Sunday, October 01, 2006

Does Yom Kippur Ceremony Violate Los Angeles Law?

LA Voice.org on Friday raised the question of whether a pre-Yom Kippur ceremony practiced by some traditional Jews violates the Los Angeles Municipal Code. The ceremony of kaparot involves swinging a live chicken over one's head, while reciting a set prayer in order to symbolically rid oneself of one's sins. It is intended to imbue people with the feeling that their very lives are at stake as they begin the Yom Kippur prayers for repentance. After the ceremony, the chicken is slaughtered and donated for a needy family to eat for the pre-Yom Kippur meal (or an equivalent value is given to charity). Most traditional Jews today swing money to be donated to charity over their head instead of a live chicken, but some communities still practice the more traditional form of the ritual. Los Angeles Municipal Code Chap. V, Section 53.67 prohibits animal sacrifice, which is defined broadly as "the ... killing of any animal in any religious ... ritual ... wherein the animal has not been ... killed primarily for food purposes, regardless of whether all or any part of such animal is subsequently consumed."