Friday, May 15, 2009

Eco-Kosher Echo

I never heard of the term "Eco-Kosher" but i seems it's a hot semanticism.

Even in the New York Times and the LA Times.

Read on:

The trend among some kosher-keeping Jews to eat only food that has been ethically, sustainably and, where possible, locally sourced.

Discussing the rise of the “eco-kosher” movement and “sustainable Shabbats,” Mary MacVean and Duke Helfand wrote in The LA Times:

For many Jews, the question was once whether to follow the Torah’s dietary laws. The book of Leviticus, for example, requires that meat come from animals that chew their cud and have split hooves in order to be considered kosher. But for “eco-kosher” Jews, those laws have come to represent only part of the equation – particularly as they relate to the consumption of meat.

Kosher meat has long enjoyed a reputation – among Jews and non-Jews alike – for high quality and an expectation that it is produced in an ethical manner. But that status was badly shaken last year by allegations that the country’s largest kosher slaughterhouse, in Iowa, abused workers, animals and the environment.

In horrified reaction, a group of Conservative rabbis designed an additional food certification known as Magen Tzedek, or shield of righteousness, that sets standards for protecting workers and the environment. The Conservative leaders expect to announce by the Jewish new year in September a first round of companies adding the voluntary seal to their products.


MacVean and Helfand noted that “the marriage of sustainability and religion reaches beyond the Jewish world”:

The Presbyterian Church (USA), for example, has designed a curriculum for high school students and young adults titled “Just Eating? Practicing Our Faith at the Table.”

The General Assembly of Unitarian Universalists Assn., meanwhile, last year selected “Ethical Eating: Food and Environmental Justice” as a four-year topic of study and action by its 1,000 congregations.

Such efforts are part of a larger food movement whose advocates wrestle with ethical questions raised by the food they buy and eat. They have been inspired in part by Michael Pollan, author of the best-selling “The Omnivore’s Dilemma,” and others who argue that fast food and an industrial food system have divorced many people from the source of their food.


And check this.

No comments: