyond cruelty to animals,” he wrote to Genack.
The Chief Rabbinate will also encourage slaughterhouses in Israel to abandon “lift and bind” slaughter techniques and utilize the “boxing” method instead. The Hakol Chai animal rights’ group commended the chief rabbinates decision.

it reveals plainly the bias prevalent in the kashrut establishment that the conservative movement deplored and condemned the procedure of “hoisting and shackling” a almost 8 years before the OU decided to get off its corrupt tush and do something about it.
Thanks so much for your previous post about shackling and hoisting and for this one as well.
While Israel’s Chief Rabbinate has “made a conceptual decision to” do away with shackling and hoisting, “the implementation is something different, something that is going to take a long time” (that’s in the words of the Orthodox Union’s Menachem Genack in a 2/21 Forward article). While the proposed phase-out is good news, the lack of a time frame means that it might be meaningless for now.
I’m admittedly late to post about the proposed phase-out, but I just did so here:
http://heebnvegan.blogspot.com.....g-and.html (OR http://tinyurl.com/23c9pk). I definitely refered to — and linked to — the YNet article and this The Jew & The Carrot post in my post. :-)