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Yom Kippur and Vegetarianism
There are many connections that can be made between the Jewish
holiday of Yom Kippur and vegetarianism:
1. On Yom Kippur, Jews pray to the "Living God", the "King Who delights in
life", that they should be remembered for life, and inscribed in the "Book of
Life" for the New Year. Yet, typical animal-based diets have been linked to
heart disease, stroke, several types of cancer, and other chronic degenerative
diseases, that shorten the lives of 1.4 million Americans annually.
2. On Yom Kippur, Jews pray to a "compassionate God", who compassionately
remembers His creatures for life. Yet, there is little compassion related to
modern intensive livestock agriculture (factory farming), which involves the
cruel treatment and slaughter of about 10 billion farm animals annually in the
United States.
3. On Yom Kippur, Jews pray to God, "Who makes peace", to be inscribed into the
"Book of Life, Blessing, and Peace". Yet, animal-centered diets, by requiring
vast amounts of land, water, energy, and other resources, help to perpetuate the
widespread hunger and poverty that often lead to instability, violence, and war.
4. On Yom Kippur, Jews are told through the words of Isaiah in the morning
prophetic reading that the true purpose of fasting on that day is to sensitize
them to the needs of the hungry and the oppressed, so that they will work to end
oppression and "share thy bread with the hungry". (Isaiah 58:6,7) Yet, 70
percent of the grain produced in the United States is used to fatten up farm
animals, while an estimated 20 million of the world's people die annually from
lack of adequate food.
5. One of the most important messages of Yom Kippur and the preceding days is
the importance of teshuvah, of turning away from sinful ways, from
apathy, from a lack of compassion and sensitivity, and returning to Jewish
values, ideals, and mitzvot. Vegetarianism involves a significant turn,
away from a diet that has many harmful effects to one that is consistent with
Jewish mandates to take care of our health, treat animals kindly, protect the
environment, conserve natural resources, help the hungry, and seek and pursue
peace.
6. The Yom Kippur liturgy has a prayer that includes the statement that "we are
God's flock, and God is our shepherd." Since Judaism teaches that people are to
imitate God in His acts of compassion and caring, we should be treating God's
defenseless creatures in the ways that we want God to treat us.
7. On Yom Kippur, Jews ask for forgiveness for the sin of "casting off
responsibility". Vegetarianism is a way to assume responsibility for our health,
for animals, for the environment, and for the world's hungry people.
8. Yom Kippur is time for reflection and soul searching, a time to consider
changes in one's way of life, a time to make decisions for improvement. Hence,
it is an excellent time to switch to a diet that has so many personal and
societal benefits.
9. According to the Jewish tradition, our fate is sealed on Yom Kippur for the
coming year. But repentance, charity, and prayer can avert a negative decree.
However, people have determined the fate of animals before they are born, and
there is virtually no possibility of a change in the cruel treatment and early
slaughter that awaits them.
10. Yom Kippur is the Day of Atonement, a day of being, in effect, at-one with
God. One way to be more at-one with God is by adopting a plant-based diet, and
thereby not harming animals, since "God's tender mercies are over all of His
creatures". (Psalm 145:9)
11. Yom Kippur teaches that, while it is often difficult, old habits can be
broken. Thus, the days surrounding Yom Kippur provide a good period to break
habits related to the consumption of animal products.
12. The afternoon service for Yom Kippur includes the reading from the book of
Jonah, which tells how Jonah was sent to warn the people of Nineveh that they
must do teshuvah, change their sinful ways in order to avoid destruction.
Today, the whole world is like Nineveh, in need of redemption, and in danger as
never before from a variety of environmental threats. In a sense, vegetarians
are now playing the role of Jonah, pointing out that a shift away from an
intensive animal agriculture that has significant negative effects on the
environment and a shift toward vegetarian diets have become global imperatives,
necessary to shift humanity from its current perilous path.
13. An important message of the book of Jonah is that God is concerned about the
fate of all of the world's people. Vegetarianism is a way to show such concern
and hence to imitate God's attributes of caring and compassion, since this diet
requires far less land, grain, water, fuel, and other resources, and hence can
contribute to a reduction of the widespread hunger that afflicts so much of
humanity.
14. The book of Jonah also shows God's concern for animals. It ends with God's
statement, "Should I not then spare the great city of Nineveh with more than one
hundred and twenty thousand human beings. . . and much cattle?"
15. On Yom Kippur, one of the many sins that we ask forgiveness for is "the sin
we committed before Thee in eating and drinking." This can be interpreted in
terms of the harm that animal-based diets do with regard to human health,
animals, the environment, and hungry people.
16. On Yom Kippur, Jews are forbidden to wear leather shoes. One reason is that
it is not considered proper to plead for compassion when one has not shown
compassion to the creatures of God, Whose concern extends to all His works.
17. Rabbi Israel Salanter, one of the most distinguished Orthodox Rabbis of the
nineteenth century, failed to appear one Yom Kippur eve in time for the sacred
Kol Nidre Prayer. His congregation became concerned, for it was
inconceivable that their saintly rabbi would be absent or late on this very holy
day. They sent a search party to look for him. After much time, their rabbi was
found in a Christian neighbor's barn. On his way to the synagogue, Rabbi
Salanter had come upon one of the neighbor's calves, lost and tangled in the
brush. Seeing the animal in distress, he freed him and led him home. His
act of compassion represented the rabbi's prayers on that Yom Kippur evening.
In summary, a shift to vegetarianism is an important way to do teshuvah ,
to turn away from a diet that is harmful in many ways to one that is in accord
with the many significant teachings and values that Yom Kippur represents.
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