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3 Adar 5764 - February 25, 2004 | Mordecai Plaut, director Published Weekly
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NEWS
Movement for Fairness in Government Asks to Present Opinion in Court
by Betzalel Kahn

The Movement for Fairness in Government filed a request asking the High Court for permission to state its position in the longstanding case on the validity of municipal ordinances limiting the sale of pork and pork products in the downtown areas of Tiberius, Beit Shemesh and Carmiel.

The Movement is asking to use a procedure rare in Israel, in practice primarily in the US, whereby an organization seeking to express its stance on an issue being heard before the High Court submits a request as an amicus curiae ("a friend of the court") in order to present a position supporting one of the two sides in the case. In order to support its moral case rejecting pork on the basis of its national symbolism, the Movement for Fairness in Government added the opinions of several public figures and rabbonim.

HaRav Mordechai Neugershal, a senior lecturer at Yahadut Mizavit Acher ("Judaism from a Different Angle"), wrote an opinion submitted to the High Court that pork was a symbol of inter-fraternal dispute. "Is there any need to expand on why our heart trembles so when history repeats itself and once again pork is digging its claws into the city street while brothers fight one another? Pork has become a symbol of the tremendous bloodletting that spilled the blood of the Jewish people in Europe throughout history, including the river of blood spilled in the 1940s . . . All this, according to Jewish tradition, was the work of the Edomites, whose symbol is the pig. Could there be any greater national shame than for a people to sever itself from its symbols and from its past? Is there anybody who has the authority to erase from memory the Jewish blood that was spilled like water throughout history?"

Later in his opinion HaRav Neugershal writes, "As the son of a family of Holocaust survivors, some of whom remained there among the mounds of ashes, as a descendant of the victims of the Cossack pogroms of 1648-49, blood libels, inquisitions and autos-da-fe, I studied Jewish history and I know pork symbolized these abominations in the eyes of all past generations of Jews. I do not have the power to prevent the masses of Jews in Eretz Yisroel from dissociating themselves from these symbols and their meaning. But I do have the power to demand legal protection from the deeply emotional blow . . .

"The law dealing with pork is not a religious law. Pork is a national symbol, like the swastika. A factory that produces shirts, pins, ties, etc. bearing a printed swastika would definitely be prohibited from selling [the product] in the heart of the city or in any other place. The principle of freedom of enterprise would be irrelevant in such a case because clearly this would be a blow to elementary sensitivities, for under the banner of this symbol so many atrocities were perpetrated. Certainly this is a severe blow to Holocaust survivors and their descendants and relatives and anybody who views himself as belonging to the Jewish people."

In conclusion HaRav Neugershal writes, I would expect our guests who were received so graciously by us (including sal klita, citizenship, etc.), whether they are Jewish or not, whether or not they have an interest in Jewish tradition, to respect our values and refrain from hurting our sensitivities. And now that they are bringing pork into city centers, the blow is many times worse. Would it be permitted to tear the national flag in public without anybody voicing a word of protest? How can we expect new symbols to be accorded respect if the State itself and its laws, in the name of one of the other principles, flagrantly scorns the old ones?"

The request by the Movement for Fairness in Government to join the petition claims that the High Court determined immigrants from the former Soviet Union who arrived during the 90s are associated with the eating of pork and that the vast majority of this sector consumes the non-kosher meat.

"No evidence of this has been laid before the court," notes the request. "No statistical figures have been generated showing the rate of pork consumption among immigrants from the former Soviet Union is greater than the rate in the general population, and if so, how much greater. Neither has a distinction been demonstrated between the immigrants from Russia and the Ukraine, for instance, and the immigrants from Caucasus lands who are mostly traditional Jews."

The request has not yet received a reply. The judges are currently engaged in writing a response to petitions filed against local authorities that did not permit the sale of non- kosher meat within their jurisdictions.

 

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