
Lewin: Herzfeld assertions are fallacious
Nat Lewin, the Washington attorney representing Agriprocessors, just sent us a response to Shmuel Herfzeld's New York Times op-ed last week.
Read the response after the jump.
REPLY TO RABBI SHMUEL HERZFELDby Nathan Lewin
In a front-page article asserting that minors had been hired to work in an Iowa kosher meat-packing plant and in an editorial calling the plant the modern equivalent of Upton Sinclair's "The Jungle," the New York Times joined the media frenzy that has, over the past two months, with very little basis in fact, pilloried AgriProcessors, the country's leading kosher slaughterer and packer of beef, and driven federal and local law-enforcement personnel to threaten dire consequences to its owner and employees. Insult was heaped on injury when an Orthodox rabbi in Washington, D.C., joined the vigilantes and published an Op-Ed piece in the Times of August 6, claiming that the news accounts "call into question whether the food processed in the plant qualifies as kosher."
This nationally published challenge to the kashruth of the AgriProcessor product contradicts the unanimous opinion of highly respected and universally recognized kashruth-certifying agencies that have repeatedly endorsed even while the media attack was ongoing – the ritual acceptability of AgriProcessors' product. Nonetheless, Rabbi Shmuel Herzfeld of Ohev Sholom Synagogue in Washington (where the author of this response has been a member for the past 40 years) a young rabbi who has achieved great success in reviving, for Jewish residents, a neighborhood that had been abandoned by its Jewish population and has electrified the entire Washington Jewish community with innovative programs raised "questions" about AgriProcessors' kashruth in this widely read forum.
Rabbi Herzfeld's column cites the following three grounds for questioning the religious suitability of AgriProcessors' meat: First, he says that "there is precedent for declaring something nonkosher on the basis of how employees are treated." The precedent he cites is that Rabbi Yisroel Salanter, the highly respected 19th century founder of the "Mussar" movement, is, according to Rabbi Herzfeld, "famously believed to have refused to certify a matzo factory as kosher on the grounds that the workers were being treated unfairly." Rabbi Yisroel Salanter is as gold-plated an authority as one can imagine. If he actually said that unfair treatment of workers renders a product non-kosher, one would have to give that ruling great weight.
Second, Rabbi Herzfeld cites allegations in an affidavit filed by the immigration authorities who raided the AgriProcessor plant in Iowa on May 12 to arrest illegal aliens employed there. He says that the affidavit alleges "that an employee was physically abused by a rabbi on the floor of the plant." Rabbi Herzfeld says that "this calls into question the reliability and judgment of the rabbi in charge of making sure the food was kosher." If, in fact, the "rabbi in charge of making sure the food was kosher" did assault an AgriProcessors employee, I would share Rabbi Herzfeld's doubts regarding that rabbi's "reliability and judgment" on issues relating to kashruth.
Third, Rabbi Herzfeld points to the arrest of "two workers who oversaw the poultry and beef division" for "helping illegal immigrants falsify documents." He says that if these supervisors "were willing to break immigration laws, one could reasonably ask whether they would be likely to show the same lack of concern for Jewish dietary laws." This is a reasonable question if, as one might assume from Rabbi Herzfeld's description of the arrests, the arrested supervisors had any responsibility whatever for AgriProcessors' compliance with "Jewish dietary laws."
But it takes a little digging beneath the surface of Rabbi Herzfeld's assertions to demonstrate how fallacious they are.
First, the Reb Yisroel Salanter story that he describes as "famous" does not appear in any biography of Rabbi Salanter that I have been able to find. Rabbi Hillel Goldberg's marvelous history of the Mussar Movement titled "The Fire Within," which has a comprehensive section on Rabbi Salanter, tells only of his having advised his students that, when they were preparing matzos for Passover, they should not overwork or make excessive demands of the female workers who were kneading the dough and otherwise preparing for the matzo baking. That same account appears in a Hebrew volume titled "Bikkurei Shai," written by the Chief Rabbi of Givatayim, Israel.
I e-mailed Rabbi Hillel Goldberg to ask him whether he had ever heard that Rabbi Salanter had refused to certify the kashruth of a matzo factory because it was unfair to its workers. He replied that the only story on this subject that he knew of was the one that had appeared in his book. He added that it was not likely that Rabbi Salanter would ever have given a certification ("hashgacha") on matzo because he "famously" avoided acting as a community rabbi. And I myself wonder whether it is not an anachronism for Rabbi Herzfeld to ascribe to the mid-19th century the community practices of today. At a time when all matzos were being hand-baked (and the rabbinic controversy over the kashruth of machine-made matzos was still several decades in the future), what "matzo factory" was seeking the "certification" of Rabbi Salanter?
Second, a closer look is warranted at Rabbi Herzfeld's assertion regarding the case of the abusive "rabbi." Nowhere in the government's affidavit is any accusation reported against any rabbi whose job was "making sure the food was kosher." The term "rabbi" is used interchangeably throughout the affidavit with the term "Hasidic Jew." Obviously, any employee on the floor of the AgriProcessors plant who had a beard and wore a yarmulke was described by the government's Guatemalan informant as a "rabbi" or "Hasidic Jew." If one such Jewish employee with no responsibility for kashruth abused an employee, it does not "call into question the reliability and judgment of the rabbi in charge of making sure the food was kosher."
Third is Rabbi Herzfeld's reliance on the arrest of two supervisors. Would the arrested supervisors who, one assumes from Rabbi Herzfeld's question, are either certifying rabbis or, at least, Hasidic Jews responsible in some manner for kashruth –show the same disdain for Jewish dietary laws as for American immigration law? Rabbi Herzfeld does not tell us that the two arrested supervisors were named Juan Carlos Guerrero-Espinoza and Martin De La Rosa-Loera supervisors at AgriProcessors whose concern or lack of concern for Jewish dietary laws is as irrelevant as one can imagine. At a time of the year when we recall that vicious reports to authorities led to the destruction of the Temple, Rabbi Herzfeld might take a more careful look at the grounds for his public allegations.
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Nat Lewin is wrong when he writes
“And I myself wonder whether it is not an anachronism for Rabbi Herzfeld to ascribe to the mid-19th century the community practices of today. At a time when all matzos were being hand-baked (and the rabbinic controversy over the kashruth of machine-made matzos was still several decades in the future), what “matzo factory” was seeking the “certification” of Rabbi Salanter? “
See http://tinyurl.com/6nkmxv where Rabbi Shmuel Singer writes “In France, in 1838, Isaac Singer invented the first machine for baking matzah.” Reb Yisroel Salanter lived from 1809 to 1883. Clearly all matzos were not hand baked in the mid-19th century, which was during his life time.
Lawyer lewin prays at Rabbi Herzfeld’s shule but is a paid shill for Rubashkin.
What Lewin is saying is that even if workers are being abused the meat is still Kosher. I know I would never eat any food if I knew that the person who prepared it was being abused. If Lewin prays at Rabbi Herzfeld’s progressive shul he probably shares this opinion when he is not getting paid by an abusive employer to defend their unethical and illegal behavior.
While Nat Lewin may pay dues to Ohev Shalom in DC, perhaps for historical reasons [it had been in deep decline until Rabbi Herzfeld took over], he actually davens (and, of course, I presume also pays dues) at Beth Sholom Congregation in Potomac, MD where Rabbi Joel Tessler is the senior rabbi.
We beg to differ re: the Kashus status of AGRI / RUBASHKIN. The ones in the know have claimed for years that the kashrus at Agri / Rubashkins leaves much to be desired. Is is on a very low standard from a kashrus point of view. It’s alledged that labels are under the control of the plant & their workers, not under the tight exclusive control of the kosher certifiers.
It’s also alledged that Agri Rubashkin commonly switches labels as they need, even from non-kosher to kosher which includes relabeling labeling non-bet-Yosef as bet yosef.
Rabbi Weismandel is aware of the labeling issue that Rubashkin is in control of the labels. Trucks operated by non-Jews carry labels to affix to Agri Rubashkin products. I picked up one of those boxes.
The Non-Jew making the additional cut for bleeding and the ripping of the Trachea & yanking the lung with a hook would declare the animal as a TREIFA.
Using an electric prod on the head of the animal may make it a TREIFA.
Shooting the animal after Shchita & then using it as a kosher animal is unacceptable “ I have seen it myself”.
Don’t try to defend their Kashrus standards, They are operating a 70% non-kosher operation & they should never be permitted to operate a kosher operation due to all of their kashrus violations.
Kosher Consumers Union, Inc.
Rabbi Yehuda Shain, President
There are many other serious kashrus issues at the plant.
I blogged about this
http://njjewishnews.com/justASC/2008/08/11/ethics-shmethics/
but I’ll save you the trip:
Lewin is almost exclusively concerned that Herzfeld would challenge the KASHRUT of the plant under ethical grounds — and if Lewin has even a smidgen of unease about the human toll of the mounting allegations against the plant, it is not to be found in his rebuttal.
Instead, a lawyer to the core, he tries to discredit the historicity of Herzfeld’s reference to Rabbi Israel Salanter.... Lewin can’t find a solid scholarly reference to the Salanter story — implying that if the principle of judging a factory’s kashrut by the treatment of its workers was not established by a 19th-century sage, it can’t possibly be an operable criterion.
“No Salantar — no justice.” Try that on a bumper sticker.
It’s an odd gambit on Lewin’s part, because if the plant has been “pilloried” by the press and if Herzfeld is one among many “vigilantes,” as he asserts, what difference would it make what Salanter did or didn’t say about ethics? If the allegations are untrue, and Agriprocessors is a legal and ethical paragon, why argue over what constitutes the role of ethics in the “ritual acceptability” of kosher meat? It would have made more sense to have written, “Even if we accept R. Salanter’s opinion as genuine, it does not apply in a case in which a factory has not been proven to have abused its workers.” But then, Lewin would have lost his opportunity for a “gotcha.”
The other two points in his rebuttal — emailed around by Lubicom, one of Agriprocessors’ pr firms – are similarly narrow and pilpulistic. Basically, he absolves Agriprocessors of any responsibility for those it employs.
Missing is any sense of a larger picture — like the one captured in this week’s devastating editorial in the Forward that recounts the past two years of journalistic and government investigations, and the sordid history of the Rubashkin family that runs the plant. What remains stunning is the degree to which the kashrut and legal authorities closest to Agriprocessors continue to deflect the ethical and legal implications of the allegations. When it comes to whether kashrut should have an ethical component that rises above what happens on the slaughterhouse floor, their stance is essentially, “we answer to a lower authority.”
After googling Rabbi Shain I came across this delightful tidbit frmo several years ago. I can’t imagine why anybody would take his kashrut opinions seriously. After reading about his dislike of Chabad and his characterization as a “rabble rouser”, I wonder how much he is being bribed to continue his diatribe against Agriprocessors and the Rubashkins!
READ THIS!!!
http://failedmessiah.typepad.com/failed_messiahcom/2005/01/us_head_of_bdat.html
The saying goes that in Harvard Law School the teach the following;
When the Law is in your favor & the facts are not...Harp on the law.
When the facts are in your favor & the law is not..Harp on the facts.
When neither is in your favor ..confuse the issues…
Yehuda Shain
Kosher Consumers Union, Inc.
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Ben
08/11/08 03:44 PM
Right. Because there’s no evidence at all that Agriprocessors has done anything wrong. At all. Pff.