Negative Commandment 217 (Digest)
Interbreeding Animals
"You shall not let your cattle breed with a different kind"—Leviticus 19:19.
It is forbidden to breed together two different animal species.
The
217th prohibition is that we are forbidden from crossbreeding different species
of animals.
The
source of this commandment is G‑d's statement, "Do not crossbreed your livestock with other
species."
The
punishment for crossbreeding an animal is lashes, provided that the person
actually placed the organ of the male animal in that of the female by hand, [as
the Talmud puts it,] "like an applicator in its tube." Our Sages said this clearly: "For adultery, [the
witnesses] only need to see them in the position of sexual relations. For
crossbreeding, they must see 'like an applicator in its tube.' "
Only then does the person receive lashes.
The
details of this mitzvah are explained
in the eighth chapter of tractate Kilayim.
Negative Commandment 218 (Digest)
Working with Two Animal Species
"You shall not plow with an ox and donkey together"—Deuteronomy 22:10.
It is forbidden to cause animals of two species to work together, e.g., to have them jointly plow, thresh or pull a wagon.
Biblically, this prohibition only applies if one of the animals is kosher (e.g., an ox) and the other is of a non-kosher species (e.g., a donkey). The Sages, however, extended this prohibition to apply to any two species.
The
218th prohibition is that we are forbidden from using two species of animals to
work together.
The
source of this commandment is G‑d's statement, "Do not plow with an ox and a donkey
together."
One
receives lashes for using them for any kind of work, such as plowing,
threshing, or driving. This is because the verse says, "together,"
meaning that one cannot bring them together for any kind of work.
One
only receives lashes by Torah law when one species is kosher and the other one
non-kosher, such as "an ox and a donkey." Then, one is lashed for plowing,
pulling or driving with them. One receives lashes by Rabbinic decree for using
any two species [even if they are both kosher or both non-kosher].
The
details of this mitzvah are explained
in the eighth chapter of tractate Kilayim.
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