Prejudice against Jews became a focal point in the controversy about the legality of
shechita, the Jewish practice of ritual slaughter. The issue had originally been raised in the 1890s, but a municipal ban on the practice in 1913 in
Oslo brought the matter to national attention.
Early opposition Efforts to ban
shechita put well-intended humane society activists in league with antisemitic individuals. In particular, Jonas Søhr, a senior police official, took a particular interest and eventually rose to the leadership of the
Norwegian Federation for Animal Protection, while also opposing admission of Jewish refugees during World War I. The animal rights cause was used as a means to attack not just the method of slaughter, but also the community itself. Those opposing the ban included
Fridtjof Nansen, but the division on the issue crossed party lines in all mainstream parties, except the
Agrarian Party (today, the Centre Party), which was consistent in its opposition to
schechita. During the 1890s, protests were raised in the Norwegian press against the practice of
shechita, on the grounds that it was cruel to animals. The Jewish community responded to these objections by stating that the method was humane. A committee commissioned on 11 February 1927 consulted numerous experts and visited a slaughterhouse in Copenhagen. Its majority favored a ban and found support in the
Department of Agriculture and the parliamentary agriculture committee. Those who opposed a ban spoke of religious tolerance, and also found that
schechita was no more inhumane than other slaughter methods. Ingvar Svanberg writes that many of the arguments against
shechita were based "on the distrust of 'foreign' habits" and "often contained anti-Semitic elements".
C. J. Hambro was one of those most appalled by the antisemitic invective, noting that "where animal rights are protected to an exaggerated extent, it usually is done with the help of human sacrifice".
1929 ban The controversy continued until 1929, when the
Norwegian parliament banned the practice of slaughtering animals which have not been first stunned or paralyzed. The ban remains in force today. No forms of religious slaughter are named as being banned in the Norwegian legislation. Norwegian law requires that animals be stunned before being slaughtered, without exception for religious practices, which is incompatible with
shechita. The
Norwegian Islamic Council, on the other hand, has found that sedation is compatible with
halal rules, provided that the animal's heart is still beating at the time of slaughter.
Continued debate The former chief rabbi of Norway,
Michael Melchior, argued that antisemitism is one motive for the bans: "I won't say this is the only motivation, but it's certainly no coincidence that one of the first things Nazi Germany forbade was kosher slaughter. I also know that during the original debate on this issue in Norway, where
shechitah has been banned since 1930, one of the parliamentarians said straight out, 'If they don't like it, let them go live somewhere else.'" Representatives of both Muslim and Jewish communities, citing scientific studies, dispute the assertion that traditional
halal and kosher slaughtering methods lead to unnecessary animal suffering. Norway's acceptance of hunting, whaling and sealing were also raised as proof of the alleged hypocrisy of the Norwegian position. Minister of Agriculture,
Lars Peder Brekk of the Centre Party (which has always rejected
shechita, see above), rejected the comparison. Proponents of the continued ban, including officials from the
Norwegian Food Safety Authority claimed that animals slaughtered according to
shechita were conscious for "several minutes" after they were slaughtered, and writer and farmer
Tore Stubberud claimed that animals in Judaism had "no moral status... pure objects for ... archaic, religious needs", and wondered whether the EU, in allowing for such slaughter had become "purely a bank, without values". To get around the ban, kosher meat has had to be imported into the country. In June 2019, it was proposed to extend the ban to imports of kosher meat. The proposal has also been described as antisemitic. ==Holocaust==