Tag: Buddha

  • Thailand Chasing Halal Gold With Tourism And Food

    Thailand Chasing Halal Gold With Tourism And Food

    The ceremony is one of dozens of marriages held over the last few months at the Al Meroz – the city’s first entirely halal hotel.

    Thailand has long been a draw for the world’s sun-seekers and hedonists, drawn to its parties, red-light districts, cheap booze and tropical beaches.

    But it has also seen a huge influx of visitors from Muslim countries, part of a quiet but deliberate strategy by the Southeast Asian nation to diversify its visitor profile.

    “Considering there are 1.5 billion Muslims around the world, I think this is a very good market,” explains Sanya Saenboon, the general manager of the hotel, one of a growing number of businesses serving a boom in Islamic tourists.

    The hotel opened its doors last year, setting itself apart with its attention to all things Islamic.

    For a start there is no alcohol on sale, while the top floor swimming pool and gym has specific times for when men and women can use the facilities.

    Everything in the building has been ticked off against a stringent checklist for practising Muslims, from bed linen washed in a particular way, to ensuring toiletries are free of alcohol or animal fat – making everyday goods “permissible” for the faithful.

    Sanya, who is Muslim, says such checks give visitors “peace of mind” so clients never have to ask themselves “can I eat this?”

    Sanya Saenboon, general manager of the Al Meroz hotel. (Photo: AFP/Robert Schmidt)

    “AHEAD OF THE CURVE”

    Despite a decade of political turbulence, Thailand has seen an explosion in tourist arrivals, from 13.8 million annual visitors in 2006 to a record 32.5 million last year.

    Western arrivals have largely remained a constant. The biggest increase in arrivals comes from China, skyrocketing from just 949,000 arrivals 10 years ago to 8.7 million visitors in 2016.

    But Muslim countries are also sending their citizens.

    An AFP analysis of government figures shows visitors from key majority Muslim nations in the Middle East and Asia have risen from 2.63 million in 2006 to 6.03 million last year.

    “Thailand was ahead of the curve,” says Fazal Baharden, founder of the Singapore-based Crescent Rating, which rates which countries are most welcoming to Muslim travellers.

    Thailand routinely places in the top two for non-Muslim majority nations alongside Singapore in Crescent Ratings’ annual survey of halal destinations.

    “They’ve really recognised the Muslim consumer market is worth tapping into,” he explains, adding medical tourism, shopping and high quality hotels are the primary draws.

    Baharden says the Islamic travel market is one of the world’s fastest-growing, thanks to the growth of cheap flights and booming Muslim middle classes.

    He estimates the number of Muslim travellers has surged from around 25 million a year in 2000 to 117 million in 2015.

    But it is not just at home that Thailand has gone halal.

    FOOD GETS HALAL MAKEOVER

    From chicken and seafood to rice and canned fruit, the country has long been one of the world’s great food exporters.

    Now a growing numbers of food companies are switching to halal to widen their customer base.

    Against a backdrop of humming machines churning out butter, Lalana Thiranusornkij, a Buddhist, explains how her family turned their three factories – under the KCG Corp banner – halal to access markets in Indonesia, Malaysia and in the Gulf.

    But going halal sometimes required some clever workarounds, such as how to avoid animal-based gelatin to make jelly.

    “In the past we used gelatin from pork but … we changed our gelatin from the pork source to be from a seaweed source,” she said.

    Thailand’s junta has set the goal of turning the country into one of the world’s top five halal exporting nations by 2020.

    Some outsiders might be surprised to see an overwhelmingly Buddhist nation embrace halal.

    But Dr Winai Dahlan, founder of the Halal Science Centre at Bangkok’s Chulalongkorn University, says Thailand was well-placed to make the change.

    Five per cent of its population is Muslim and – outside of the insurgency plagued southern border region – is well-integrated within the Buddhist majority.

    It was local Thai Muslims who first began asking for the country’s halal testing centre, a business that scours products for any banned substances and has since boomed.

    A Thai lab technician tests halal products at the Halal Science Centre at Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok. (Photo: AFP/Roberto Schmidt)

    “Fifteen years ago there was only 500 food plants that had halal certification. Now it’s 6,000,” Winai told AFP as female lab technicians in headscarves tested food products for traces of pork DNA.

    Over the same period the number of halal certified products made in Thailand has gone from 10,000 to 160,000, he added.

    It’s paid off. The government estimates the halal food industry is already worth $6 billion a year.

    As Thailand has quickly learned, there’s gold at the end of the halal rainbow.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Singaporean Buddhist: Rohingya Issue An International Humanitarian Issue, Not Just A Muslim Problem

    Singaporean Buddhist: Rohingya Issue An International Humanitarian Issue, Not Just A Muslim Problem

    Admin hi,

    I’m Singapore born and bred Chinese who became a Buddhist over 8 years ago. Been following your posts on the plight of the Rohingya in Myanmar. Some of the images and videos were very hard to take. As a Buddhist, it pains me to read that some of the inhumane treatment on the Rohingya were allegedly carried out by militant Buddhists. It made me question my faith but I’ve become better for it as I’ve been able to rationalise that these deplorable acts are not what Buddhism is about. Moreover, the Buddhism practiced there is not the same as what’s practiced here.

    Trust me, we all want to help. Me and my other non-Muslim friends, we all want to help. That’s only natural after looking at the suffering. But we all don’t quite know how. Nevertheless, we cannot lose hope.

    I want to reassure all my Muslim friends we suffer with you on this Rohingya issue. The Rohingya are human beings just like us. Their lives should not be toyed with, with such appalling disregard.

    Their suffering is not a Muslim problem. It is a problem for the world, for humanity. All humankind should roundly condemn the actions of the Myanmar government.

    In the past, the world marginalised Myanmar because of its disregard of democracy and its mistreatment of Aung San Suu Kyi. What the Rohingya is going through is far worse. The world cannot turn a blind eye just because there is some semblance of democracy in the country now.

    The world can, and should do better.

    In separateness lies the world’s greatest misery; in compassion lies the world’s true strength.

    #savetheRohingya #SingaporeansforRohingya #solidaritywithRohingya

    Lotus

    [Reader Contribution]

  • Dalai Lama On Rohingya Muslims: If Buddha Happened, He Would Protect The Rohingya Brothers And Sisters

    Dalai Lama On Rohingya Muslims: If Buddha Happened, He Would Protect The Rohingya Brothers And Sisters

    Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi has a moral responsibility to try to ease tensions between majority Buddhists and minority Rohingya Muslims, her fellow Nobel laureate, the Dalai Lama, said on Monday.

    The Tibetan spiritual leader said he had stressed the issue in meetings with Suu Kyi, who came to power in April in the newly created role of state counsellor in Myanmar’s first democratically elected government in five decades.

    “She already has the Nobel Peace Prize, a Nobel Laureate, so morally she should … make efforts to reduce this tension between the Buddhist community and Muslim community,” he told Reuters in an interview in Washington.
    “I actually told her she should speak more openly.”

    Violence between majority Buddhists and minority Muslims in recent years has cast a cloud over progress with democratic reforms in Myanmar. Rights groups have sharply criticized Suu Kyi’s reluctance to speak out on the Rohingya’s plight.

    The Dalai Lama said Suu Kyi, who won worldwide acclaim and a Nobel Peace Prize as a champion of democratic change in the face of military persecution, had responded to his calls by saying that the situation was “really complicated.”

    “So I don’t know,” he said.

    There is widespread hostility towards Rohingya Muslims in the Buddhist-majority country, including among some within Suu Kyi’s party and its supporters.

    More than 100 people were killed in violence in western Rakhine state in 2012, and some 125,000 Rohingya Muslims, who are stateless, took refuge in camps where their movements are severely restricted.

    Thousands have fled persecution and poverty in an exodus by boat to neighboring South and Southeast Asian countries.

    The Dalai Lama said some Buddhist monks in Myanmar “seem to have some kind of negative attitude to Muslims” and Buddhists who harbored such thoughts “should remember Buddha’s face.”

    “If Buddha happened, he certainly would protect those Muslim brothers and sisters,” he said.

    The new Myanmar government announced late last month that Aung San Suu Kyi would lead a new effort to bring peace and development to Rakhine State.

    The announcement offered no details on how the group would go about addressing the state’s multitude of problems.
    Suu Kyi said during a visit by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry last month that the country needed “enough space” to deal with the Rohingya issue and cautioned against the use of “emotive terms”, that she said were making the situation more difficult.

     

    Source: http://indianexpress.com