Brooklyn, NY – Kapporos Ritual Divides Orthodox Jews

    42

     Rabbi Shea Hecht in Brooklyn, N.Y., demonstrates how Orthodox Jews wave a chicken three times over their heads and say the prayer of Kapparot (or Kapparos, depending on heritage) in the days leading up to Yom Kippur. photo credit: Dianna Douglas Brooklyn, NY – Rabbi Shea Hecht plucks a chicken off a truck parked behind a synagogue in Queens, N.Y., and demonstrates how to swing a chicken.

    Join our WhatsApp group

    Subscribe to our Daily Roundup Email


    “You take it by the wing,” says the white-haired Hecht, careful not to get the chicken’s feathers or anything else on his black suit and tall black hat. “You put one wing over the other wing. See? It’s very relaxed. And you swing it very softly over your head like this.”

    Hecht holds the bird, waves it three times above his head, and says the prayer of Kapparot (or Kapparos, depending on heritage). He prays that his sins will be transferred to the bird and he will escape the divine punishment that he deserves. The prayer is more than 1,000 years old, and countless Orthodox Jews will recite it in the days before Yom Kippur, the Jewish day of atonement, which begins at sundown Sunday. Hecht says waving the chicken isn’t the point of this ritual.

    “The main part of the service,” he says, “is handing the chicken to the slaughterer and watching the chicken being slaughtered. Because that is where you have an emotional moment, where you say, ‘Oops, you know what? That could have been me.’ ”
    Listen to the Story

    Wave Money, Not Chickens

    But David Rosenfeld, who is also an Orthodox Jew, has a different message.

    “Kapparos!” he calls out to passersby. “Use money, not chickens.”

    Rosenfeld and his friend Sam Schloss have set up a table next to a kosher bakery in Brooklyn. They have pamphlets and a cage of fake chickens — which causes some confusion.

    “How much for chickens this year?” a woman asks, thinking they’re selling chickens for Kapparot.

    “No, we want people to use money,” Rosenfeld says, explaining that waving money around her head is just as religiously acceptable as waving a bird. “We think it’s very cruel to the chickens. We’re trying to get people to not buy the chickens at all but use money instead.”

    She nods and says she’ll use money this year.

    It’s not easy undoing a millennium of tradition, one chicken at a time. And it’s lonely. Rosenfeld knows he’s at odds with his friends at synagogue.

    “It is a kind of double world for me because I love all these people I’m with and I’m part of their world,” he says. “I wear a yarmulke; I’m with them; they’re wonderful people. But I disagree with them on this point.”

    And so each year he and Schloss — who is also Orthodox — search out Kapparot sites in Brooklyn.

    Police Arrests, Fines

    On Monday, NPR went on the search with Schloss.

    “Yup, there’s a sign right there,” he says, pointing to a small blue and white poster with a chicken on it.

    For years, Schloss has been covering up these posters with his own that show filthy and starving chickens in crates. One year, Schloss found a garage full of chickens that had been abandoned after Yom Kippur.

    “They were emaciated chickens mixed in with dead chickens,” he recalls. “There was no food, there was no water — it was hot during the day, cold at night. There was rain. It was just a torturous thing for these animals to go through.”

    The police arrested the organizer for animal cruelty. And the city has fined others for leaving public places looking like a slaughterhouse, with blood and dead chickens all over the site.

    Grab It By Two Wings

    At a small operation in Boro Park, there are maybe 100 chickens. The man running the site eases a bird from its crate and hands it to a customer. She waves it three times over her head. The operator says he trucks in these chickens for the week, and makes a small profit. He’s clearly nervous. He won’t give his name — and he complains the sacred ritual has been unfairly tainted by a few rotten apples.

    “It’s very easy for people to condemn the Jewish people. But you can stand here now for the next few hours. You watch how I hold the chicken. I am careful; I hold the chicken with two wings.”

    He says if you grab it by one wing, the wing could break. That would cause the chicken pain and it would no longer be kosher. He shows NPR a bag of bread, soaked in water, which he gives to the chickens so they don’t get hungry or thirsty.

    “This is probably the best one I’ve seen,” Schloss says. “I mean it’s not the best thing for the chickens, and you can hear that in their voices. But it’s as good as I think we’re going to get.”

    Schloss hopes his efforts and the bad publicity have forced changes like these. But he doubts the practice will ever be outlawed.

    And that’s just as it should be, says Hecht.

    “What I’ve told my local police department and my local government is, ‘I’m an American. We have freedom of religion.’ ”

    That may be why anti-cruelty groups like the ASPCA declined to talk for this story. Instead, it issued a statement saying that it opposes any practice in which animals are made to suffer in the name of religious beliefs or tradition.

    A Division Among Orthodox Jews

    But for many Orthodox Jews, the problem with Kapparot is not about animal rights or even the law. It’s about religious interpretation, and this is dividing Orthodox rabbis themselves.

    “We value Jewish tradition enormously, except when it collides with the fundamental principles of our Torah,” says Brooklyn Rabbi Shlomo Segal.

    “The Torah prohibits Jews from causing any unnecessary pain to living creatures, even psychological pain. It says in the Book of Proverbs, ‘The righteous person considers the soul of his or her animal.’ ”

    Segal is among the Orthodox rabbis urging believers to use money instead of live animals. But that makes for thin spiritual experience, counters Hecht. He says there’s something visceral, and sacred, about holding a live animal in your hands just before it dies for your sins.

    “I know and I can speak for myself and my family members, and thousands of people in my community, who say that this Kapparot service has moved them and has given them a realization that, ‘Hey, I have to make changes. I have to improve myself. ‘ ”

    And Hecht is ready to help them. Come Saturday, the sidewalk in front of his yeshiva will be packed with believers. It will be loud; it will be bloody. And 4,000 chickens will pay the price of atonement.


    Listen to the VINnews podcast on:

    iTunes | Spotify | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Podbean | Amazon

    Follow VINnews for Breaking News Updates


    Connect with VINnews

    Join our WhatsApp group


    42 Comments
    Most Voted
    Newest Oldest
    Inline Feedbacks
    View all comments
    gregaaron
    gregaaron
    14 years ago

    I hope that no one really thinks that our aveiros are being “transferred to the chicken”. Unfortunately, that is one of the biggest reasons that PETA & Friends (“Animals are people too!!!”) are so against kapparos – what did the poor chicken do wrong that it’s getting all of our sins? Ironically, most of these people probably don’t belive that there is a concept of righteous and sinners anyway….Someone needs to explain that BIRDS DON’T DO AVEIROS, and they don’t get ours either.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    aren’t they the ones who stood outside the beis hamikdash & protested against the korbanas, too?

    Swiney Swineson
    Swiney Swineson
    14 years ago

    Does this guy Schloss really think chickens are intelligent enough to think they’re being “tortured”? and does he think we’re stupid enough to believe that the only way to reduce chicken cruelty? If he was serious about this, he would open up his own Kapparos site and make sure that the chickens are treated properly

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    why dosnt anyone explain to them that its not sepcifically “orthodox” jews, rather HASIDIC jewish custom. true, hassim are orthodix, but this implies that all orthodox jews use chickens which isnt true to begin with. this is a chassidic custom

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    The chicken is not gettting our sins. It is getting the punishment that we should have gotten for our sins.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    When I was a child we used money because it wasn’t possible to use a live chicken. I did Kapporos earlier in the week by Rabbi Hecht & my husband & sons will go tonight & see the chickens schechted & fulfill the mitzvah of covering the blood.

    I heard Rabbi Hecht’s son, who was supervising the bochurim who were getting the chickens out & helping the public, tell them to be very calm & careful & not aggressive with the birds.Ii looked for Peta & other mishagoyim & there weren’t any there, so this wasn’t for effect.

    We are ordered to be kind to animals. If doing Kaporos was so terrible to the chickens,our sages would never have told us to do this mitzvah.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    I do kapparos with money because that’s what my father zatzal did. That’s what we’re all supposed to do. “Minhag Kdin”. How can you make issues on Erev Yom Kippur
    & embarrass or ridicule anyone? Think before you act & may Hashem forgive your stupidity.

    Tuna Fish
    Tuna Fish
    14 years ago

    There is no question that all Kaporas sites must follow every regulation to make sure that the chickens are well taken care of. If all rulles are followed then I don’t see a problem. The chickens go for Tzedokah. These chickens were to be slaughtered anyways.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Once again, opportunists in the Chareidei community create a massive Chillul Hashem and unknown damage to the rest of us.

    When I make my Sukkah, I build it in my backyard, and I dont chop down publicly owned trees to make one. When I light my Chanukah Menorah, I do it in my house, as the Halachah dictates, and not in public places on massive menorahs with kerosene. The same with Kapporos. One can do Kapporos without having opportunist money makers trucking in live chickens under inhumane conditions to public places where they dont belong, so people can pay them large sums of money for the ‘privilige’ of shlugging Kapporos.

    On Erev Yom Kippur, or on other days of AY”T, just go to the shlachthoiz or shochet that you go to normally, buy your chicken(s), and before the shochet shechts it, you can shlug Kapporos and say the appropriate Tefillah. This is how we did it when I was young and living on the lower East Side. Nobody made a big deal about it because it wasn’t one.

    Just because people no longer feel like going to a shcohet to do the Kapporos the proper way, as was done for thousands of years, that doesnt give them the right to make a chillul hashem for he rest of Klal Yisroel.

    Also, it’s Osur to give the chicken to someone else as it appears like your getting rid of your aveiros by giving them to someone else. One should eat the chicken and give its value in money to a tzedakah.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Peta was puting out thousands of flyers worning about chicken cruelty

    do they know how many trees it had to be cut for that amount of flyers?

    Do you know how nany clean air we are loosing? and who knows mabey trees do feel pain after all they have some kind of life before being cut….

    I think al gore should sue this group its an evel one….

    eva Levy
    eva Levy
    14 years ago

    the way t chickens are treated nowadays it is cruel. in the old country you took a free roaming chicken from your coup out back and then you ate that very chicken for shabbos or gave it to a poorer neighbor. there was not these kaporos mills with hundreds of birds cooped up in tiny, swealtering, poop filled cages for 12, 20 hours or more. it was not cmmercialized like today..who is eating these chickens? are every one of them going to the poor? who sees to that? tmche shabbos won’t tae them.or are they dumped in a bin? with money, there is no tzar baalei chaim and you know who is getting your tzedakah. you know there is no waste. chickens made sense in the old country because most people had chickens which would be eaten eventually anyway and few spare coins. now we have money, not chickens at home, and money an fish are EVERY BIT as acceptable as birds for kapporos. why the heck not?

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    know who is running the chicken enterprise- if they are being cruel to the chickens (and just because chickens don’t know, doesn’t take away from the fact that tzaar baalei chaim is ASSUR) the GO SOMEWHERE ELSE where you know the chickens are being treated properly- or use money instead.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Peta was puting out thousands of flyers worning about chicken cruelty

    do they know how many trees it had to be cut for that amount of flyers?

    Do you know how nany clean air we are loosing? and who knows mabey trees do feel pain after all they have some kind of life before being cut….

    I think al gore should sue this group its an evel one….

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    I hope all you people who are worried about the chickens’ welfare enjoyed your chicken soup, your kneidlach made with eggs (potential chickens), your helzel stuffing (made with the neck of the chicken) & your roast chicken Friday night.

    Oh, & let’s not forget your gefilte fish, the nice leather shoes you wear & your wife’s fur coat.

    Bloody hypocrites.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    yes, they are an axes of evel.

    Love Kapporos
    Love Kapporos
    14 years ago

    some good old memories are waking up early in the morning erev yom kippur to do the mitzvah of kapporos at the crack of dawn starting the day with a mitzvah. I am looking forward to doing so early tomorrow morning. To my fellow Jews who think this is harmful to animals maybe think about becoming vegan. I have been doing kapporos for years and at least instead of clucking away in the field think about the chickens getting the opportunity to help a jew do a mitzvah. Elevating all the sparks inorder to bring moshiach.
    Wishing all a Gemar Chaisima Tova, a shona tova umesuka!

    David W
    David W
    14 years ago

    I take care to hold the chicken under the wings, and this year also by the feet so it doesn’t flap around (and hurt itself). Instead of banning Kaporas, we should be teaching people the right way to hold a chicken, and ensuring that the staff don’t throw them around and squeeze them into boxes!

    The folks from PETA have a much bigger agenda – they want to elevate the status of animals to that of humans, and for the whole world to be vegetarian.

    MalachHamovies
    MalachHamovies
    14 years ago

    We are ordered to be kind to animals. If doing Kaporos was so terrible to the chickens,our sages would never have told us to do this mitzvah.

    Really !! Show me one place in any gemorah that Chazal spoke about this “mitzvah”.

    It’s Tzaar Baalei Chaim . Pure and simple. And right before Yom Hadin !! Also, the vilna gaon was right wlhen he called it darchei hamoiri..

    Ki Bayom Hazeh Yechapeir Aleicheim….. The day of Yom Kippur alone forgives you of your sins. Don’t screw it up by commiting one of the worst aveiros in the torah !!

    its allmost over
    its allmost over
    14 years ago

    You meshiguim , now and tommorow morning is your last chance to make a tummel about caporos . This is how its been done since who knows when , and if moshiach c”v does not come this year it will be done next year the same way. So , go get a life , I have a good idea , go to the peta org’s website mabey they have a good job for you .mabey the lulavs we cut off the tree are causing harm to the enviroment , mabey this is not your gig . To all, may we all have a git gebencht yur, oy do we need it!

    Monsey'er
    Monsey'er
    14 years ago

    Dear NPR and all its Commentators,

    We the Orthodox Jews are the keepers of the old traditional way of Judaism, we follow the laws and customs of the Torah and its Holy sages all throughout our existence. True that according to Halacha (code) one can use money instead of chickens, but the Shulcan Urach (book of laws) states that if possible one should take a chicken and watch it being slaughtered so to be reminded that you deserve the same for your sins… There is absolutely nothing cruel about this what’s so ever, we are just as humane and compassionate to animals and humans than all of you seculars out there, and please don’t creep into are kishkes for every custom we do (we have many weird ones), we are proud of it and will continue doing so till the end of ages..

    We can care less what the media or a So called Modern Orthodox “Rabbi” have to say about us!

    Wishing all of humanity a sweet and healthy new year!!

    BRO
    BRO
    14 years ago

    PETA ??? Their activists are known for storming anmal labs and throwing acid in scientists faces, blinding them!

    yeapb
    yeapb
    14 years ago

    Where I live the chickens are brought in for 2/3 hours on the way to the shecht hoiz on Tzom Gedalya usually, kept in the shade, handled gently in the shul chotzer and the area is left clean as shechito is not carried out on the spot. Erev Yom Kippur a batch are pre ordered only and brought in for an hour and half to another shul chotzer where they are shechted on the spot and again everything is properly cleared up as it is in the shul chotzer. Maybe more kehillos should start doing it this way.