Tag: malay

  • “Halal” Butcher in Switzerland Sold Pork to Muslims for 3 Years

    “Halal” Butcher in Switzerland Sold Pork to Muslims for 3 Years

    A “halal” butcher has been taken to court after selling pork to Muslim customers for over three years.

    According to Morocco World News, the Swiss butcher reportedly sold 3.1 tons of pork to his Muslim customers, telling them it was halal and trying to pass it off as calf meat.

    Upon inspection of his facility, it was discovered that what he was selling as calf meat looked nothing like it should.

    “If customers had known it was pork, they would not have bought it because Islam forbids the consumption of this type of meat,” the prosecutor handling the case said.

    Now, the man is facing six months of jail time and is being fined 18,000 Swiss francs, which equates to roughly £11,880.

    He was charged with “fraud and misrepresentation.”

    As Morocco News noted, the butcher was engaging in two-fold deception in selling pork as if it were veal.

    Firstly, Muslims were buying and consuming pork, which is against their religion.

    Secondly, he was making higher profits since pork is cheaper than calf meat.

     

    Source: www.5pillarz.com

  • Man Leaves Wife And Their 10 Children To Fend For Themselves

    Man Leaves Wife And Their 10 Children To Fend For Themselves

    A single mother and her 10 children are struggling to survive after their father left them for another woman two years ago.

    Over the past year, debt collectors – both legal and illegal – have gone to Madam Rafeah Abdul Kadir’s three-room flat in Hougang to look for her estranged husband, Mr Mazlan Abdul, 37.

    An arrest warrant was also issued for Mr Mazlan after he defaulted on maintenance payments since April this year.

    Meanwhile, he can be seen on Facebook posing for selfies with his girlfriend and dancing with her in a Bollywood club.

    Said an upset Madam Rafeah: “He goes out with his parents and girlfriend to eat at nice places. He’s clearly having a good time. What about his children? What are they supposed to eat?”

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Encouraging Use Of The Malay Language:  More Exhibitions and Talks To Be Organised

    Encouraging Use Of The Malay Language: More Exhibitions and Talks To Be Organised

    More exhibitions, performances and book talks will be held to revitalise the Malay language.

    This was detailed by the Minister for Culture, Community and Youth Lawrence Wong in parliament today.

    “The NHB (National Heritage Board) will support the plans by the Malay Language Council to organise Bulan Bahasa on a larger scale,” he said.

    These plans include “exhibitions … showcasing the contributions of our literary pioneers and community leaders”, “book talks and Malay language performances targeted at students of all ages, from pre-school to tertiary”.

    According to the National Institute of Education, Bulan Bahasa aims to “encourage the use of Malay Language in everyday activities.”

    Mr Wong said this in a response to a question by Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC Member of Parliament Zainudin Nordin who asked about the relevance of Bulan Bahasa and “whether the teaching and learning of the Malay language will be further improved to inspire our younger generation to use it more”.

    Mr Wong also said that “group discussions, debates, role-plays, and the use of technology” have been used to make lessons “more fun and engaging”, after the Mother Tongue Language Review Committee made recommendations to do so in 2010.

    “Schools also organise Mother Tongue Fortnights annually in collaboration with community organisations and stakeholders, during which cultural activities are showcased to stimulate students’ interest in their mother tongue and help them to see how the language can come alive.

    “Some schools go the extra mile to expose their non-Malay students to the Malay language and culture.

    He said that, “A good example is Edgefield Secondary School where all its students learn conversational mother tongue languages, including Malay, as well as about the respective cultures, in Secondary 1.”

    Mr Wong also said pre-schools can tap on the Lee Kuan Yew Fund for Bilingualism (LKYFB), which was set up to promote bilingualism among pre-school children.

     

    Source: www.therealsingapore.com

  • French Company Produces Halal Test-Kits

    French Company Produces Halal Test-Kits

    PARIS: A French start-up is hoping to take a slice of the multi-billion Halal food market with a device allowing diners to find out within minutes whether a dish contains pork.

    Capital Biotech has received orders from as far afield as Turkey, Chile and Indonesia for its “Halal Test” which tests within 10 minutes whether a food contains pork meat, forbidden for Muslims and Jews.

    Launched only a fortnight ago, the company has won nearly 100,000 (US$135,000) in orders, a “surprise” according to co-founder Jean-Francois Julien.

    The company acknowledges that the test, a one-use device costing 6.90 euros (S$11.16), does not constitute a complete “Halal” test, which also requires information about how the animal was slaughtered. But it “allows you to dispel a one-off doubt, for example when you are on holiday or when a new “Halal” product hits the market,” said Julien.

    To use the device, the cautious diner mixes a small amount of food with hot water and inserts a small strip into the mixture. The strip tests for pork proteins and takes less than 10 minutes.

    France’s five million Muslims (the largest population in Europe) have been hit with food scandals – in 2011, “Halal” sausages were discovered to contain pork – and want to be sure they are not eating forbidden food, said Abbas Bendali from marketing firm Solis.

    Capital Biotech believes however that 70 percent of its sales will eventually come from professionals who want a quick way of testing whether food is suitable for non-pork eaters.

    Bendali said the cost of the device would inevitably deter individuals “at a time of economic crisis.” “It’s difficult to invest seven euros to test a bowl of pasta that costs three,” he said. Muslims are more reassured by “a genuine Halal certificate,” he said.

    A FIRST, BUT CAUTION

    But the firm is not limiting itself just to pork, hoping to make itself the firm of reference for tests on all types of food allergies. It intends to launch soon a range of tests for soya, egg or almonds – all potential allergens – in ready meals.

    The firm will then roll out tests for gluten, peanut or milk. In the long-run, the start-up plans to extend its quick-fire testing to pharmaceutical products. However, Faycal Bennatif, marketing director of the world’s top biological analysis group Eurofins, told AFP it was not down to the consumer to perform quality tests on food products.

    In the wake of the horsemeat scandal that rocked Europe last year, Eurofins has been inundated for requests to test meat products but has not developed a quick-fire test. “We work with DNA sequencing in the lab which is not at all the same method,” said Bennatif, adding he was “dubious” as to how efficient the new quick tests were.

    Capital Biotech’s “Halal tests” do not require authorisation to be launched on the market, estimated at 5.5 billion euros (US$6.8 billion) in France alone, although authorities will examine the reliability of the testing method.

    Expert in allergens, Jocelyne Just said the tests were a “first” but should be treated with caution “in the sense that a patient can be allergic to one food form but not another, for example to raw milk but not pasteurised.”

    As for Capital Biotech, the start-up already has its eye on the next market by securing domain names for “kosher tests”.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Malay Language Could Face Extinction

    Malay Language Could Face Extinction

    THE Malay language could be heading towards extinction due to globalisation, warned the acting director of Language and Literature Bureau yesterday.

    During the seventh Brunei Darussalam – Indonesia – Malaysia Language Council (MABBIM) Lecture, Hjh Nortijah Hj Mohd Hassan said the Malay language is being marginalised and overshadowed by other world languages.

    “It is not impossible that the Malay language will reach the brink of extinction if we do not make serious efforts to protect it,” she said.

    In the pursuit of learning other languages, the acting director said Malays have started to forget they need to uphold the Malay language.

    Some individuals think that the language is one-dimensional, that it only aims to be spoken and not support the development of Malay as the official language, she added.

    “The Malay language must be accompanied with a sense of spirituality and purity of the soul towards accepting the language so that it is able to shape the personality, character and intellect of an individual.

    “It also depends on how we, the speakers, respond and act towards the native language…,” Hjh Nortijah added.

    She went on to say that strategic plans and sustainable support from all parties need to be created to develop intensive efforts to realise the empowerment of the Malay language.

    In his lecture, Director of Continuing Education at Universiti Brunei Darussalam Dr Yabit Alas said one of the main challenges of the Malay language in the globalisation and technological era is pressure from the English language.

    “Even though I mentioned that the Malay/ Indonesian language had its glory days, however due to various political and cultural developments such as colonialism, the development of the Malay/Indonesian language had slowed down,” he said.

    He added that other languages such as English had expanded and evolved, but the Malay language’s expansion process was halted for around 600 years during the British rule of Malaysia and Brunei, while Indonesia was under the Dutch.

    To enhance the role of the Malay language, Dr Yabit suggested increasing the publication of scientific books, which is what gets universities ranked.

    He also recommended the introduction of rules where publishers are required to have at least 50 per cent of what they publish a year in Malay, adding that Indonesia practises such rules.

    “The correct and proper use of a language actually mirrors how civilised the country is,” he added.

    About 300 government officers and students attended the lecture. MABBIM was established in 1972 to empower the use of Malay language.

     

    Source: http://www.bt.com.bn/