diet and religion
Publié le 22/02/2012
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Religious regulations about
what people may eat and drink. Most religions
order and regulate what people eat and drink.
Sometimes they make eating and drinking into
RITUALS. Examples include the Japanese tea ceremony
and the Christian EUCHARIST. Sometimes
they teach their adherents to slaughter animals
in special ways or dedicate food to religious
beings or for religious purposes. That is, they
SACRIFICE and make offerings. Sometimes they
ask followers to give up eating, drinking, or
both, either partially or entirely, for a limited
period of time. This is FASTING, which Muslims,
for example, do during the month of Ramadan.
Religions also make rules about ordinary eating
and drinking. That is, they have dietary laws.
Dietary laws answer such questions as what
foods people should and should not eat, who
may prepare and serve food, and when and how
much people may eat. There is probably no item
on which all religions agree.
REGULATIONS CONCERNING MEAT
One of the most common topics for dietary laws
concerns the eating of meat. Some religions do
not allow the eating of meat at all. Traditionally,
most Hindus of the highest religious status have
not eaten meat. Other Hindus consider some meat
and animal products, such as milk, more acceptable
than others, such as beef. Many Buddhists
have practiced vegetarianism. So have Jains, the
Pythagoreans of ancient Greece, Manichaeans, and
some Taoists. In the last decades of the 20th century
a number of North Americans adopted vegetarianism.
They often did so because they wanted
a healthy diet, a diet that was responsible to the
environment, or both. Other religions allow the eating of meat but
strictly regulate which meats may be eaten. The
Jewish laws of kashrut—more colloquially, kosher
foods—are a good example. Traditional Muslims
observe many of the same restrictions on meat
products as Jews. Christians do not.
Observant Jews eat water animals as long as
they have scales and fi ns. Therefore, sole and trout
are kosher or acceptable; lobster, shrimp, eels, and
catfi sh are not. Observant Jews also eat birds that
meet certain requirements. But the best known
kosher law concerns land animals. These animals
must chew the cud and have cloven hoofs. Pigs do
not chew the cud; therefore, observant Jews do not
eat pork—and many other meats as well.
Observant Jews also do not eat blood. This
regulation requires special preparation of meat
before cooking. The BIBLE forbids boiling a kid in
its mother's milk. The RABBIS extended this rule: It
is not proper to eat meat and dairy products in the
same meal. Thus, cheeseburgers and pepperoni
pizzas are not kosher. Observant households often
have two sets of kitchen ware—one for meat meals,
the other for dairy meals. After eating a meat or
dairy dish, observant Jews also let an appropriate
interval—say, six hours—pass before eating foods
of the other variety.
REGULATIONS CONCERNING OTHER FOODS
Religions have had less to say about plant food and
dairy products, but they have not ignored them.
The followers of Pythagoras were forbidden to eat
beans. Members of the Nation of Islam (see ISLAM,
NATION OF) are supposed to avoid certain vegetables
that recall the experiences of slavery. Technically,
Jains may eat only living beings that have a single
sense. This principle prohibits them from eating
some plants as well as meat. (Most North Americans
limit senses to animals, but Jains do not.) Traditional
HINDUISM distinguishes between two types
of food, pakka and kacca. Hindus who are most
concerned about the purity of their diet eat only
food that is pakka. They avoid onions and garlic
as well as animal foods. They also eat food that is
prepared with clarifi ed butter, known as "ghee,"
rather than with oils from plants or animals.
Many religions also regulate the consumption
of alcohol. One of the fi ve precepts of BUDDHISM
rejects alcohol altogether. Some Buddhists, however,
ignore this precept, especially in Japan. JUDAISM
permits alcohol in moderation, but ISLAM strictly
forbids it. Christian attitudes vary. Some Christians
drink to excess when they celebrate certain rituals,
such as CARNIVAL. Some Protestants, however,
avoid alcohol altogether. They even celebrate the
EUCHARIST with unfermented grape juice. After
World War I this Protestant attitude, represented
by groups like the Women's Christian Temperance
Union, helped to pass a constitutional amendment
that made alcohol illegal in the United States. This
started the era of Prohibition (1920–33).
OTHER DIETARY LAWS
Many dietary laws detail what foods may be eaten.
But religions also tell their followers who may prepare,
serve, and clean up food, as well as when
and how much a person may eat.
In traditional Hinduism dietary rules help
defi ne ritual classes (varnas) and castes (jatis) (see
CASTE IN HINDUISM). According to these rules, a person
should eat only cooked food that is prepared
by someone of equal or higher status. Similarly,
people should clean up only food that has been
eaten by someone of equal or higher status. Buddhism
teaches that MONKS AND NUNS should not eat
after noon. MANICHAEISM taught that its elite, called
"the elect," must eat all the food that laypersons
brought to them.
WHY REGULATE DIET?
People often wonder why others observe dietary
laws that they do not. Some people attribute these
laws to medical concerns. For example, some
people think that observant Jews do not eat pork
because pigs carry trichinosis. However, when the
Jewish dietary laws of kashrut were established,
no one knew that pigs carried trichinosis.
Many modern scholars trace dietary laws to a
different cause. They say that these laws help create
group identity. For example, the laws of kashrut
help distinguish Jews from non-Jews. There is
something to this claim. During the 20th century people all over the world moved into modern, pluralistic
cities. When they left their traditional communities
behind, many of them gave up their traditional
dietary practices. But group identity explains
only when people observe dietary laws. It does not
explain the particular laws that they observe.
It is important to note what the religions
themselves say about these laws. Buddhists say
that it takes a clear, crisp mind to pursue enlightenment,
or understanding. Someone who is intoxicated
does not have such a mind. Therefore, they
refrain from alcohol. Jains do not eat meat because
of their devotion to the principle of AHIMSA. Many
observant Jews say that there is only one good reason
for practicing the dietary laws. GOD instructed
them to do so. Who are human beings, that they
should second-guess God?
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