** Petition to Replace Chickens With Money **
Please sign our petition and share with all of your contacts.
Thank you for your compassion!
Rina
We are a coalition of compassionate people who have banded together to promote the use of money, instead of chickens, in the ritual of Kaporos ("atonements"), also spelled Kapparot, Kappores, Kaparos, etc. For more information on the custom of Kaporos, please see Jewish Vegetarians of North America President Richard Schwartz's article: http://www.jewishveg.com/schwartz/kapparot.html
Friday, August 13, 2010
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
** Please Attend Our Demo 9/12/2010, 12 Noon - 3 PM in Brooklyn **
Please see demo details on our new web site:
End Chickens as Kaporos
End Chickens as Kaporos
Thursday, August 5, 2010
* The Alliance To End Chickens As Kaporos *
We are a coalition of compassionate people who have banded together to promote the use of money, instead of chickens, in the ritual of Kaporos ("atonements"), also spelled Kapparot, Kappores, Kaparos, etc.
Please watch our video clips (shot in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, September 2009) of the handling of the chickens during the ritual: http://www.youtube.com/user/EndChickensAsKaporos
Kaporos (“atonements”) is a custom preceding Yom Kippur – the Jewish Day of Atonement – in which chickens are ritually sacrificed by many Orthodox Jews. The person “swings” the chicken, held by the legs or by pinning the bird’s wings backward, around his or her head while chanting about transferring one’s sins symbolically onto the bird. The chicken is then slaughtered and may or may not be given to the poor. Prior to the ceremony, the chickens are packed in crates, and birds not used have been found abandoned in their crates when the ceremony was over.
The Alliance to End Chickens as Kaporos seeks to replace chickens in kaporos rituals for 3 principal reasons:
· The use of chickens as kaporos is cruel. They suffer in being held with their wings pinned backward, in being swung over the heads of practitioners, and in being packed in crates, often for days without food or water leading up to the ritual, which violates tsa’ar ba’alei chaim, the mandate prohibiting cruelty to animals.
· The use of chickens is not required by Jewish law. It is not a mitzvah but a custom that originated in the middle ages.
· There is an acceptable substitute that not only avoids cruelty but can help reduce hunger and show compassion. Money can be used as a non-animal alternative, and funds raised can be given directly to charities that provide food for the poor and hungry throughout the year, including 13,000 Jewish families living at or below the poverty line in New York City.
** Disclaimer: The purpose of the group is to promote the use of money, instead of chickens, in Kaporos. Many Jewish people already use money, instead of chickens, and some don't take part in the ritual at all. The spewing of anti-Semitism or prejudice of any kind will not be tolerated. Any blatantly anti-Semitic comments will be deleted. **
Please watch our video clips (shot in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, September 2009) of the handling of the chickens during the ritual: http://www.youtube.com/user/EndChickensAsKaporos
Kaporos (“atonements”) is a custom preceding Yom Kippur – the Jewish Day of Atonement – in which chickens are ritually sacrificed by many Orthodox Jews. The person “swings” the chicken, held by the legs or by pinning the bird’s wings backward, around his or her head while chanting about transferring one’s sins symbolically onto the bird. The chicken is then slaughtered and may or may not be given to the poor. Prior to the ceremony, the chickens are packed in crates, and birds not used have been found abandoned in their crates when the ceremony was over.
The Alliance to End Chickens as Kaporos seeks to replace chickens in kaporos rituals for 3 principal reasons:
· The use of chickens as kaporos is cruel. They suffer in being held with their wings pinned backward, in being swung over the heads of practitioners, and in being packed in crates, often for days without food or water leading up to the ritual, which violates tsa’ar ba’alei chaim, the mandate prohibiting cruelty to animals.
· The use of chickens is not required by Jewish law. It is not a mitzvah but a custom that originated in the middle ages.
· There is an acceptable substitute that not only avoids cruelty but can help reduce hunger and show compassion. Money can be used as a non-animal alternative, and funds raised can be given directly to charities that provide food for the poor and hungry throughout the year, including 13,000 Jewish families living at or below the poverty line in New York City.
** Disclaimer: The purpose of the group is to promote the use of money, instead of chickens, in Kaporos. Many Jewish people already use money, instead of chickens, and some don't take part in the ritual at all. The spewing of anti-Semitism or prejudice of any kind will not be tolerated. Any blatantly anti-Semitic comments will be deleted. **
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