Assalaamu`Alaykum wa Rahmatullaahi wa Barakaatahu,

Dear brother Shahid,

Attached below is the refutation vis-?-vis the "Kosher Nostra Scam" on the 
American Consumer

Wasalaam,
K a r i m a
DDN


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



http://www.snopes.com/racial/business/kosher.asp#add

The Kosher Nostra


Claim:   Certain symbols displayed on the packaging of a variety of grocery 
items signify that their manufacturers have paid a secret tax to the Jews.

Status:   False.

Example:   [Collected on the Internet, 2005]


      The "Kosher Nostra Scam" on the American Consumer

      By Ernesto Cienfuegos
      La Voz de Aztlan


      Los Angeles, Alta California — (ACN) La Voz de Aztlan receives quite a 
few "news tips" per week from our many subscribers and readers. Some we dismiss 
immediately but a very few catch our attention. Last week we receive an e-mail 
asking us if we knew the significance of the small encircled letter "U" or 
letter "K" that can be found printed on many food cans, food packages and on 
other kitchen products. The message gave us some clues and suggested that we do 
some research into the subject. What we found certainly was "news" to us and it 
both shocked and angered us.

      On arriving at my residence, I immediately went to the pantry to verify 
that what I had just learned was actually true. Sure enough, most of the 
packaged and canned foods from major companies, like Proctor & Gamble and 
others, did have the (U), the (K) or other similar markings. The Arrowhead 
water bottle, the instant Folgers Coffee, the Kelloggs box, the Jiff Peanut 
Butter, the Pepper container, the Trader Joe's tea box and even the Glads 
plastic sandwich bags carton had the (U) or (K) mark on them.

      We needed a little more verification so we called two major companies to 
asked some questions. We chose Proctor & Gamble that markets the Folgers Coffee 
and the Clorox Company that manufactures the Glads plastic zip lock sandwich 
bags. Each of the two companies, as well as most others, have 1-800 telephone 
numbers printed on their packages for consumers to call in case they have any 
questions about their products. When we asked the Proctor & Gamble 
representative what the (U) meant on their Folgers Coffee container, she asked 
us to wait until she consulted with her supervisor. She came back and informed 
us that the mark meant that the coffee was " certified kosher". We than asked 
her how and who certified the coffee to be "kosher" and whether it cost any 
money to do so. She refused to answer these and other questions. She suggested 
that we write to their Corporate Public Affairs Department. We than called the 
Clorox Corporation to ask what the (U) meant on the package of their Glads 
plastic sandwich bags and she also said that the (U) meant that the plastic 
bags were "kosher" but refused to answer questions concerning payments the 
Clorox Corporation has to make in order to be able to print the (U) on their 
products.

      What we learned next, pretty much floored me personally. I learned that 
major food companies throughout America actually pay a Jewish Tax amounting to 
hundreds of million of dollars per year in order to receive protection. This 
hidden tax gets passed, of course, to all non-Jewish consumers of the products. 
The scam is to coerce the companies to pay up or suffer the consequences of a 
Jewish boycott. Jewish consumers have learned not to buy any kitchen product 
that does not have the (U) the (K) and other similar markings.

      Another shocker was learning who is actually behind these sophisticated 
"Kosher Nostra Scams." It turns out that the perpetrators of these elaborate 
extortion schemes are actually Rabbinical Councils that are set up, not just in 
the U.S. but in other western countries as well. For example, the largest 
payola operation in the U.S. is run by those who license the (U) symbol. The 
(U) symbol provides protection for many products sold here in Aztlan and in the 
United States. This symbol is managed by the The Union of Orthodox Jewish 
Congregations with headquarters at 333 Seventh Avenue in New York City.

      The scam works like a well oiled machine and is now generating vast 
amounts of funds, some of which are being utilized by the Union of Orthodox 
Rabbis to support the Ariel Sharon Zionist government in Israel. The website of 
the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations is full of pro-Israel and 
anti-Palestinian propaganda.

      The "Kosher Nostra" protection racket starts when an Orthodox Rabbi 
approaches a company to warn the owners that unless their product is certified 
as kosher, or "fit for a Jew to eat", they will face a boycott by every Jew in 
America. Most, if not all of the food companies, succumb to the blackmail 
because of fear of the Jewish dominated media and a boycott that may eventually 
culminate in bankruptcy. Also, the food companies know that the cost can be 
passed on to the consumer anyway. The food companies have kept secret from the 
general consumer the meaning of the (U) and the amount of money they have to 
pay the Jewish Rabbis.

      It is estimated that the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations, which 
manages the (U) symbol protection racket, controls about 85% of the "Kosher 
Nostra "certification business. They now employ about 1200 Rabbi agents that 
are spread through out the U.S. Food companies must first pay an exorbitant 
application fee and than a large annual fee for the use of the (U) copyright 
symbol. Secondly, the companies must pay separate fees each time a team of 
Rabbis shows up to "inspect" the company's operations. Certain food companies 
are required to hire Rabbis full time at very lucrative salaries.

      The amount of money that the non-Jewish consumer has paid the food 
companies to make up for the hidden Jewish Tax is unknown, but it is estimated 
to be in the billions since the scam first started. The Orthodox Jewish 
Councils as well as the food companies keep the amount of the fees very secret. 
The Jewish owned Wall Street Journal wrote about the problem many years ago, 
but they have stopped writing about it now.

      Only public awareness concerning the "Kosher Nostra Scam" will eventually 
help stop this swindle of the American consumer. Public education of the scam 
may lead to an eventual non-Jewish boycott of all products with the (U), (K) or 
other Jewish protection symbols. I certainly do not need to pay extra for 
"kosher water", "kosher coffee" or "kosher plastic sandwich bags". In fact, I 
demand my money back for all the money I had to pay over the years for the 
hidden and illegal Jewish Tax. Are there any bright attorneys out there that 
could bring a class action suit against the Union of Orthodox Jewish 
Congregations on behalf of the citizens of Aztlan and other non-Jewish people?



Origins:   Folks search for proofs of their darkest imaginings everywhere, 
including on the shelves of grocery stores. Packages bearing marks whose 
meanings aren't readily apparent to the average shopper have been interpreted 
by those always on the sniff for a Jewish conspiracy as signs that Big Business 
is in league with the Jews.

The rumor that the presence of those mysterious markings signifies that the 
manufacturers of those products have paid a secret tax to the Jews of America 
has been afoot for decades; the e-mail quoted above is merely a recent 
manifestation of this age-old canard. The claim is wholly false, and we wonder 
at the twisted minds that would advance such a slander. There is no "Jewish 
Secret Tax" and never has been.

The markings pointed to in the rumor are real; however, their purpose is 
entirely different from the one asserted by the rumormongers. They do not 
signal that a secret tax has been paid or that corporations have succumbed to 
blackmail; they are there to indicate to members of a particular faith that 
such items have been vetted as having met the strictures their religion 
imposes. (If the notion of a religion imposing dietary requirements upon its 
followers sounds like an outlandish proposition, keep in mind that only in 
recent times have Catholics taken to eating meat on Fridays, and that Muslims 
still eschew pork.)

As to what those markings mean:


  a.. The letter "K" simply means "Kosher." Kosher, in Hebrew, means fit or 
proper, and is generally used to describe foods that are prepared in accordance 
with special Jewish dietary laws. These laws are stringent and almost 
incomprehensible to those not versed in them.

  b.. The small "u" in a circle or ("OU") stands for the Union of Orthodox 
Jewish Congregations and shows that the food underwent rabbinical supervision 
in its preparation. (An "OUD" marking shows that the package contains dairy 
products, while an "OUM" indicates the presence of meat.)

  c.. "Parve" (also "pareve") is Yiddish for "neutral." The presence of this 
word on packaging signifies that the contents of the package contain neither 
milk nor meat and thus can be combined with other ingredients in recipes. 
(Jewish dietary law forbids the mixing of meat and dairy, thus a packaged food 
that contained cheese could not be combined with, say, hamburger.)
This variety of markings used on packaged foods alert consumers that items 
contained therein either meet the strict dietary constraints imposed by Judaism 
on its followers or that the contents of the package can be mixed with other 
foods or can touch them. Not all Jews keep kosher, nor even among those who do 
are the strictures always adhered to rigorously, but those determined upon 
being truly pious are aided in this endeavor by the presence of those markings. 
The devout go so far as to maintain two separate sets of utensils, cookware, 
and cutting surfaces so that meat and dairy never encounter one another in 
their kitchens. It is for their benefit that otherwise puzzling kosher 
certifications on non-foodstuff items are there (e.g., certifications are 
placed upon dishwashing liquid because dishes used for dairy cannot be washed 
using a soap made from animal fats).

Less observant Jews do not bother themselves overly much about the kosherness 
of everyday items; they avoid the out-and-out no-nos such as pork and shellfish 
but don't lose much sleep over the animal fat content of their washing-up 
liquid, nor do they fret that cold cuts might now be resting upon a plate that 
had months earlier been used to serve cheese. The proponents of the "Jewish 
Secret Tax" slander often assert that a sub rosa Jewish cabal forces large 
companies to comply via the threat of a nationwide boycott, backed by the 
underlying presumption that all Jews can be marshalled into turning their backs 
on products that fail to display kosher certification marks. That is not the 
case — Jews buy and use non-kosher items too, so although lack of kosher 
certification keeps the ultra-conservative crowd from buying certain products, 
it doesn't prevent the less stringent from making such purchases, nor would a 
"don't buy that because it's not kosher" directive have much effect even if 
there were a secret Jewish cabal to issue it.

Those seeking kosher certification for their products have to adhere to kosher 
practices through the manufacturing process, use only kosher ingredients, and 
have their facilities regularly vetted by qualified inspectors. Kosher 
certification companies do charge for this service, which is the backbone of 
the "secret tax" claim — it costs money to obtain and maintain kosher 
certification, thus this is an extra expense a manufacturer must bear if he's 
determined upon having that certification. Where the rumor and reality part 
ways, however, is where the money goes. Fees paid to kosher certification 
companies go to keeping those businesses afloat with the profits siphoned off 
by those companies' owners; they do not flow off into some special Jewish fund 
used to advance Zionist causes. These are businesses, not charities, and those 
who run them do so with every expectation of making a living, in the same 
manner that someone who owns a hardware store does so with the notion of making 
enough from the endeavor to support himself and his family.

Does certification add to the price of a product? Certainly, but the amount is 
miniscule, especially compared to the advertising, packaging, shipping, 
research, testing, admin and finance-related costs, and a myriad of other 
components that contribute to the process of bringing a product to market or 
making it better appeal to consumers. One might as well rail against the costs 
associated with selecting the ink colors and style of lettering used on a 
package — it's all legitimate business expense, even though no one ever rails 
against the "Secret Red Ink Conspiracy" or rants about the "Helvetica Font Tax."

Barbara "heading for Helvetica in a handbasket" Mikkelson

Additional information:

           A Kosher Primer (Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America)

      http://www.ou.org/kosher/primer.html



Last updated:   3 May 2007

________________________________

   Sources:
      Brunvand, Jan Harold.   The Mexican Pet.
      New York: W. W. Norton, 1986.   ISBN 0-393-30542-2   (pp. 106-107).

      Morgan, Hal and Kerry Tucker.   More Rumor!
      New York: Penguin Books, 1987.   ISBN 0-14-009720-1   (pp. 131-132).

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Reply via email to