I would like to furnish a bit of background for the practice of Kapparot for 
the benefit of the list- I realize it may seem like one of the strangest 
practices and I suspect it is largely unfamiliar to most (even many Jews 
today).  Essentially, the practice, which involves swinging a live chicken 
clockwise over one's head, is symbolic atonement (hence the connection with Yom 
Kippur).  It is practiced widely in some (not necessarily all) Hassidic 
communities.

Journalist Ari Goldman, a former reporter for the New York Times, writes about 
his experience with this ritual growing up, and how, as an adult, he actually 
longed to re-enact it.  He had to be careful what he wished for. Apparently a 
live chicken was waiting for him one year at his office at the NYT.  Indeed, he 
brought it home and his family enacted the ritual.  And then his daughter 
persuaded him to donate the chicken to a local day care center that  had a 
coop!  Goldman self identifies as a "pluralist" Orthodox Jew.

Warmly,
Bobbi



Roberta Rosenthal Kwall
Raymond P. Niro Professor
Founding Director, DePaul University College of Law
Center for Intellectual Property Law & Information Technology

Author of The Myth of the Cultural Jew: Culture and Law in Jewish Tradition
http://amzn.to/15f7bLH

 You can view my papers on the Social Science Research Network (SSRN) at the 
following
URL:  http://ssrn.com/author=345249


________________________________
From: religionlaw-boun...@lists.ucla.edu [religionlaw-boun...@lists.ucla.edu] 
on behalf of Michael Masinter [masin...@nova.edu]
Sent: Sunday, October 09, 2016 3:23 PM
To: Law & Religion issues for Law Academics; Paul Finkelman
Subject: Re: "California Court Issues TRO Against Kaporos Practices"


Paul raises a question that surely would trigger an interesting debate among 
rabbinical authorities and Talmudic scholars, but I suspect from Hosanna Tabor 
and from the contraception mandate cases that a court would conclude the law 
burdens a religious practice if those who wish to engage in the practice 
sincerely believe that it is a religious observance or practice.  Save for 
prisoner RLUIPA cases, both opposing parties and courts seem quite unwilling to 
question the characterization by a religious observer that a practice is 
religious in character, and that appears to be equally the case whether the 
claim arises under the religion clauses or RFRA.



Mike

Michael R. Masinter
Professor of Law
Nova Southeastern University
3305 College Avenue
Fort Lauderdale, FL 33314
954.262.6151
masin...@nova.edu






________________________________
From: religionlaw-boun...@lists.ucla.edu <religionlaw-boun...@lists.ucla.edu> 
on behalf of Paul Finkelman <paul.finkel...@yahoo.com>
Sent: Sunday, October 09, 2016 2:51:57 PM
To: Law & Religion issues for Law Academics
Subject: Re: "California Court Issues TRO Against Kaporos Practices"

I would be interested in knowing if this practice is actually a "religious" 
practice as opposed to a cultural practice brought over from Europe at some 
point.  That is, is there a basis for this practice in Torah, Talmud, or Jewish 
"oral tradition," of if this is merely custom. Perhaps someone on the list who 
knows more on this can comment.

I guess my question is, and I hope Eugene has some thoughts on it is this:  
just because it is done around a holiday and in a synagogue and with a rabbi, 
does that actually make it a religious practice?  Or a cultural one?
I do not know the answer.

Then of course, if this is not actually a religious practice, can the Courts be 
asked to determine that?


******************
Paul Finkelman
Ariel F. Sallows Visiting Professor of Human Rights Law
College of Law
University of Saskatchewan
15 Campus Drive
Saskatoon, SK  S7N 5A6
CANADA
paul.finkel...@yahoo.com<mailto:paul.finkel...@yahoo.com>
c) 518.605.0296 (US number)

________________________________
From: "Volokh, Eugene" <vol...@law.ucla.edu>
To: "Law & Religion issues for Law Academics (religionlaw@lists.ucla.edu)" 
<religionlaw@lists.ucla.edu>
Sent: Sunday, October 9, 2016 12:43 PM
Subject: "California Court Issues TRO Against Kaporos Practices"

>From 
>http://religionclause.blogspot.com/2016/10/california-court-issues-tro-against.html:
As previously reported, in late September an animal rights group filed suit 
against Chabad of Irvine in a California federal district court challenging 
Chabad's promotion of the pre-Yom Kippur ceremony of kaporos that involves use 
of live chickens which are then slaughtered. (Complaint in United Poultry 
Concerns v. Chabad of Irvine, (CD CA, filed 9/29/2016)). The complaint 
contended that defendants are in violation of California's unfair business 
practices law. On Oct. 6, the court on its own motion ordered plaintiff to show 
cause why the case should not be dismissed for lack of standing. (Full text of 
court order.) On Oct. 7, plaintiff filed a response (full text) arguing in part:
               UPC has standing under the Unfair Competition Law based on its 
diversion of organizational resources spent addressing Defendants’ unlawful 
activity and attempting to convince authorities to take action.
The court was apparently convinced. It issued another order (full text 
[https://www.scribd.com/document/326967590/Upc-v-Chabad-Tro]) on Oct 7 granting 
plaintiff a temporary restraining order barring defendants from killing 
chickens or other animals in exchange for a fee or donation in violation of 
California Penal Code Sec. 597(a). It set a hearing on whether to order a 
preliminary injunction for October 13, the day after Yom Kippur-- effectively 
barring the pre-Yom Kippur practice by defendants for this year.
Any thoughts on how to analyze this?  Note that sec. 597(a) generally bans 
killing animals, but excludes killings allowed under sec. 599c:

No part of this title shall be construed as interfering with any of the laws of 
this state known as the "game laws," or any laws for or against the destruction 
of certain birds, nor must this title be construed as interfering with the 
right to destroy any venomous reptile, or any animal known as dangerous to 
life, limb, or property, or to interfere with the right to kill all animals 
used for food, or with properly conducted scientific experiments or 
investigations performed under the authority of the faculty of a regularly 
incorporated medical college or university of this state.

I take it that, if the kaporos chicken were eaten after being slaughtered, the 
action would not be illegal, and the injunction would not cover the sale of the 
chicken.  But according to the plaintiff’s papers, it appears that the chickens 
are not being eaten -- partly because plaintiffs had earlier argued that the 
carcasses were “unsanitary” -- but are instead being “rendered into fertilizer.”

I’m inclined to think that these exceptions don’t stop the law from being a law 
of general applicability for Employment Division v. Smith purposes, because 
they aren’t focused on singling out religious practice for special burdens.  
(They do favor some secular practices over religious practices, but I think 
that’s OK, as it is for a vast range of other laws that have many secular 
exceptions, such as Title VII, copyright law, the duty to testify, and many 
more.)  But I’d love to hear what others think.

Note also that California courts have not yet decided whether the California 
Constitution’s religious freedom provision should be interpreted using the 
Sherbert/Yoder model -- though, given the current liberal retreat from the old 
Justice Brennan/ACLU position, I suspect that California courts will follow 
Justice Scalia rather than Justice Brennan on this.

Eugene

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