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Thousands of Chickens Die of Hypothermia During Kaporos in Brooklyn

October 9, 2022 by Leave a Comment


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Thousands of chickens stacked in crates on the streets of Brooklyn died of hypothermia over the course of two days during Kaporos, a ritual animal slaughter that takes place each year in the days leading up to Yom Kippur, the Jewish day of atonement. After being delivered to Hasidic neighborhoods in Williamsburg, Borough Park, Crown Heights and Midwood, hundreds of crates filled with chickens were left outside in the rain, soaking tens of thousands of chickens who were being stored without shelter on public streets. 

According to Michael Dolling, who rescues and rehabilitates farm animals, young chickens have difficulty regulating their body temperature. When they are exposed to cold temperatures, wind and rain, they quickly become hypothermic. Upon seeing the wet and shivering animals at several Kaporos sites in Williamsburg, Dolling said that thousands of chickens at those sites alone would be dead within hours. In fact, many of the chickens were already dead — before even being used in the ritual. “In past years, when Kaporos took place in September, thousands of chickens slowly roasted in the crates. This year, they froze to death.”  

Over the course of six days, advocates rescued and saved the lives of 238 chickens who would have otherwise died of exposure or been killed during the Kaporos ritual.  The rescuers used car heaters, towels and blankets to warm the shivering birds while rushing them to a triage center for first aid. There, they used heat lamps, heat plates, hair dryers and warm water bottles to raise their body temperature while administering subcutaneous fluids and medicines to stabilize them.

Photo of some of the chickens rescued during Kaporos in 2022

During Kaporos in 2022, animal rights activists in Brooklyn rescued and saved the lives of 238 chickens who would otherwise have died of hypothermia or been slaughtered.

During Kaporos, ultra-Orthodox, or Hasidic, Jews twirl a live chicken around their head while reciting a prayer asking for forgiveness for their sins. After the ritual, the chickens are killed in one of dozens of makeshift slaughterhouses erected on public streets without permits in violation of 15 city and state health and animal cruelty laws.

Photo of chicken feces on public streets during Kaporos

During Kaporos, a ritual slaughter of chickens before Yom Kippur, residential streets in several Hasidic neighborhoods in Brooklyn are contaminated with chicken feces in violation of multiple city and state health codes.

Instead of shutting down the slaughterhouses and issuing fines, the NYPD provides the Kaporos vendors with barricades, floodlights and a police presence to help facilitate the ritual killing. At some of the Kaporos sites, the NYPD closes down entire public streets. Despite the health code and animal cruelty violations and the lack of permits, the city government subsidizes Kaporos because the Hasidic communities in Brooklyn are a powerful voting bloc. 

Photos of chickens killed during Kaporos in Brooklyn, NY

In 2018, animal rights activists brought dead Kaporos chickens left on the streets of Brooklyn into the NYC Department of Health.

For many years, animal rights activists with the Alliance to End Chickens as Kaporos protested Kaporos, calling on practitioners to perform the ritual using coins, a commonly used alternative to chickens. Over time, however, the protests, which did not appear to be effecting change, morphed into “chicken care vigils” during which activists provide food and water to the chickens in the crates.

@theirturn

Look how hungry they are. See 5th link in bio. #kaporos #yomkippur #animalcruelty #hasidimofbrooklyn #animalsacrifice @nychealthy

♬ original sound – Donny Moss

In 2017 and 2018, animal rights activists in New York City ran a campaign to compel the Health Commissioner at the time, Dr. Mary Bassett, to enforce the health codes violated during Kaporos. In a meeting with Dr. Bassett and other Health Department officials, the advocates presented her with a toxicology report which concluded that  Kaporos poses a “significant public health hazard” based on fecal and blood samples taken from the streets. Indeed, several advocates who have rescued abandoned and sick chickens have contracted e. Coli and campylobacter. Dr. Bassett refused to curb Kaporos, telling the advocates that “no disease signals” had been associated with the practice.

After being subjected to ten months of increasingly provocative protests during her public appearances, Dr. Bassett resigned from her position as Health Commissioner with over three years left in her term and moved to Boston. In anticipation of a protest during a talk that she was giving at the Boston University School of Public Health, Dr. Bassett attempted to defend her inaction on the grounds that her boss at the time, Mayor Bill de Blasio, would not allow it:  “Those of us who work in government face the reality of the fact that the people who appoint us have to go back to the public and back to the ballot box to be reappointed, so there’s always going to be a need for advocacy from people outside of government. For someone who is passionately committed to many issues embraced by advocates, it can be difficult to acknowledge the role that I play as a political appointee. I can’t always be at the barricades.”

Photo of chicken body parts on the sidewalk

Animal rights activists say that, as NYS Health Commissioner, Dr. Mary Bassett has an obligation to enforce the health codes and protect the public from another zoonotic disease outbreak

After spending three years in Boston, Dr. Bassett returned to New York in 2021, when Governor Kathy Hochul appointed her State Health Commissioner, a position that gives her more power than before to shut down Kaporos. Activists hoped that the COVID pandemic, which is believed to have originated in a live animal market, would compel Dr. Bassett to curb the practice, as tens of thousands of people without PPE physically handle live animals, many of whom are visibly sick and show signs of respiratory distress.

Photos of toxicology report outlining the risks Kaporos poses to the public health

Mayor de Blasio’s Health Commissioners have refused to address a toxicology report that outlines the public health risks posed by the slaughter of over 100,000 chickens on public streets during Kaporos.

In 2015, an advocacy group called the Alliance to End Chickens as Kaporos and 19 NYC residents who live in neighborhoods that are contaminated by the mass slaughter sued the City of New York, the NYC Department of Health and the NYPD for failing to enforce the 15 public health, sanitation and anti-cruelty laws and regulations that are violated during Kaporos. Nora Constance Marino, the attorney for the plaintiffs, called on the court to issue a “Writ of Mandamus,” which would compel city agencies to enforce the laws. After two lower courts ruled against the plaintiffs, Marino argued her case in front of the Court of Appeals, which ruled that city agencies have discretion over which laws to enforce.

Activists estimate that at least 100,000 chickens are slaughtered in the streets of Brooklyn each year during Kaporos.



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TheirTurn.net Comments

  1. Pro Human says:

    https://www.priestsforlife.org/images/abortion-images-galleries.aspx

    Look at what an abortion looks like…..oh but the chickens

  2. Donny Moss says:

    The Kaporos practitioners didn’t appear to care at all that hundreds of chickens were freezing to death right in front of them. When they were hiding under tarps, the chickens were getting soaked in the rain and shivering uncontrollably

  3. Crib says:

    There is nothing illegal going on. Just because the Jews won their case against you doesn’t mean you need to be such a hater

  4. Fred Stone says:

    They also help protect the Jews from people who come there to harass them. Thanks NYPD for the protection from the Bigots

  5. Freedom of Religion says:

    Another year and the Jew Haters are back. Nothing is illegal going on as the courts have already said. Your propaganda and hatred against the Orthodox Community is well noted like usual. If you don’t like freedom of religion in America there are other countries you can move too. Thousands of people are having Abortions…..are you protesting them and harassing them?

  6. Mark Caponigro says:

    Rina Deych says “It’s mind-boggling,” and she’s absolutely right: what happened this year with an exceptional cold school, of course, but in general with the unnecessary chicken-killing observance of Kaporos. Any observer with a mind and heart cannot but comprehend, that God does not want this; or if he does, he does not deserve to be worshiped.

    I can’t help noting, though, that the Hasidim are fierce, unyielding defenders of their traditions, and are quick to condemn any criticism as anti-Semitic. So let’s not be persuaded that pro-chicken activism will change things any time soon.

  7. Thank you for your report on our united effort to end chicken Kaporos. Two quick things:
    One is that the Alliance to End Chickens as Kaporos filed a lawsuit through our excellent attorney Nora Constance Marino, Esq. that went before the 3 NYS levels: Supreme Court, Appellate Court, and NYS Court of Appeals. Our lawsuit was sadly dismissed for reasons cited on the Alliance website in 2018 at http://www.EndChickensAsKaporos.com. There were two important dissents at the Appellate level.

    Second, NYPD not only provides Kaporos practitioners with barricades and other assistance noted in this report to perform their ILLEGAL activities, but most uglily, filthy orange traffic cones to be used as killing cones into which the bleeding, suffering chickens are shoved face down to bleed out as much blood as can be drained from the live birds before, both dead and alive, they are thrown into big black plastic garbage bags to be trucked to the landfill at taxpayers’ expense. Life doesn’t get any uglier or meaner than this depraved and heartless ritual.

    1. Donny Moss says:

      Thank you for commenting with this info! Yes, we have been told that the police provide the practitioners with the orange traffic cones used to bleed the chickens out onto the street.

  8. Joel Stein says:

    As always, I appreciate your advocacy. But, for the life of me, I cannot understand why a summons or class action lawsuit is not brought against perpetrators of such animal abuse regardless of their ‘religious’ claim. Horrendous abuse is any form is still abuse.

    1. Donny Moss says:

      Actually, a lawsuit was filed against the DOH and NYPD, and it made its way up to the Court of Appeals in Albany. Ultimately, the judges ruled that the city has discretion over which laws to enforce and could therefore turn a blind eye to the laws violated during Kaporos.

  9. Rina Deych says:

    Thank you, Donny, for this powerful piece exposing the horrors that took place on Brooklyn streets. It’s mind-boggling how such extreme disregard for animal suffering is allowed to take place on a yearly basis.

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