📚 Daf Yomi Summary –Chullin 18: Defective Slaughter: How Much Error Invalidates Shechitah

  1. Defects Found After Slaughter

The Gemara discusses cases where:

  • After shechitah, defects are discovered in the trachea or esophagus

Key question:

  • Did the defect exist before shechitah (making it invalid)?
  • Or did it occur during shechitah?
  1. Presumption vs. Proof

Two principles collide:

  • Chazakah: assume the animal was kosher
  • Physical evidence: suggests possible invalidity

The Gemara rules:

  • We follow the most reasonable assumption
  • If the defect could plausibly be caused by the knife → shechitah stands
  • If it clearly pre‑existed → invalid
  1. Degrees of Damage

Not all damage is equal:

  • Minor tears → may be attributed to the act of shechitah
  • Structural weakness or decay → indicates prior treifah

Halacha weighs anatomy, probability, and common experience.

  1. Torah Law Is Not Hyper‑Suspicious

The daf reinforces:

  • Torah does not assume failure without evidence
  • Kashrut relies on normal physical reality

Without this balance:

Eating meat would become impossible.

Core Themes of Chullin 18

  • Kashrut depends on realistic assessment
  • Presumptions protect daily life
  • Physical evidence must be interpreted, not feared

One‑sentence takeaway

Chullin 18 teaches that shechitah is judged by reasonable physical assessment, balancing caution with livable halacha.

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