cellio: (kitties)
[personal profile] cellio
During Pesach we are not permitted to eat, own, or benefit from chametz (leaven, but it's more complicated than that now). Traditional interpretations of halacha raise this as a problem for pet owners, because keeping your pets alive benefits you. So you have to find compliant forms of pet food, or send the pets elsewhere for a week, or perhaps sell the pets along with your chametz (I'm not sure if that works -- that would make you the custodian of someone else's pets for the week).

I think this interpretation of "benefit from" makes sense in the case of livestock (that you're ultimately going to profit from in some way), but I don't see it for pets. Pets aren't profit centers; they're family members -- you can argue about pecking order within the family, but that's another matter.

Still, I am mindful of the traditional problem. I can't change the food (one is on a special diet), and I'm not going to send them away or sell them, but I can still do something, without even invoking compassion or arguing about whether pikuach nefesh (serious health issues) applies to non-humans.

So, I hereby transfer ownership of the cat food in the house to the cats.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-04-12 01:55 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cvirtue.livejournal.com
Since she's Jewish, and the cats are a bit like children, then the old standby that the mother's religion is transmitted to the children, should obtain. So I suppose the cats are Jewish.

However, if cat rabbis exist, I doubt the cats are communicating this to the humans very effectively, so keeping their version of Jewish law would have to be up to them.

Cellio, I hope you have a ... er, what's the right wish for the holiday? Happy Passover? or is that too flip for the occasion?

(no subject)

Date: 2006-04-12 02:10 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cvirtue.livejournal.com
You'd be set for life, is what you'd be!

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