<span style>Martin asked: Follow up to your previous comments on certification.</span><br style><span style>So, now Mr. Gentile is producing Kosher food with Bittul and he decides he'd like to market it</span><span style>.</span><br style>
<span style>Now, play certifying kashrut agency for a minute, would you give your </span><span style>hecksher to it, and if not why not?</span> <br clear="all"><div><p style>Thats easy.<br>Any one who does not want to be persecuted by the frum ruffians will not certify</p>
<p style>Those who fear Gd, will.</p><p style>Pas Palter is just such a product. Chazal were not only discussing bread produced in a factory in which we know that there are no non-K ingredients. It describes in principle bread produced in the very non-K kitchen of your NJ neighbour. It is baked in his very non-K oven. And it is only bread for which Chazal created the extra standard of Pas Yisrael. All other foods aside from BYisrael foods, <span style="font-size:13px">are Kosher.</span></p>
<p style>I think the new mantra amongst a larger section of the community than we care to admit, is; "It may be good enough for Gd, but is it good enough for me?" or maybe that ought to be, "It may be good enough for Gd, but I dont want to be just an ordinary bloke, I want to be (and I want to be known as being) a tad better than ordinary" We all want to be a BaAl Nefesh, in this arena at least.</p>
</div>-- <br><span style="border-collapse:collapse"><p style="margin-top:0px;margin-right:0px;margin-bottom:0px;margin-left:36pt;font-family:Arial;font-size:16px"><font color="black" face="Verdana"><span style="font-family:Verdana;color:black;font-size:10pt"><span style="font-family:arial;font-size:small;border-collapse:separate">Best,<br>
<br>Rabbi Meir G. Rabi</span></span></font></p></span>