Tag: Islam

  • China Businesses Taps Onto Global Halal Market, But Confused Over What Halal Really Means

    China Businesses Taps Onto Global Halal Market, But Confused Over What Halal Really Means

    QINGTONGXIA — The wine-swilling co-founder of Sai Wai Xiang Halal Foodstuff Co enjoys his pork and does not follow Islam, but still sells more than US$50 million (S$67.4 million) worth of food to Muslims across Asia and the Middle East.

    The company is at the forefront of a Chinese drive into the global halal food and beverage market, exporting as far away as Saudi Arabia.

    Businessman Deng Zhijun bills his wares as “products with Muslim ethnic flavour”, but has difficulty recalling some of Islam’s basic dietary tenets.

    “Muslims definitely don’t smoke and don’t drink alcohol,’ he said over a lunch at the company, in a garden lined with caged peacocks, macaws and chickens. “There’s also some kind of meat they don’t eat, but I forgot.”

    His half-knowledge is typical of China’s complicated relationship with Islam, which officially has more than 23 million adherents in the country. Some independent estimates put it as high as 50 million — which would put China among the world’s top 10 Muslim nations.

    Beijing’s officially atheist Communist authorities oscillate between tight restrictions and more liberal policies that are enforced unevenly.

    Mr Deng’s company is based in Ningxia, a western region a third of whose six million population are Hui. The group are a separate minority under Beijing’s classification policies even though most are essentially from the Han ethnic majority, differentiated only by being Muslims.

    Violence in Xinjiang, the homeland of the other main Muslim minority, the Uighurs, has killed hundreds, with Beijing attributing it to Islamic extremism and foreign influence, while activists blame draconian restrictions on religion and culture.

    In a promotional video playing at Sai Wai Xiang’s factory — set up 14 years ago — a table of happy Chinese diners clink glasses of beer before tucking into their meal.

    “Drinking red wine is very good for the body and has health benefits, just like eating halal food,” said Mr Deng, who recalled a recent trip to Bordeaux and said he often finishes a bottle of the local Ningxia vintages with dinner.

    PORK SAUSAGES

    The global halal food and beverage market is projected to grow to US$1.6 trillion by 2018, according to a report from the Dubai Chamber of Commerce and Industry, up from US$1.1 trillion in 2013.

    Mr Deng and other company executives pointed to President Xi Jinping’s “One Belt, One Road” initiative that aims to boost trade with a host of countries across South Asia and the Middle East, and he expects a windfall of incentives for halal food.

    But there are concerns over how strictly halal standards are followed in China.

    Last year, hundred of Muslims took to the streets in Xi’an to protest the sale of alcohol in halal restaurants. In Qinghai province a crowd destroyed a bakery after pork sausages and ham were found in its delivery trucks.

    Such fears have an impact in potential export markets, and food safety scares are common in China, from gutter oil to milk powder.

    The integrity of Chinese halal food was “questionable”, Dr Miriam Abdul Latif, a professor of food science and a halal expert at the Malaysian University of Sabah, told AFP, citing examples of “fake halal documents or certificates”.

    To build consumer trust, Dr Latif said, Chinese companies should have their products inspected by certification bodies from Muslim countries.

    SECURITY STRATEGY

    But the issue goes to the heart — or perhaps the stomach — of the relationship between religion and the state.

    China’s current halal certification system is a patchwork of local regulations, with varying strictness. Mosques technically have the right to inspect nearby facilities, but ultimate power rests with local government Ethnic and Religious Affairs Bureaux.

    At a high-level national political meeting in Beijing last month, Mr Ma Guoquan, a delegate from Ningxia, called for a single national standard for halal food, and improved enforcement.

    “There are many problems regarding halal food management that can’t be ignored,” Mr Ma said, according to the Ningxia Daily newspaper.

    But some say national laws would be anathema to the ruling party’s official atheism.

    “This kind of legislation would be contrary to the principle of secularism,” Mr Xi Wuyi, a Marxism expert at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences wrote on China’s Twitter-like Weibo in March. “It could threaten China’s national security strategy.”

    At the same time some Muslims complain over too much government interference in their religion.

    Away from the high-level politics of policing halal food, many of the faithful in Ningxia rely on personal relationships to guarantee quality.

    “I know the meat I buy is halal because I know the butcher, I see him frequently at the mosque for prayer,” said rural resident Na Liang. “I know the baker, I know the family that runs the noodle shop and I know all the food I eat is halal.”

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Regency Park Condo’s Managing Agent Prohibits Prayers On Premises, Issued Challenged To Complain To MUIS

    Regency Park Condo’s Managing Agent Prohibits Prayers On Premises, Issued Challenged To Complain To MUIS

    Freedom of worship is a right enshrined in the constitution. We have been praying under the staircase at the capark of Regency Park Condominium for many years. We understand that it is the common property of the estate and we have kept the place clean and neat and it does not obstruct any human movement nor does it pose a safety hazard to anyone.

    However, the condo manager, Ms Jennifer Peh from Saville property management pte Ltd managing agent has thrown our praying carpets and told us to pray outside the permises.

    When we appealed to let us use that little space under the staircase, she told us arrogantly “If you want to pray, go to the mosque”. She even challenged us to “complain to your MUIS”

    We work as personal drivers and have to be in the condo vicinity at all times, in case our bosses need our services. Even our bosses who are residents in the estate do not mind us praying under the staircase and our bosses feel that the harsh action and words of Ms Jennifer Peh is uncalled for.

    Where is the religious tolerance that the government keeps on promoting?

     

    Source: Ismail Ahmad

  • Yaacob Ibrahim: Nilai-Nilai Generasi Lalu Harus Terus Diamalkan Masyarakat Islam Hari Ini

    Yaacob Ibrahim: Nilai-Nilai Generasi Lalu Harus Terus Diamalkan Masyarakat Islam Hari Ini

    Dengan perubahan dan transformasi yang berlaku dalam dunia sekarang ini, budaya lebih progresif yang dipegang generasi lalu seperti saling menghormati, merendah diri dan bersikap inklusif masih perlu diamalkan oleh masyarakat Islam hari ini.

    Menteri Bertanggungjawab bagi Ehwal Masyarakat Islam Dr Yaacob Ibrahim juga berkata menerusi pendekatan kontekstual, masyarakat Islam mampu berpegang teguh kepada kepercayaannya dan pada masa yang sama menyumbang kepada pembangunan negara.

    Beliau berkata demikian di Persidangan Islam dalam Dunia Kontemporari yang dianjurkan Sekolah Pengajian Antarabangsa Rajaratnam RSIS pagi tadi (28 Apr).

    Dr Yaacob berkata sudah menjadi sifat setiap kumpulan agama di mana para penganutnya mahu memikir dengan mendalam bagaimana mengamalkan ajaran agama sebaik mungkin dan pada masa yang sama terus menjalin kehidupan hari ini.

    Tetapi tidak seperti mereka yang menganggap bahawa visi dan tafsiran mereka sahaja yang mutlak dan tidak boleh dikritik, masyarakat Islam sepatutnya mengamalkan budaya yang lebih progresif dengan nilai-nilai seperti hormat-menghormati, merendah diri dan bersikap inklusif yang dipegang teguh oleh generasi terdahulu.

    Beliau berkata pendekatan yang mengambil kira konteks dalam mengamalkan agama akan memastikan seorang Muslim itu boleh terus berpegang kepada tradisi agamanya dan pada masa yang sama menyumbang kepada pembangunan negara.

    Dr Yaacob memberi contoh bagaimana masyarakat Islam Singapura menyesuaikan diri dalam konteks masyarakat berbilang kaum serta negara yang dipimpin secara sekular.

    “Sebagai contoh ialah MBF, di mana diwujudkan oleh Encik Lee Kuan Yew, untuk kita gunakan sistem CPF untuk mendapatkan dana untuk mewujudkan masjid-masjid yang baru yang akan memenuhi keperluan keagamaan masyarakat Melayu/Islam,” kata Dr Yaacob.

    “Ia menunjukkan bahawa keinginan kita untuk mencari huraian yang praktikal mendorong kita untuk sama-sama bekerjasama untuk mencari apa yang dinamakan “common ground” antara apa yang kita pegang sebagai kepercayaan kita, dan apa yang kita perlu untuk berlaku di Singapura,” tambah beliau.

    Pemerintah juga mempunyai peranan dalam menyediakan sekitaran di mana dasar-dasar pemerintah menggalak kesederhanaan dan rasa hormat terhadap kepelbagaian budaya.

    Dasar-dasar sebegitu menyokong pembangunan masyarakat yang padu.

    Atas sebab itu, Singapura kata Dr Yaacob tidak menyokong mereka yang bersikap eksklusif dan yang cuba meletakkan sesebuah budaya sebagai lebih baik daripada yang lain.

    Menurut beliau, ajaran-ajaran bersifat eksklusif boleh menyebabkan sikap saling tidak mempercayai semakin menebal di kalangan para penganut agama yang berlainan dan akhirnya ini akan membawa kepada konflik.

    Masyarakat Singapura kata Dr Yaacob mempunyai tradisi berpegang kepada prinsip-prinsip sederhana, inklusif, menghormati kepelbagaian dan menyertai dengan aktif dalam pembangunan negara.

    Inilah cara Singapura yang harus kita pertahankan dengan bersungguh-sungguh.

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Myanmar Monk Builds Pagodas In Church And Muslim Areas

    Myanmar Monk Builds Pagodas In Church And Muslim Areas

    A Myanmar Christian leader appealed for calm Wednesday (Apr 27) after an influential Buddhist monk built pagodas within the compound of a church and near a mosque, in a country beset with religious tensions.

    The incursions began last month when supporters of the monk Myaing Kyee Ngu erected a religious statue and planted a Buddhist flag on the church’s grounds in the eastern state of Karen.

    They returned on Saturday to erect a pagoda, according to local Anglican Bishop Saw Stylo. The supporters have since moved on to build a pagoda near a mosque in a Muslim-majority village in the same township of Hlaingbwe, he said.

    “That is why I asked all local young people, whether they are Buddhist, Muslim or Christian, not to do anything wrong,” said Saw Stylo, who oversees Karen state, Mon state and Tanintharyi region.

    Myanmar, which was stifled for decades under military rule, has long bristled with religious tensions between majority Buddhists and minority groups.

    These surged sharply after a 2012 outbreak of violence in the western state of Rakhine between Buddhists and Muslim Rohingya left scores dead. Tens of thousands of Rohingya remain trapped in bleak displacement camps.

    Buddhist nationalists have grown increasingly strident since then and their influence has been credited with swaying Aung San Suu Kyi’s party against fielding a single Muslim candidate in last year’s election, which swept her pro-democracy movement into power.

    It is not clear what is behind the recent pagoda construction in Karen state. But the office of local MP Saw Chit Khin told AFP that Buddhist authorities had already written to the monk to urge him to cease building.

    Images in local media showed dozens of people praying around the newly-erected white stupa.

    “We feel very worried and sensitive about it. This might be political as well as religious,” said Saw Stylo.

    “I am very interested in how the new government will bring Myanmar to a brighter future. That is why I requested everyone to stay calm in this case,” he added.

    Christian communities in ethnic minority areas have for years complained of encroachments by zealous Buddhists, particularly through the presence of the military.

    Christians and Muslims are each thought to make up over four percent of the population. But updated figures from a 2014 census in Myanmar – its first in three decades – have not yet been released amid fears that any perceived increases could further stoke animosity.

     

    Source: ChannelNewsAsia

  • Ikatan Muslimin Malaysia: Feminism Making Women Forget Their Place As Homemakers

    Ikatan Muslimin Malaysia: Feminism Making Women Forget Their Place As Homemakers

    Feminism does not belong in Malaysia as it is causing women to neglect their husbands and children, choosing instead to work and socialise, Islamist group Ikatan Muslimin Malaysia (Isma) said today.

    It’s president Abdullah Zaik Abd Rahman said that while Muslim women are allowed to work, they should still prioritise the household before anything else.

    “I believe that Asian women, especially Muslim women who still hold on to the principles, know that the main priority of the woman is at home,” he said during his keynote address at the Isma Women’s forum today.

    “That (feminism) has a negative impact if it’s not filtered by culture or religion.

    “The function of women, even though they can enter all career fields, they cannot prioritise it more than their basic roles because if this is to continue then there will be an extraordinary void in our family institutions where the children that need the love and attention of their mothers,” he added during a press conference, also noting that while feminism is appropriate in the West, it was not appropriate in Malaysia.

    He explained that one of the most pivotal roles of women was maintaining a household and raising successful children, something that many are no longer seeing as a priority due to feminism.

    “(Women) have a specific responsibility to educate their children. But the situation now needs to be re-examined as the lifestyle of women today are wholly influenced by feminism.

    “(Women working) will create an emptiness in (children) that is very extreme for the next generation. And they will try to fill the void with other things that may happen irresponsibly and may affect the development of their character,” he said.

    He added that feminism has also given women too much “space” and in turn robbed men of theirs as there no longer are gender-specific careers.

    “Unlike before, when some fields are done by men and cannot be done by women, today women can enter all fields; in fact some women are considered more competent. Women can enter all fields and this constricts the space for men to function and there are no longer fields specially for men or specially for women,” he said.

    He suggested that women instead only be allowed to work for half a day so that they can return to their families and prioritise the household.

    “If we reduce their workday to 6 hours or half day but same salary we can save the family institutions,” he said.

     

    Source: www.themalaymailonline.com

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