THE PAIN OF FUR-BEARING ANIMALS
Fur is obtained from animals who
are either trapped or raised on ranches. Both
involve treatment of animals that appears to
be far from the Jewish teachings that have been
previously discussed:
Animals caught in steel-jaw leg
hold traps suffer slow, agonizing deaths. Some
are attacked by predators, freeze to death,
or chew off their own legs to escape. It has
been said that one can get a "feel for
fur" by slamming your fingers in a car
door. A Canadian Wildlife service report
gives an idea of the terror that trapped animals
face and their desperate efforts to escape:
The stomachs of [trapped] arctic
foxes . . . often contain parts of their own
bodies. They may swallow fragments of their
teeth broken off in biting the trap, and sometimes
part of a mangled foot; almost every stomach
contains some fox fur, and a considerable
number contain pieces of skin, claws, or bits
of bone.
Over 100 million wild animals
are killed for their pelts every year. Many
species of animals killed for their furs have
become endangered or have disappeared completely
from some localities.Millions of animals not
wanted by trappers, including dogs, cats, and
birds, die in traps annually and are discarded
as "trash animals." Many trapped animals
leave behind dependent offspring who are doomed
to starvation.
Treatment of animals raised on
"fur ranches" is also extremely cruel.
Confined to lifelong confinement, millions of
foxes, beavers, minks, ocelots, rabbits, chinchillas,
and other animals await extinction nothing to
do, little room to move, and all their natural
instincts thwarted. The animals are simply a
means to the maximizing of production and profit,
and there is no regard for their physical, mental,
or emotional well being. Because of the enforced
confinement and lack of privacy, naturally wild
animals often exhibit neurotic behaviors such
as compulsive movements and self mutilation.
The animals finally suffer hideous deaths by
electrocution by rods thrust up their anuses,
by suffocation, by poisoning, which causes painful
muscle cramping, or by having their necks broken.
According to the International
Society for Animal Rights, Inc.,to make one
fur garment requires 400 squirrels; 240 ermine;
200 chinchillas; 120 muskrats; 80 sables; 50
martens; 30 raccoons; 22 bobcats; 12 lynx; or
5 wolves.
IS FUR NECESSARY?
Judaism puts human beings on a
higher level than animals and indicates that
animals may be harmed and even killed if an
essential human need is met. However, is the
wearing of fur truly necessary for people to
stay warm during wintry weather? There are many
non-fur coats and hats, available in a variety
of styles, that provide much warmth. Imitation
fur is produced at such a high level of quality
that even among Chasidim there is a small but
growing trend to wear synthetic "shtreimlach"
(fur-trimmed hats).
Based on the prohibition of tsa'ar
ba'alei chayim, Rabbi Chaim Dovid Halevy,
Sephardic Chief Rabbi of Tel Aviv issued a p'sak
(rabbinic ruling) in March, 1992, indicating
that Jews should not wear fur. Rabbi Halevy
asked: "Why should people be allowed to
kill animals if it is not necessary, simply
because they desire the pleasure of having the
beauty and warmth of fur coats? Is it not possible
to achieve the same degree of warmth without
fur?"
In his book, The Jewish Encyclopedia
of Moral and Ethical Issues, Rabbi Nachum
Amsel, a modern Israeli educator, states: "If
the only reason a person wears the fur coat
is to "show off" one's wealth or to
be a mere fashion statement, that would be considered
to be a frivolous and not a legitimate need.
Rabbi Amsel also points out that hunting for
sport is prohibited because it is not considered
a legitimate need (Avodah Zarah 18b).
OTHER CONSIDERATIONS
The Talmud teaches that Jews are
"rachamanim b'nei rachamanim," compassionate
children of compassionate ancestors (Beitza
32b). One has to wonder if the wearing of
fur is consistent with that challenging mandate.
Are the words of Isaiah valid
today if we fail to show compassion to animals?
Even though you make many prayers,I
will not listen. Your hands are full of blood.
(Isaiah 1:12-15)
What kind of lesson in Jewish
values are young people getting when they see
worshippers coming to synagogue in fur coats
on the Sabbath day?
Not only do animals benefit from
our compassion and concern -- we, too, benefit
by becoming more sensitive and more humane,
as Jews and civilized human beings.