LiveKindly.co
June 2018
The year-long challenge will see the synagogues serve plant-based meals and offer educational platforms to congregants. Each selected synagogue receives $5,000 in funding to help with the programming.
Five U.S. synagogues will receive “incentive and educational support”
from The Synagogue Vegan Challenge, created in partnership with VegFund, the
Shamayim V’Aretz Institute announced in a press release today.
The five finalists are New York City’s Romemu (Rabbi David Ingber); Denver’s
Congregation Rodef Shalom (Rabbi Rachel Kobrin); OHEL (Rabbi David Paskin)
in Boca Raton, Florida; Agudath Jacob (Rabbi Ari Hart) in Skokie, Illinois;
and Ohef Sholom Temple (Rabbi Rosalin Mandelberg) in Norfolk, Virginia.
Agudath Jacob is an Orthodox synagogue while the others are conservative,
reform, or non-denominational.
“This is about saving lives,” Rabbi Dr. Shmuly Yanklowitz, Founder & CEO of
The Shamayim V’Aretz Institute, said in a statement.
The yearlong challenge will see the synagogues serve plant-based meals and
offer educational platforms to congregants. Each selected synagogue receives
$5,000 in funding to help with the programming.
The Jewish diet is traditionally heavy in animal products including cured
meats, dairy, and eggs — foods that are repeatedly linked to human health
issues including cardiovascular disease, obesity, diabetes, and some forms
of cancer. Jewish women reportedly have some of the highest breast cancer
rates in the world. And while genetics play a critical part in that elevated
risk, a plant-based diet has been shown to help reduce the risk and improve
recovery for certain forms of cancer, including breast cancer.
Raising animals for food is also detrimental to the planet; livestock
produce an overwhelming number of greenhouse gases, use a significant amount
of natural resources, and pose serious risks to the world’s oceans through
factory farm runoff.
Israel, the Jewish capital of the world, has also recently become known as
the vegan capital of the world as the nation continues to embrace the
benefits of a vegan diet. An estimated 75 percent of Jews of the Ashekanazi
community are said to be lactose intolerant, seeking out nondairy milk,
yogurt, and cheese options.
Despite the fact that Kosher certification is often considered a symbol
associated with healthy foods, the certification itself has nothing to do
with the quality of the ingredients or finished product. For animal
products, it can also be far more stressful to the animals who are
slaughtered without first being stunned. If done incorrectly, animals can
still be fully conscious as they bleed out. Undercover investigations have
revealed horrific conditions in some Kosher certified slaughterhouses.