Not Kosher
July 10, 2008Germany's main Jewish group rejected Wednesday, July 10, the latest criticism of kosher slaughter practices, and was immediately backed by a Turkish group in Germany speaking on behalf of Muslims.
Both Islam and Judaism reject the stunning of animals before slaughter and prescribe that animals be killed by a swift throat cut.
Speaking on Germany's main public broadcaster ARD, Ernst Breitling, president of Germany's federal chamber of veterinarians had earlier called kosher and halal slaughter "cruelty to animals."
The body has demanded a change in German law to end an exemption for minority butchers which he said had allowed 500,000 sheep to be slaughtered annually in this way.
Encouraging prejudice
Stephan Kramer, general secretary of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, dismissed the demand, saying it encouraged anti-religious prejudice.
"The prevention of cruelty to animals has the highest priority in Judaism and prevailed long before animal-protection societies and laws existed," he said in Berlin.
Only trained butchers were allowed to do such slaughtering and the animal lost consciousness within seconds this way. He denied stunning was more humane.
The Turkish Society in Germany, a secular group with mainly Muslim members, agreed. Its president, Kenan Kolat, said in Berlin the halal slaughter method in Islam killed animals without any cruelty.
Religious freedom
German Agricultural Minister Horst Seehofer also rejected calls for a law against slaughter without stunnung.
"Politicians cannot ignore religious freedom," he said, in a reference to the fact that Federal Constitutional Law grants minorities the right to live according to their faith among themselves if they otherwise observe the law, as well as the right to exercise freely their chosen profession or trade.
In 1995, the German Constitutional Court had ruled that Islam did not necessarily demand ritual slaughter, making the practice illegal.
But in 2002, it re-established the right for German butchers to slaughter animals according to Islamic religious ritual in a case brought by a Turkish butcher from Giessen.