A powerful explosion rocked Hangzhou, China, about two hours from the capital Shanghai. According to local media reports, the explosion occurred in a famous restaurant in the city due to a gas leak. Four people were reported killed and dozens wounded. The victims were local residents and passersby.
On the margins of the dramatic event, an untold story is recorded. On the same day, a kashrut inspection was conducted at a food factory located close to the restaurant, by one of the supervisors of the SKS-Mehadrin kashrus supervision, headed by the Admor of Shatz Ashdod.
After the long hours of inspection, the factory owners suggested to the overseer to come and dine with them in a nearby restaurant, as is customary in Chinese culture, whereby a guest is invited to a meal.
Despite the unpleasantness of the refusal, the overseer gently rejected the owners of the factory, claiming that he could not eat the food served in the restaurant for “conscientious reasons” (a refusal of a “religious background” less acceptable in China).
The factory owners finally agreed and gave the overseer a table set with a basket of fruit and water and they went to dine in the famous restaurant. A short time later the explosion took place. The factory owners were injured. The overseer was saved thanks to the observance of kashrus.