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The Permission to Eat Meat in Rabbinic Literature, Biblieurope Editions
The Permission to Eat Meat in Rabbinic Literature, Biblieurope Editions
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Today, in the name of animal welfare, some are questioning She'hita, "ritual slaughter", and want to impose another method of killing.
Today, many people are concerned about ethics, not with regard to their neighbor, their fellow human being, but with regard to animals, other living beings.
Biblieurope Editions
Today, in the name of animal welfare, some are questioning She'hita, "ritual slaughter", and want to impose another method of killing.
Today, many people are concerned about ethics, not with regard to their neighbor, their fellow human being, but with regard to animals, other living beings.
Today, this phenomenon is happening in our society, among us. Is it a growing awareness demonstrating a progression of thought, or is it an epiphenomenon caused by a group of activists wanting to launch a new trend?
What does rabbinic literature say about all this?
What do our texts say about this?
Is this an old reflection spanning centuries, rooted in our way of life, our Halakha, since the beginning of the Jewish people, or is it also something "new"?
Biblieurope Editions
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