"Like Judaism refers to vegetarianism? I beg you to give a detailed answer to my question."


On weekdays, there is no obligation to eat meat, so there is no ban on vegetarianism. In particular, if a person holds this power supply system for the sake of health.


However, those who practice vegetarianism for reasons of "humanity", goes wrong for several reasons:


The first reason


In the field of values, the issue of what is good and what is - an evil that humanity, and that is not humane, one should rely only on the Creator. And if the Almighty has allowed us anything, we can conclude that there is no problem with humanism. This we pray in the coming beit midrash (house of study): "Do not tell me about the permitted: not allowed." Our sages said (Talmud Yerushalmi, Nedarim 9, 1), that a man who forbids himself to something, approved it, and makes a vow not to enjoy it, commits sin: "It is not enough to you that forbade you the Torah, but you you want to ban himself and other things. " And often the person who relies on his own judgment in matters of morality, comes to substitution of concepts and in fact removed from morality. We see how different organizations fighting for "animal rights" be cruel to people, forgetting, apparently, that the people - the same "little" animals.


The second reason


A person who constantly rejects meat, weakening itself and can not fulfill God's will perfectly. And our sages said (Talmud Yerushalmi, Kidushin 4, 12): "We'll have a man to give an account for everything that they had seen his eyes, but did not eat." Here it means food that can give people more power to serve the Almighty as Ramchal explains in his book Mesilas Yesharim (chapter "Prishut").


Source: Imrey Noam. http://imrey.org