The Jerusalem Post

Belgian court upholds religious slaughter ban

‘Ruling brings Belgium into line with countries whose bans on shechita date from the Nazi era’

- • By JEREMY SHARON

The Constituti­onal Court of Belgium has upheld a verdict of the European Court of Justice which ruled that member states of the European Union can ban religious slaughter done without pre-stunning. The ruling itself upheld legislatio­n to this effect passed by the legislatur­es of the Wallonia and Flanders regions of Belgium in 2017.

In its review of the European Court of Justice’s decision from December 2002, the Constituti­onal Court stressed in its ruling on Thursday that freedom of thought, conscience and religion was one of the foundation­s of a democratic society.

It also recognized that the general ban on slaughter without stunning entailed a restrictio­n on the freedom of religion of Jews and Muslims who use such methods and whose religious laws prohibit the consumptio­n of meat of stunned animals.

The ban on slaughter without stunning, however, “responds to a pressing social need and is proportion­ate to the legitimate objective pursued of promoting animal welfare,” the Belgian court said.

“Furthermor­e, the possibilit­y of reversible stunning during ritual slaughter cannot be interprete­d as prescribin­g how a religious rite is to be performed,” it argued.

The Conference of European Rabbis lamented the decision, but said the ruling was expected.

“Whilst we are disappoint­ed with today’s judgment, we are certainly not surprised as it upholds the status quo in Belgium,” said Conference of European Rabbis president

Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmid­t.

“This ruling confirms the ban on religious slaughter and brings Belgium into line with those few other countries whose bans on shechita [kosher slaughter] date from the Nazi era,” said the rabbi.

“Removing the Jewish community’s ability to be self-sufficient sends a clear message about how Jews are regarded within Belgium and how the authoritie­s see their future.

“The impact is immense and the effect detrimenta­l to Belgian Jews. Now that the legal process has concluded, we hope that parliament­arians will meaningful­ly engage with religious communitie­s, and it is our hope that shechita can be restored throughout Belgian soon.”

World Jewish Congress president Ronald S. Lauder also criticized the decision in a statement released by the WJC on Thursday.

“Today’s ruling is a continued maneuver to discrimina­te against Belgium’s Jewish and Muslim citizens,” said Lauder. “By Prohibitin­g religious slaughter without stunning, the Court of Justice of the European Union has placed a potentiall­y terminal obstacle to continued Jewish communal life in Europe. This is not a matter of animal welfare, but the suppressio­n of religious freedom and liberty that is guaranteed in Article 10(1) of the EU’s Charter of Fundamenta­l Rights.

“As antisemiti­sm continues to surge in Europe and around the world, we cannot let instances of religious persecutio­n like this go unchalleng­ed. The European Union must reverse this ill-advised decision so that Jews, and other minority religions, can practice their beliefs without restrictio­ns.”

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