Jeffrey Cohan,
AlterNet.org
April 2016
We have a Torah that clearly and repeatedly establishes the ideal of veganism and that calls upon us to show great concern for the comfort and well-being of animals. Yet most Jews continue to blithely consume meat, dairy, and eggs as if the welfare of animals were irrelevant.
A divinity student from a Presbyterian seminary approached me one day and
made a surprising comment. “I’m so impressed,” he said, “with the emphasis
that Judaism places on treating animals with compassion.”
I didn’t know whether to kvell (feel pride) or to cry. Kvell,
because all levels of Jewish texts, from the Torah on down, express
incredible sensitivity for the welfare of animals. The divinity student knew
something about Judaism—on paper. Cry, because concern for animals is almost
totally absent from Jewish communal discourse, while literally billions of
farm animals are suffering in abysmal conditions.
We have a Torah that clearly and repeatedly establishes the ideal of
veganism and that calls upon us to show great concern for the comfort and
well-being of animals. Yet most Jews continue to blithely consume meat,
dairy, and eggs as if the welfare of animals were irrelevant.
I say most Jews, but by no means all Jews. In fact, a disproportionate
number of rabbis have adopted vegetarian or vegan diets. Their ranks include
such prominent rabbis as Lord Jonathan Sacks, the former chief rabbi of
Great Britain; Rabbi David Rosen, the former chief rabbi of Ireland; and
Rabbi David Wolpe, the spiritual leader of Sinai Temple in Los Angeles, one
of the flagship Conservative congregations.
Food and the Torah
These rabbis understand that when it comes to something as fundamental as
how we eat, the Torah expresses God’s intentions in no uncertain terms. In
Genesis 1:29, in the very first conversation with Adam and Eve, God tells
them that plant-based foods are theirs to eat—period.
Just in case we didn’t get the message the first time around, God sustained
the Israelites on a vegan diet—manna—to prepare our ancestors for
the Revelation. And at the risk of being redundant, the Torah twice
describes meat eating as emanating from human lust rather than from the
divine will, in Numbers 11:34 and in Deuteronomy 12:20.
The kosher laws in Leviticus obviously permit killing animals for food, but
place a variety of highly restrictive limits and conditions on eating meat.
For example, pigs and shellfish are off-limits, meat may not be served with
dairy products, and even some parts of a cow are not kosher. By contrast,
all fruits, vegetables, grains, nuts, and legumes are permitted. The purpose
of the kosher laws is not altogether mysterious: by making meat eating
inconvenient at best, they clearly convey moral consternation over the
killing of animals.
Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik, the revered founder of America’s Modern Orthodox
movement, wrote, “There is a distinct reluctance, almost an unwillingness on
the part of Torah, to grant man the privilege to consume meat.” It is hardly
coincidental that the easiest way to keep kosher is to be vegetarian or
vegan. We have no need for separate plates, utensils, or dishwashers to keep
meat and dairy apart from each other.
After all, the vegan ideal speaks to the very essence—the raison d’ętre—of
Judaism. Why did God give Jews the Torah if not to bring the divine
attributes of mercy, compassion, and morality into what was—and in many ways
what remains—a brutal, savage world? For thousands of years, the strong have
heartlessly exploited and oppressed the weak. The Torah arrived to save the
world from humanity itself. Jews should be especially sensitive to this
dynamic, for reasons of both theology and history. Have we not been
exploited and oppressed over the millennia?
Compassion or Oppression?
So what do we do when we encounter animals, sentient beings who are at our
mercy, whose care God entrusted to us? What do we do when we’re in the
position of strength?
Tragically, we cram chickens into cages so small they can’t lift a wing; we
brand and often castrate cows without pain relief; we send living male
chicks into grinders and steal newborn calves from nursing cows. Then, after
subjecting them to lives of abject misery, we slit their throats. And for
what reason? Because we like how they taste? Because it’s the conventional
thing to do? Because non-Jews are doing it too?
As Jews, we should be expanding our circle of compassion, not narrowing
it. We should be setting an example, not following the lead of a decadent
society. Precisely because God and our sages recognized the human tendency
to oppress the weak, they liberally sprinkled the Torah—writ large—with
commandments to treat animals with kindness. For instance, in Exodus 23:5,
we’re told to help a donkey who is struggling to bear his load, even if the
donkey belongs to our sworn enemy. We are forbidden in Deuteronomy 22:10 to
yoke an ox and ass to the same plow, for neither one would be able to
proceed at its natural speed. This conveys exquisite sensitivity about
respecting the nature of animals. Animals are even to be given a day of rest
on the Sabbath, per Exodus 20:9. Collectively, the many verses in the Torah
dealing with our treatment of animals are referred to as tza’ar baalei
chayim, the prohibition against causing an animal to suffer.
According to the Shulchan Aruch—the authoritative, sixteenth-century
codification of Jewish law—we are not only prohibited from inflicting pain
on animals but also obligated to relieve their suffering. Modern factory
farming—which is where more than 90 percent of kosher meat comes from—makes
a mockery of these beautiful teachings. Accordingly, the aforementioned
Rabbi Rosen has asserted that virtually all meat should be considered
non-kosher, due to the egregious contrast between Jewish law and
contemporary animal-agriculture practices.
We should not delude ourselves that the laws of shechita absolve us
from complicity in this widespread cruelty. For one thing, the laws of
kosher slaughter apply only to slaughter, not to the suffering imposed on
the animals before they’re taken to the slaughterhouse. And second, it is
virtually impossible to strictly apply the laws of shechita in
modern abattoirs, where the sheer number of animals killed in a single day
is often in the hundreds or even thousands. These laws were written in and
for an era when a shochet might slaughter one or two animals in a
day or a week.
It seems God anticipated this. The divine wisdom is truly awe-inspiring.
The Torah prescribed a vegan diet for us, and as it turns out, a vegan diet
is better not only for animals but for our own health, too. Have you ever
known anyone to develop heart disease, diabetes, obesity, or cancer from
eating blueberries? Or lentils? Or broccoli?
Fortunately, as veganism continues to grow in popularity, a whole host of
vegan substitutes for meat and dairy products are widely available, even at
regular supermarkets. Many of them are much lower in fat and completely free
of cholesterol.
You don’t need to become a vegan overnight. Start with one meal a day and
take it from there. Or try a vegetarian diet first, then move toward
abstaining from all animal products. We all have an opportunity to bring
Jewish and ethical values into our daily lives by eating in a way that
aligns with the ideals and compassion of the Torah. And maybe someday soon I
can look that theological student in the eye and just kvell.
Jeffrey Cohan is the executive director of Jewish Veg and he invites readers to move toward a plant-based diet.