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Jan 10, 2011
Kashrus Dilemma In The Palestinian Authority
The Rabbanut's kashrus division has a dilemma.
A tehina factory in Shechem, in the heart of the Palestinian Authority, has realized how big of a business kashrus is, and how going kosher can be very beneficial to a company's success, and is absolutely necessary in order to get your food product, tehina in this case, distributed through the chain supermarkets. The tehina factory in Shchem has contacted the Rabbanut requesting kashrus certification on the factory.
This is the first time the Rabbanut has ever received such a request, to certify a factory in the PA territories, and it puts them in a bind.
The bind being how they can possibly supervise what is going on inn the factory when it is too dangerous, and therefore impossible, for them to show up at the factory.
The administrators of the factory have even offered to fund and secure the entry of the mashgichim into the PA area and the factory, coordinating everything with the security forces.
Problem solved, right? Wrong. This just creates another problem.
Since the mashgichim would not be able to come in without arranging things first with the PA security forces, there is no way they can hold an element of surprise over the factory administration and employees. Without the element of surprise via being able to come and go whenever you want, the supervision is worthless. The factory must know when the mashgichim are coming, thus giving them the opportunity to do whatever they want when the mashgichim are not around, and they would clean things up right before the appointed time the mashgiach is meant to arrive.
The Rabbanut is currently looking for a solution to the problem.
Who would have thought kashrus and the PA go together in the same sentence? Perhaps the PA needs to solve this by opening up it's own version of the Rabbanut, or some sort of kashrus certification system.
A tehina factory in Shechem, in the heart of the Palestinian Authority, has realized how big of a business kashrus is, and how going kosher can be very beneficial to a company's success, and is absolutely necessary in order to get your food product, tehina in this case, distributed through the chain supermarkets. The tehina factory in Shchem has contacted the Rabbanut requesting kashrus certification on the factory.
This is the first time the Rabbanut has ever received such a request, to certify a factory in the PA territories, and it puts them in a bind.
The bind being how they can possibly supervise what is going on inn the factory when it is too dangerous, and therefore impossible, for them to show up at the factory.
The administrators of the factory have even offered to fund and secure the entry of the mashgichim into the PA area and the factory, coordinating everything with the security forces.
Problem solved, right? Wrong. This just creates another problem.
Since the mashgichim would not be able to come in without arranging things first with the PA security forces, there is no way they can hold an element of surprise over the factory administration and employees. Without the element of surprise via being able to come and go whenever you want, the supervision is worthless. The factory must know when the mashgichim are coming, thus giving them the opportunity to do whatever they want when the mashgichim are not around, and they would clean things up right before the appointed time the mashgiach is meant to arrive.
The Rabbanut is currently looking for a solution to the problem.
Who would have thought kashrus and the PA go together in the same sentence? Perhaps the PA needs to solve this by opening up it's own version of the Rabbanut, or some sort of kashrus certification system.
Labels:
kashrut,
palestinians,
Rabbanut,
shchem
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What's the problem? They could just use the Neturei Karta as mashgichim. No need for security.
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure that I would rely on their hechsher though.
That's what they did during shmitta
ReplyDeleteI don't see what the problem is. Tell them, "No, we can't provide supervision." If they would let Jews live there in peace, they could ask the local rabbinate for supervision. As it is, Israelis are not allowed to travel to Shechem because it is not safe. End of discussion.
ReplyDeleteRav Wosner has explained that it is permissible to have CCTV set up in all of the related areas with direct live feeds to a remote Meshgiach 24 x 7
ReplyDelete