Chief Rabbi Slams Private Kashrus Bodies in Knesset: "They Chase Profit, Not Standards"
Rabbi Kalman Bar warns private certification agencies undermine public trust • Businesses flee to lenient supervisors to avoid fixing violations | The battle over Israel's kosher system (Israel News)

Israel's Chief Rabbi delivered a scathing critique of the private kashrut certification industry during a stormy Knesset committee session Tuesday, warning that profit-driven supervision agencies are systematically undermining public trust in the country's kosher food system.
Rabbi Kalman Meir Bar, who serves as Chief Rabbi of Israel and President of the Chief Rabbinate Council, testified before lawmakers preparing legislation to combat kashrut fraud. His testimony marked a rare public confrontation over the kashrut reform implemented in recent years, which opened the market to private certification bodies alongside the state rabbinate system.
"The public needs to know they can rely on a kashrut certificate and the body standing behind it," Rabbi Bar declared in his prepared remarks. "Kashrut is not a marketing brand but a public responsibility requiring professional, continuous, and credible supervision."
The Economic Incentive Problem
The Chief Rabbi's most pointed criticism targeted what he described as the fundamental conflict of interest plaguing private kashrut agencies. Drawing on his 12 years of experience as Chief Rabbi of Netanya, Rabbi Bar explained that municipal rabbinates operate without financial incentives tied to the number of establishments they supervise.
"The Rabbinate is the only body in the system operating entirely without profit considerations," he stated. "Supervisors and inspectors are not compensated based on the quantity of businesses, so the sole consideration guiding them is the welfare of kashrut and the welfare of the public."
In contrast, Rabbi Bar warned that private certification agencies face inherent pressure to retain clients and expand their portfolios — creating what he characterized as a race to the bottom in supervision standards. The Chief Rabbi revealed a troubling pattern: when municipal rabbinates demand businesses correct kashrut violations, those establishments frequently switch to more lenient private supervisors rather than address the underlying problems.
"In many cases, the transfer of businesses between different kashrut bodies occurs precisely against the backdrop of the Rabbinate's demand to correct professional deficiencies in the field," Rabbi Bar testified. "When a business is required to meet binding procedures and instead chooses to seek a more lenient kashrut body to circumvent the problems — uniformity is damaged and public trust is harmed."

The Local Supervision Advantage
Rabbi Bar emphasized that effective kashrus supervision requires intimate knowledge of local establishments and ongoing relationships with business owners — something he argued only municipal rabbinates can provide. "The city rabbi and the kashrut department know the businesses up close, understand the unique needs of the area, and face the daily challenges," he explained. "You cannot manage real kashrut by remote control, without constant presence in the field."
The Chief Rabbi's testimony comes amid a series of high-profile kashrus scandals that have shaken consumer confidence. Earlier this year, the Rabbinate issued an urgent recall after discovering thousands of kilograms of beef containing forbidden fats had been distributed across Israel over a two-year period. In another incident, a Florida catering company was exposed for falsely claiming kosher certification while serving entirely non-kosher food at Jewish events.
The state kashrut system serves millions of Israelis across the religious spectrum — from strictly observant communities to traditional and secular Jews who rely on Rabbinate certification when purchasing kosher products or dining out. Rabbi Bar stressed that this broad public trust depends on maintaining rigorous, politically independent supervision standards.
Legislative Battle Ahead
The Knesset committee is preparing legislation aimed at preventing kashrus fraud, with Rabbi Bar's testimony providing ammunition for lawmakers seeking to strengthen state oversight. The proposed law would impose stricter penalties on businesses falsely claiming kosher certification and establish clearer standards for supervision agencies.
The Chief Rabbi concluded his remarks with an appeal to legislators: "Kashrus is a matter of trust. And that trust is built on professional, consistent supervision independent of economic interests."
As the Knesset moves toward a vote on the anti-fraud legislation, the kashrus industry faces a potential reckoning over supervision standards and accountability.