Editorials are posted and archived on JN Online: WWw detroitj ewis hn ews c o m Dry Bones In The Spirit Of Kashrut n Hebrew, Kaf Shin Resh. It is the root of kashrut and "kosher" — and it means, most simply, "fit, proper or correct." Looking at a videotape distributed last week that showed cows being slaughtered at AgriProcessors Inc., a kosher beef abattoir in Postville, Iowa, most of us could determine to the satisfaction of our own con- sciences whether what we saw was fit, proper or correct. Rabbinic and other reactions differed but most of us likely felt that the goal of kosher slaughter, to respect the life of the animal and to minimize its pain, was being compromised. The process of drawing the lifeblood of a crea- ture can never be antiseptically, spotlessly clean. But that is not what being kosher requires. Its goal is purity, particularly purity of the spirit. To argue that the rit- ual slaughterer, or shochet, meets the literal requirements of using an unblemished knife and cutting through the esophagus and trachea misses the point when the animals are then left to writhe for up to a minute in apparent agony. Watching what happens in any slaughterhouse, where animals are herded into close quarters before ultimately facing death, makes many of us contemplate reducing the meat content of our daily diet. And there is no doubt the group that arranged for the covert videotaping in Postville — People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) — advances an agenda whose stridency is offensive to many Americans. Neither fact, however, exculpates the AgriProcessors plant, which sells its Rubashkin/ Aaron's Best brands in this country and also ships meat to Israel. The tape showing workers pulling out the cows' tra- chea and esophagi by hand seems a particularly repellent violation of Jewish ethics, even if technical- ly the animals are dead as soon as the incision is made. The price of kosher meats is high enough to pay for humane killing as well as for rabbinic supervision. The New York-based Orthodox Union, the major agency for kosher supervision, deserves praise for its prompt response to the videotape; O.U. Vice President Rabbi Tzvi Hersh Weinreb said he would ask AgriProcessors to change the most offensive elements of its proce- dures. That response was substan- tially better than the Agudath Israel of America reaction, a "shoot-the-messenger" statement describing PETA as "devious and unscrupulous." Surely we are good enough at engineering death to be able to assure that the animals we eat do not suffer needlessly. Overall, the practices of kosher slaughterhous- es, where trained rabbis exercise ultimate authority, seem to be more humane than government-regulated secular abattoirs in America and most of the world. It should not be too diffi- Facing The Truth hour, and if I run into him on the street see it clearly. It's one smile, one face. the next day I won't have the slightest idea Then, during the Thanksgiving holiday, who he is. my daughter and her husband came in from My wife says this is because of an excess of New York and stayed with us. Jaime loves egotism. Probably. But enough about her. looking at old pictures, and one evening she I just have a problem with punims. brought out a whole box of them from a Especially when they're out of context. storage closet. She gave a double take at one Even with my immediate family, I some- and asked, "Who's this?" times fail to see the face before me. My It was a picture of my wife, taken a year GEORGE mother recently had an old photograph of my CANTOR or two before I met her, at about the same father blown up to keep on her dresser. It age Jaime is now. The faces are identical. Reality shows him at about the age of 18, posed in a I had never seen it before, and it left Check bathing suit at a summer cottage. I had seen it Mike, my son-in-law, pretty shaken, too. dozens of times before in a family album. Sherry merely beamed, secure in the infalli- But in its magnified form there were several bility of genetic science. details that I never had noticed. The most striking We spend a lifetime with the faces of those clos- of which was that I was looking at my face. est to us. But I wonder if we really see them. We I had never really seen much of a resemblance look at a parent, a child. And gradually that is before. When I was young, I wasn't looking for such what we see, rather than a face. Sometimes we things; and for the last 32 years of his life, my dad have to look deep in the past to really see who wore a white beard. He was younger than I am now they are. when he began to grow it, and that is the image of I know that years ago I fell in love with a special him that is fixed in my mind. face, and over Thanksgiving I unexpectedly saw it But here he is as a strapping youth, and now I can again. Isn't life delightful? I I I EDITORIAL M any years ago, I decided to grow a mus- tache. I started it on a long road trip to the West Coast and kept it for about three years. One night, I was sitting around my apartment. You know how it is; not much on TV, too cold for a walk. So I shaved it off. A strange face stared back at me from the bath- room mirror. It looked vaguely familiar. Someone I used to know but couldn't quite place. It took me weeks before I got used to my former face again. I wonder, though, if anyone is really familiar with his own face. The reflected image we see is a distor- tion, a reversal of reality. I don't think we can ever have the gift, as Robert Burns put it, to "see our- selves as others see us." I suffer from a sort of facial dyslexia anyhow. I can interview someone intensively for half an George Cantor's e-mail address is gcantor@thejewishnews.corn www.mrdrybones.com cult for AgriProcessors to fix those steps that are wrong. American Jewry will support them in mak- ing the necessary corrections. 12/10 2004 33