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Class Action Suit: Non-Jewish Prisoners Tying Tzitzis Which Are Portrayed As Tied By Avreichim


It is entirely possible that you have pasul tzitzis; A class action lawsuit for a huge sum was filed against the world’s largest tzitzis factory on the grounds of misleading the consumer in the lawsuit: “This is a gross and grave mistake.” A chareidi prisoner found the fraud. The owner’s response to Bechadrei Chareidim: “There is no tallit that leaves the factory without a hechsher for the tying of tzitzis”.

The lawsuit was filed last week in the amount of 100 million shekels against ‘Mishkan Techeiles’ on the grounds of misleading the consumer. On the other hand, the company’s CEO tells Bechadrei Chareidim media there is no deception, and everything is done as per halacha.

The lawsuit claims ‘Mishkan Techeiles’, the largest tzitzis and tallis company in the world, claims to be mehadrin as all its tzitzis and tying are done by “avreichim Yiras Shomayim”. In addition, the lawsuit cites that Shulchan Aruch pasuls tzitzis tied by a non-Jew. Millions of Jews worldwide use Mishkan Techeiles tzitzis daily, relying on its claim, never thinking for a moment that the tying of the tzitzis is actually done by goyim.

“This is a gross, gross, dishonest, and immoral misrepresentation of all consumers who bought the tallitot and tzitzis produced and marketed by the respondent,” wrote a petition filed in the Tel Aviv District Court by attorney Yochi Geva on behalf of Yom Tov Cohen.

The petitioner is a chareidi man who over the years has served a prison term. He says he was shocked to discover that the “Mishkan Techeiles” company uses many non-Jewish prisoners to tie the tzitzis, “in fact hiding it from its customers.” The petition also included an affidavit by Jiyad Abdalla, a prisoner who used to do the tzitzis and an affidavit by Abd al-Rahman as well.

The plaintiff requested the court to approve the claim as a class action and to award compensation in the amount of 100 million shekels or another figure which the court will determine.

On Monday (the eve of Tisha B’Av), the court sent the statement of claim to the Mishkan Techeiles company, which must respond within 90 days. A pre-trial hearing was held before Judge Yechezkel Keiner in February 2018.

Shlomo Avrahami, the founder of the “Mishkan Techeiles” factory, responds to the grave claims and says unequivocally that “there is no tallis that leaves the factory – without a hechsher.” In a conversation with Bechadrei Haredim, Shlomo says that “this claim is fundamentally baseless, and all our tzitzis are tied under different hechsherim including Eida Chareidis, Beis Yosef, Rav Wosner, Rabbanut Tel Aviv, and Rabbi Aryeh Levine is responsible for the kashrus and nothing leaves the factory for sale without a hechsher”.

He acknowledges that prisoners are used as is the case with other tzitzis companies, but they in no way are involved in tying, but rather packaging. He insists the company will prove this in court.

(YWN – Israel Desk, Jerusalem)



7 Responses

  1. I personally don’t care whether the prisoner is tying or packaging the product; I don’t want to purchase any item made by prison labor.

  2. Just what are the rules in the Israeli jail system that allows any work for a private company’s benefit? Even “boxing” things . And why would it be efficient to send finished materials to a prison to have prisoners box them just to send them out again. In other words, don’t the materials have to be boxed in the first place to send them into the prison to be “boxed”? Or is it that prisoners are released into a private factory to do the boxing (now that sounds safe, doesn’t it?)

  3. CTL, you bought license plates made by prison labor. Correctional Enterprises of Connecticut has an exclusive contract.

  4. What would you have inmates doing all day? Chain gangs are history. There are only so many jobs available in the prison laundry. If a private company wants to pay the prison system for inmate labor, it’s a win-win. The work gets done more cheaply, the astronomical expense of housing a prisoner is somewhat offset, and the inmates are doing something productive. Prisoners don’t “make big ones into little ones” like they once did on a rock pile. I suspect an inmate, in Israel or elsewhere, will never see a sledgehammer during his incarceration.

  5. To Arib – You state “one question why is this guy in prison, he must be a real tzadik”.
    I can think of many tzadikim, Rebbes and other frum Yidden who ended up in prison.

    To CTLAWYER – You state “I personally don’t care whether the prisoner is tying or packaging the product; I don’t want to purchase any item made by prison labor.
    How many of your clients ended up in prison? You seem to know them well.

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