Tony Yengeni’s Ritual Slaughter: Animal Anti-Cruelty vs. Culture

Original Articles

Tony Yengeni’s Ritual Slaughter: Animal Anti-Cruelty vs. Culture

Published in: South African Journal of Philosophy
Volume 28 , issue 3 , 2009 , pages: 271–290
DOI: 10.4314/sajpem.v28i3.47859
Author(s): Kevin Behrens Department of Philosophy, South Africa

Abstract

I address the question: ‘Are acts of the ritual slaughter of animals, of the kind recently engaged in by the Yengeni family, morally justifiable?’ Using the Yengeni incident as a springboard for my discussion, I focus on the moral question of the relative weight of two competing ethical claims. I weigh the claim that we have an obligation not to cause animals pain without good reason against the claim by cultures that traditional practices, such as the one under discussion, are morally justifiable on the basis of the moral goods obtained through cultural identification and participation. I attempt to show that claims justifying practices on the basis of culture are not strong enough to outweigh the prima facie wrong of causing non-human animals unnecessary pain.

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