Anonymous ID: c21b5f Jan. 16, 2023, 11:29 a.m. No.18156717   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>6737

>>18156707

vaccines are a jewish lie

 

The rabbis have produced Responsa on the subject for centuries. One of the key laws in the Talmud is Pikuah Nefesh which states that almost any law can be broken if it saves life. The only exceptions are those concerning idol worship, incest and bloodshed. One father in Victorian times was arrested for refusing to vaccinate his son. The opinion of the Chief Rabbi was sought. Hermann Adler said that it was within the din to vaccinate. Chief Rabbi Mirvis has said it is a religious imperative to get vaccinated.

 

The law also says that the opinions of Doctors must be followed. There was a hiccup when 12 doctors wrote in The Lancet that vaccination could cause autism. Some years later they changed their minds when the lead researcher was found to have falsified his results. There is no evidence it causes autism.

 

The Rabbinical Assembly, the Association of Conservative Rabbis in America, has voted unanimously in favour of vaccination, pointing out that wearing masks, physical distancing and washing hands are obligated by the Halachah. They arenโ€™t just recommended; they are obligated.

 

At the other end of the religious scale is the late Hasidic Rabbi Menachem Schneerson who said that vaccination was a mitzvah to protect your health. A mitzvah isnโ€™t an option; itโ€™s a law. Rabbi Zalman Auerbach, another famous Hasidic rabbi, said that if the only time you could be vaccinated was on the Sabbath, that was permissible as well

 

Nevertheless there are demonstrations against vaccination and the World Health Organisation has said that resistance to it is number one on the list of global health threats. Forty per cent of the French do not trust vaccination. In Israel and the United States there have been demonstrations against it. There was a positive war of street posters in Israel advocating vaccination and condemning it. The din is the din though.

 

https://blogs.timesofisrael.com/the-jewish-view-of-vaccination/