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October 17, 1997 - Image 18

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1997-10-17

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.



Fowl

Play

Jews of all stripes came to "shlugg kapores"
last week in preparation for Yom Kippur.



JULIE EDGAR
Senior Writer



C

hicken feathers and autumn
leaves danced in the air last •
week outside Bais Chabad in
Farmington Hills as hun-
dreds of Jews participated in the
ancient, noisy and odiferous pre-Yom
Kippur ritual known as kapores. .
The scene was not for the weak of •-4
stomach, but then imagine what the
al
Temple was like in ancient times, a par-
ticipant pointed out.
Hundreds of white chickens, after
being slung over hundreds of heads,
went to their deaths at a makeshift
slaughterhouse out back, where a
shochet expertly slit their throats and
Thr
ew them in a barrel. The birds were ei
then boxed and taken to Superior
Kosher Meats in Oak Park for butcher- Ill
ing. Sometime soon, they'll be feeding
students at the Lubavitcher yeshiva in

Oak Park.
Kapores, despite its primitive quality,
is not animal sacrifice. Rather, the
chicken is a surrogate for the man, the
symbolic repositorz of an individual's
wrongdoings as the Day of Atonement II*
el
approaches.
"What's happening to the chicken
should be happening to us," explained
Rabbi Herschel Finman, who organizes
the annual event with Rabbi Chaim

Bergstein of Bais Chabad.
"We see sin as extraneous to the per-
son, not endemic to the soul of a per-
son, and therefore the act of repentance IF.
is seen as wiping off some foreign sub- •
stance," Bergstein said.
The chickens are raised by an acade-
mician who has a Ph.D. in agriculture.
Bergstein orders 500 or so birds for the
estimated 1,000 people who attend the e
event each year.
On the night before Yom Kippur
eve, Finman stood behind a table in
street clothes hawking chickens, which 4
were stuffed in stacked crates behind 111
him. People of all sizes clustered
around the table. Squawking and pray-
ing completed the circus-like atmos-
phere.
Howie Schwartz, a member of
Temple Israel, brought his family to
kapores, which literally translates as
"atonement." Last year was his first
time.

Top: Rabbi S.A. Deutsch recites the
kapores prayer.

Far left: The shochet, or ritual slaugh-
terer, at work.

Left: Rabbi S.A. Deutsch (right) helps
out Israel Shafer with the kapores prayer.

10/17
1997

18

I

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