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Food

Want a hechsher? You'll have to talk to Big Brother

We speak to the London Beth Din's man responsible for keeping the capital kosher.

July 14, 2011 09:53
Rabbi Simon takes time off from inspections to teach children about kashrut

By

Victoria Prever,

Victoria Prever

2 min read

The London Beth Din (KLBD) has a fearsome reputation. According to one kosher caterer, they trust no one - not even their inspectors, the shomrim. Rabbi Hillel Simon is the Beth Din's Big Brother, the man who looks over the shoulders of the shomrim and ensure kosher is kept.

To the less observant, Orthodox food laws can be intimidating. A visit to the home of Rabbi Simon - who is one the rabbis heading up the kosher division - dispels any fears. Nursing a hot lemon for a heavy cold in his book-lined lounge, the rabbi points out that he combines tradition with a thoroughly modern outlook - he even blogs on his own website.

As Chief Rabbinical Inspector and co-ordinator for catering, he and his team oversee the licensing of more than 100 caterers, bakeries, restaurants, food manufacturers, delis and shops. They are also responsible for the supervision of some 3,000 catered events per year, and the certification of almost 700 factories worldwide. No job is too big - a photograph at KLBD head office shows a shomer travelling to inspect an Egyptian factory by horse, the only way to get there. Rabbi Simon is available night and day to answer questions on halachah, he produces manuals for shomrim and is one of the KLBD's policy makers.

He explains: "The LBD is the most esteemed European hechsher with the most rigorous training programme. A new shomer cannot work alone until he has shadowed a practising one at least seven–15 times".