Thursday, 29 October 2009

kosher Rip-off

The extravagantly high price of kosher food - especially meat - is preventing European Jews from adhering to Jewish dietary laws, thus blurring their Jewish identity, a group of rabbis who met in Brussels warned this week.

"The current prices of kosher food in Europe makes it extremely difficult for tens of thousands of Jews to obtain kosher food," said Rabbi Aryeh Goldberg, deputy director of the Rabbinical Centre of Europe (RCE).

"Their failure to eat kosher erodes their Jewish identity and their insulation from non-Jewish society," he said. Over 100 rabbis and representatives of leading kosher supervision outfits gathered for a conference organized by the RCE this week.

The rabbis discussed various topics, but most emphasis was placed on the question of finding ways to lower the prices of kosher food in Europe, said Asher Gold, RCE's spokesman.

An example that was given at the conference was the kosher meat market in Britain, one of the most expensive.

The British company Tesco sells a whole, non-kosher chicken at £2. In contrast, a kosher chicken of similar weight costs five to six times more than that - between £10-12.

The situation is similar on the European continent, which is split up into two different markets: countries where it is impossible to obtain any kosher meat whatsoever and countries where the prices of kosher meat are prohibitively high.

One exception is France, where a large slaughterhouse located in Paris provides meat at a premium of just 25%.

Rabbi Jermia Menachem Kohen, Head of Paris's Consistoire [rabbinical court], said that the large economies to scale enable France's 500,000 Jews to buy cheap kosher meat.

"Since we have such a large demand the added costs for kosher meat are shared by more people which means that each person pays less," said Kohen in a telephone interview with The Jerusalem Post from Paris. JewPost

Jew Tax on food you eat

2 comments:

Kev said...

I used to work at food grade chemical plant and each year the Jewish Rabbi's would come in to the plant to make sure everything was Kosher. They were never friendly, and seemed to thumb up their noses at the workers in the plant. Now I understand!

http://exposethemnow.blogspot.com/

Anonymous said...

The Jewish company Tesco...