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The happy chicken or the non-kosher egg?

May 30, 2014 08:00

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Anonymous,

Anonymous

1 min read

All those eggs you bought thinking they were kosher may not quite be as they seem, writes Rosa Docherty. According to the Jewish Vegetarian Society, it only needs a hen to be later killed the wrong way for its eggs to lose kashrut status.

The organisation says that for an egg to be kosher it needs to be from a chicken that has suffered needless harm neither in life nor death.

That means that those gassed or killed by means other than shechita could effectively lose any right to kosher status long after their eggs have been bought and eaten.

The JVS says many stores are also breaking rules by selling eggs produced by birds kept in cramped conditions. “Whether battery or free-range, hens are gassed or killed by other means after they have been used to make eggs,” says director Lara Smallman. “This means eggs sold on the high street, including in kosher shops, directly contravene tza’ar ba’alei chayim, the prohibition against causing unnecessary pain.”