Category: HALAL

  • A&W’s Comeback To Singapore Plagued By ‘Halal Not Halal’ Issue.. Seriously?

    A&W’s Comeback To Singapore Plagued By ‘Halal Not Halal’ Issue.. Seriously?

    Yes, again the ‘Halal Not Halal’ issue is baccccccccck and the TRENDING restaurant that everyone is talking about now is A&W Singapore.

    “We gave up. The queue was 1 hour.”

    Said one of the kiasu patrons of A&W on its first day reopening in Singapore after they have been gone for a long time. Other than A&W, many flocked over to Jewel Changi Airport over the weekend to see the news attractions especially the waterfall.

    But what is the hype eh about this A&W, because in JB the outlets are lengang (slow business). (:

    Photo of an outlet in JB

    So, apart from the tak boleh rilek crowd that die-die confirm plus chop cannot eat on other days (other than the opening day) or wait it out a few days/weeks, the issue of HALAL CERTIFICATION surfaced. Not surprising la.. Singaporeans.

    Screenshot taken from Facebook

    This ah gerl say don’t make A&W Singapore become halal certified. Her argument is that people ONLY have a choice to eat beef or pork, so if someone don’t eat beef they need to eat the pork instead. #bodohpehstatement #racistmuch

    “Dekni tk makan Babi,dia makan Taik Babi.”

    Oops. Not we say one siol. Someone who replied to her said that. Padan muka you.

    Anyway, A&W Singapore saved the day when they instantaneously responded the following to Singaporeans’ squabble about ‘Halal Not Halal’ issue.

    Beyond opening new outlets, A&W also wants to cater to various segments of the local market, said Mr Tan. It has “every intention” of submitting its application to the Islamic Religious Council of Singapore (MUIS) for halal-certification.

    “The Muslim community formed a very big chunk of our business (in the past) and I think right now we will continue to respect and recognise that this particular market is very important to us,” said Mr Tan.

    “From the start, when developing the menu, we always wanted to make it halal, but obviously we need to get the restaurant to open first – we are in the process – meaning to say we have every intention to submit our application to MUIS.

    “We’re hoping that the crowd will ease out a bit and then we will get them to come in (and do an audit),” said Mr Tan.

    “Right now, we would like consumers to know that it’s a Muslim friendly menu, no pork no lard, and as soon as we can find the time to submit our application to MUIS, we will do so immediately.”

    Photo from CNA

    Wohoo! Definitely great news for us Muslims! Thanks to A&W.

    A&W has been halal in the past and will always continue to be halal to cater for the Muslim community in Singapore.

    Btw, 94% responded YES to a poll asking if A&W should be halal.

    Duh of course yes. It’s our birthright!

     

    Rilek1Corner

     

  • Impermissible to drink “Zero Alcoholic” Beer, Says Office Of the Mufti SG

    Impermissible to drink “Zero Alcoholic” Beer, Says Office Of the Mufti SG

    Can Muslims drink “0% alcohol” beer? The answer is NO. It is not permissible if it meets either or both the criteria below.

    1. The process of making the drink is similar to the process done to make alcoholic drinks.

    (Explanation: Products that contain zero alcohol or have its alcohol removed actually have similar manufacturing process as alcoholic beverages.)

    2. The product is marketed in a similar way to how alcoholic drinks are marketed.

    (Explanation: The products are also being marketed in a manner that is similar to alcoholic beverages – its packaging and etc. Islam takes a firm stand against products which are haram, or can lead to haram activities. Hence, for products that intentionally mimic haram products, extra precautionary measures must be taken in order to emphasize the prohibition of the original product, and the Islamic denunciation of such products.)

     

    Ruling by Office of the Mufti, Islamic Religious Council of Singapore (MUIS)

    #beer #butterbeer #0percentalcoholbeer

     

    Rilek1Corner

  • Halal Scanner; Singapore-made app to know if a product is halal or not just by scanning

    Halal Scanner; Singapore-made app to know if a product is halal or not just by scanning

    Azman Ivan Tan, CEO, and Salehin Amat Kamsin, chief operating officer of WhatsHalal say their app can tell if a food product is halal or not, just by scanning its barcode, ingredients list, or product image.

    The new tool, which is set to launch at the end of April, can supposedly tell users if a food product is likely to be halal or not – just by scanning its barcode or ingredients list.

    The Halal Scanner will be integrated into the existing WhatsHalal app, which was designed as a halal food guide for consumers, businesses and enterprises.

    The WhatsHalal app was launched in February last year, around four months after entreprenuers Azman Ivan Tan and Salehin Amat Kamsin first co-founded the tech company.

    Although the app offers four other key services to consumers – a halal restaurant listing, food delivery, takeaway food orders and restaurant reservations – only the listing service is available now due to a revamp of the app.

    A beta version of the upcoming Halal Scanner is expected to be launched in all of WhatsHalal’s available countries – Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia and Australia.

    In an interview with Business Insider, Azman, who is now CEO, and Salehin, who serves as chief operating officer, said that they are expecting at least 50,000 products to be scanned in the first few months after the launch.

    During this phase, the WhatsHalal team will identify scanned ingredients which require halal verification. According to Salehin, about 150,000 potential ingredients are expected to surface for validation.

    How it works

    The scanner has three identification methods – product image, barcode and ingredients list – and all of them work based on community-driven data collected over time.

    Users first take a photo of a product in the app. If WhatsHalal’s back-end team is able to verify that the product’s packaging contains the Islamic Religious Council of Singapore (Muis) logo, it will automatically accept that the product is halal.

    The data is then stored in WhatsHalal’s system and the next time a user scans a barcode of the same product, the app will immediately indicate that it is halal.

    In cases where a product does not bear a Muis logo, its ingredients list come into play. After a user scans the ingredients list on the app, WhatsHalal automatically conducts an optical character recognition (OCR) on it.

    “If it doesn’t have a Muis logo, what we do is we let the system learn over time. By default, the system knows – if there’s salt and sugar, the system will flash ‘halal’ and ‘halal’. Only when they see pork, it will immediately say ‘not halal’. Very clear cut,” Azman, who has 20 years of experience in technology and business management, said.

    But for ingredients that are in the grey area, more information will be shown so the consumer can make a more informed choice. One such ingredient is gelatin, which can be from different sources such as fish or beef.

    “You can click on that, and we’ll show you a little bit of information, such as gelatin from (a certain country) is likely halal, and (if it’s) from China then it’s likely non-halal,” the 42-year-old said.

    If a significant number of users were to raise their concerns on a particular product, WhatsHalal will engage certified, external halal consultants to conduct thorough checks on whether its ingredients are likely halal or not.

    “So if this (a product) comes from XYZ company, and, say, this company has been certified by a proper certifying body, we’ll take it as yes – our halal consultants don’t need to check all the way. But if it’s not certified they’ll check with manufacturers,” Azman said.

    Salehin, 32, said that while the aim of the Halal Scanner is to verify as many products as possible, there is also a need to be practical by recognising operation constraints.

    “We must put things into perspective – there’s a small number of Muslims in Singapore, but millions in Indonesia and Malaysia,” he said. It is hence not practical to expect the WhatsHalal team to be able to check every single product scan that comes in.

    And that’s where the WhatsHalal database will shine.

    “The more people scan, the more we build up product database,” he said.

    The company is even looking at incorporating a translation feature within the scanner, so that users can scan products bought from other countries and still collect the information they need to make a decision.

    Helping Muslim customers make better decisions faster

    With the Halal Scanner, Azman and Salehin hope to help customers make decisions more quickly by speeding up the halal food identification process.

    “When we go to a supermarket, the first thing we do is look at the ingredients list. As a Muslim, we’re sure that some ingredients are halal, but not so sure of others. So we’ll check online, and that’s a lengthy process sometimes, given that each product has, say, 10 ingredients,” Azman said.

    “So what happens with our system is we actually just speed up the process and make it easy. All the information is at your fingertips,” he added.

    But Azman emphasised that the Halal Scanner is not created to dictate a user’s decision. Rather, it serves as a guide for informed decision-making.

    “We will not be able to tell you that something is 100 per cent halal… we leave it to the end user to make the decision. We are only helping you to map,” he said.

     

    Source: BusinessTimes

  • PyeongChang 2018 Winter Olympics: Muslim Prayer Room Scrapped Due To Strong Anti-Muslim Protests

    PyeongChang 2018 Winter Olympics: Muslim Prayer Room Scrapped Due To Strong Anti-Muslim Protests

    By and large, PyeongChang has gone out of its way to welcome the world for the 2018 Winter Olympics. But not everyone in the South Korean host city is feeling the Olympic spirit.

    The Korea Tourism Organization (KTO) has announced that it will no longer go forward with plans to set up a mobile multi-faith prayer room for spectators in Gangneung, where all of the Games’ indoor events are taking place, following “strong opposition” from anti-Muslim protestors, according to Al Jazeera’s Haeyoon Kim and Faras Ghani.

    “We sat down with them for talks, but in the end, we had to cancel the plans,” Gangneung city government tourism division chief Kang Suk-ho told Al Jazeera.

    The KTO’s Kim Yeong-ju told Korea Exposé’s Ho Kyeong Jang that opposition to the prayer rooms was so strong that local officials “could no longer do their jobs.”

    Much of the hostility has flowed from the PyeongChang Olympics Gangwon Citizens’ Islam Countermeasure Association, a relatively new group that pushed a petition against the prayer room via Google. The petition — which stoked fear about radical Islam in the South Korean province of Gangwon — has collected more than 56,000 digital signatures.

    “The government has already spent too much of the taxpayers’ money on the Games, and we shouldn’t spend more building a prayer room,” Seo Ji-hyun, the director of operations at the Islam Countermeasure Association, told Al Jazeera. He also suggested that Muslims should refrain from prayer at the Olympic Games as they supposedly would while flying or driving.

    Islamophobia is nothing new in South Korea, where Muslims comprise just 0.2 percent of an overall population of 51 million. The Citizens’ Association for a Proper Country, a civic group led by Jeong Hyeong-man, has advocated against halal-friendly establishments and warned against “the increase of Muslim terrorist bases in Korea.”

    Muslim athletes in PyeongChang still have access to a cafeteria serving certified halal food. And all visitors to the Winter Games who adhere to the faith can count on vociferous support from the Korean Muslim Federation.

    This decision demonstrates that we, as a host country, lack thoughtful understanding,” Lee Ju-hwa, a KMF representative, told Al Jazeera in a statement, before adding, “Instead of claiming that the installation of a prayer room is preferential treatment given to a certain religion, we need to raise awareness that it was to consider others with different faith and beliefs.”

    The move comes as another blow to the host country’s attempts to bolster its image as a “Muslim-friendly Korea.” According to the KTO, South Korea saw a 33-percent year-over-year increase in Muslim tourists between 2015 and 2016, and welcomed 1.7 million members of the faith as visitors in 2017.

    Source: sports yahoo

     

    Rilek1Corner

  • Students Took Issue With UCF Muslim Group’s ‘Try A Hijab On’ Booth And Ignites Twitter Fight

    Students Took Issue With UCF Muslim Group’s ‘Try A Hijab On’ Booth And Ignites Twitter Fight

    A University of Central Florida freshman drew national attention this week after she posted on Twitter about a Muslim group at her school offering students the opportunity to try on a hijab.

    Kathy Zhu, 19, said she was walking between classes about noon Thursday, which was annual World Hijab Day, when she passed a Muslim Student Association tent near the Student Union.

    She posted three photos and wrote “there’s a ‘try a hijab on’ booth at my college campus. So you’re telling me that it’s now just a fashion accessory and not a religious thing? Or are you just trying to get women used to being oppressed under Islam?”

    Zhu’s post garnered a quick response, with thousands of Twitter users chiming in, including someone who said she was in one of the photos.

    “I invited you to try one on and you said ‘no thank you,’” the woman wrote. “You didn’t take the time to even ask questions or try to understand what Hijab is. That’s ignorant of you. You literally sprinted after taking the photos. That’s pathetic.”

    In a separate post, the woman urged people to contact the university’s Office of Student Conduct.

    “Let’s get this girl expelled,” she wrote.

    UCF issued a brief statement on Twitter about the matter Friday, saying no action would be taken.

    “The University of Central Florida has received a number of emailed complaints suggesting that disciplinary action be taken against students involved in a disagreement being played out via social media,” the post on the official UCF Twitter account read. “Upon review, neither student’s actions as reported to the university violate our Rules of Conduct.”

    Members of the Muslim Student Association did not respond to requests for comment Friday. The group posted photos on its Facebook page of several people, including at least one man, trying on the head coverings.

    Thursday’s dust-up is one of several social media incidents at UCF during the past year. In July, a student said he was suspended from the school after he posted a marked-up note from his ex-girlfriend on Twitter. The school quickly rescinded his suspension.

    And last March, a post on a private Facebook page inviting members to an event where they would learn how to find and report undocumented immigrants online received national attention. UCF officials said the event did not reflect the school’s values but would not trigger university discipline. The creator of the Facebook post later said the event was a hoax.

    Zhu, who is studying political science at UCF, was born in China and grew up in Kissimmee. She said Friday in an interview that her messages weren’t directed toward a specific student. The woman in the photo calling for her to be expelled, she said, “was way more out of line than what I did.”

    She said she took issue with the idea that students should try on hijabs at UCF, pointing to videos online of women removing or burning the head coverings in protest of a culture or religion they think is oppressive to women.

    One of the photos Zhu posted to Twitter show signs under the Muslim group’s tent saying “My hijab empowers me,” and “My hijab is a symbol of understanding.”

    “The hypocrisy of this is kind of disgusting,” she said.

    Source: orlandosentinel

     

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