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In 1692, a shechita and slaughter order was in effect.
"Unconsciousness and the external behavior of the animal have nothing to do with shechita," he said.
The laws of shechita are meant to prevent the suffering of animals.
The laws of shechita are not given in the text of the Torah.
In the 1890s, protests were raised in the Norwegian press against the practice of shechita.
He accepted the request of the village's inhabitants that he come practice shechita.
With the ordinance of 1641 the Danish king had permitted the Jews shechita.
Any sane adult Jew who knows the proper technique may perform shechita.
Some women even mastered the laws of Shechita, thereby acting as ritual slaughterers.
Rabbi Hyamson lead the battle to preserve shechita in America.
Protests were raised in the Norwegian press, during the 1890s, against the practice of shechita, on the grounds that it was cruel to animals.
Efforts to ban shechita put sincere humane society activists in league with antisemitic individuals.
The Torah gives precise details on how animals are to be sacrificed and slaughtered (shechita).
Any animal that dies by any means other than fully observed ritual slaughter (shechita) is considered in this class.
During 1996, the debate over the practice of shechita (Jewish religious slaughter of animals) in Finland continued.
In one story, he prepares himself to ritually slaughter a chicken according to the halachic laws of shechita:
Norwegian law requires that animals be stunned before being slaughtered, without exception for religious practices, which is incompatible with shechita.
As with mainstream Judaism, even permitted animals can only be consumed if they are properly slaughtered (see Shechita).
Apart from circumcision, they also slaughtered their food animals according to the laws of shechita wherever they were able to learn the necessary rules.
Carrion (nevelah): meat from a kosher animal that has not been slaughtered according to the laws of shechita.
An illustrated guide for shechita from early 20th-century Pakistan, with Hebrew and Marathi on facing pages.
However, factory farming and high-speed mechanized kosher slaughterhouses have been criticized for failing to meet the essence of shechita.
There are those who feel that it is forbidden to have the animal in an upright position during shechita due to the prohibition of derasah (pressing).
One, consisting of five sections and twenty-two chapters on shechita (the laws of slaughtering animals for food)