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===Animal welfare===
===Animal welfare===
Before the [[Second World War]], religious slaughter was protected in several countries aroun 1933 when Hitler came to power and it was noticed by democratic countries that a move was afoot to ban Jewish and Muslim slaughter. Legislation was introduced to specifically permit Jewish and Muslim slaughter in The United Kingdom, Scotland, Eire, South Africa, etc.<ref>The Right to Practice Shehitah'' Berman, Munk, Munk</ref>
Before the [[Second World War]], religious slaughter was tolerated in Europe, except for four countries (Switzerland in 1893, Norway in 1930, Poland and Sweden in 1938). Religious slaughter without stunning was prohibited in several countries in Europe from 1936 to 1944 under the occupation of [[Nazi Germany]] (Germany in 1936, Italy in 1938, then in the majority of the other European countries according to the Nazi Germany occupation progress between 1940 and 1944).<ref>{{cite thesis|degree= Ph.D.|first=Sophie|last=Nizard-Benchimol|title=L’Economie du Croire. Une anthropologie des pratiques alimentaires juives en modernité|publisher=Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales|date=1997}}</ref><ref name="asidcom_report"/><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/docs/00/05/19/38/PDF/CahiersESR-Bergeaud.pdf |title=Nouveaux enjeux autour de l’abattage rituel musulman : une perspective européenne (Emerging around the Muslim ritual slaughter: a European perspective) |author=F BERGEAUD-BLACKLER |year=2004 |publisher=Cahiers d’économie et sociologie rurales, n° 73, page 11 }}</ref> ''See also: [[Animal welfare in Nazi Germany]]''.

tolerated in Europe, except for four countries (A Swiss ban was introduced by a national plebicite in 1893 after an antisemitic campaign that was waged in the German speaking cantons that were Lutheran (Catholics voting against). Effective bans were introduced in Switzerland in 1893, in Norway in 1930, in Poland in connection with Hitler's invasion in 1936 (punishment for slaghtering animals according to the Jewish rite was being sent to a concentration camp) and Sweden in 1938). Religious slaughter without stunning was prohibited in nazi occupied Europe from 1936 to 1944 (Germany in 1936, Italy in 1938, then in the majority of the other European countries according to the Nazi Germany occupation progress between 1940 and 1944)<ref>The Right to Practise Shehitah. Berman, Munk, Munk</ref>.<ref>{{cite thesis|degree= Ph.D.|first=Sophie|last=Nizard-Benchimol|title=L’Economie du Croire. Une anthropologie des pratiques alimentaires juives en modernité|publisher=Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales|date=1997}}</ref><ref name="asidcom_report"/><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/docs/00/05/19/38/PDF/CahiersESR-Bergeaud.pdf |title=Nouveaux enjeux autour de l’abattage rituel musulman : une perspective européenne (Emerging around the Muslim ritual slaughter: a European perspective) |author=F BERGEAUD-BLACKLER |year=2004 |publisher=Cahiers d’économie et sociologie rurales, n° 73, page 11 }}</ref> ''See also: [[Animal welfare in Nazi Germany]]''.


The ritual method of slaughter as practiced in Islam and Judaism has been described as inhumane by animal welfare organisations in the U.K. and the U.S.A., who have stated that it "causes severe suffering to animals."<ref>{{Cite news| url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,3604,956385,00.html | work=The Guardian | location=London | title=Halal killing may be banned | first=Colin | last=Blackstock | date=2003-05-15 | accessdate=2010-05-04}}</ref><ref name="bbc">{{Cite news| url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/2977086.stm | work=BBC News | title=Halal and Kosher slaughter 'must end' | date=2003-06-10 | accessdate=2010-05-04}}</ref> These animal welfare organizations hope to forbid the right to practise the ritual slaughter without stunning in Non-islamic countries.
The ritual method of slaughter as practiced in Islam and Judaism has been described as inhumane by animal welfare organisations in the U.K. and the U.S.A., who have stated that it "causes severe suffering to animals."<ref>{{Cite news| url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,3604,956385,00.html | work=The Guardian | location=London | title=Halal killing may be banned | first=Colin | last=Blackstock | date=2003-05-15 | accessdate=2010-05-04}}</ref><ref name="bbc">{{Cite news| url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/2977086.stm | work=BBC News | title=Halal and Kosher slaughter 'must end' | date=2003-06-10 | accessdate=2010-05-04}}</ref> These animal welfare organizations hope to forbid the right to practise the ritual slaughter without stunning in Non-islamic countries.

Revision as of 09:43, 20 May 2011

Halal (Arabic:حلال, ḥalāl; means lawful or legal) is a term designating any object or an action which is permissible to use or engage in, according to Islamic law. The term is used to designate food seen as permissible according to Islamic law (Sharia, الشريعة الإسلامية). The opposite of this word is haraam.

Food

The terms halal and haraam are applied to many facets of life; and one of the most common uses of these terms is in reference to meat products, food contact materials, and pharmaceuticals. In Islam there are many things that are clearly halal or haram. There are also items which are not as clear, and for which further information is needed. Items that are not clear are called mashbooh, which means "questionable". 'Halal' means permissible. 'Haraam' means forbidden. The term 'halal' can, therefore, also be associated with other products such as halal mortgages (sharia compliant mortgages)[citation needed] which omit the use of 'interest' which is 'haraam'.

In Islam, other forbidden items include pork and all its products; animals improperly slaughtered; alcoholic drinks, including all forms of intoxicants; carnivorous animals; birds of prey; and any food contaminated with any of these products.[1]

Dhabiha: method of slaughter

Ḏabīḥah (ذَبِيْحَة) is the prescribed method of slaughtering all animals excluding fish and most sea-life per Islamic law. This method of slaughtering animals consists of using a well sharpened knife to make a swift, deep incision that cuts the front of the throat, the carotid artery, wind pipe and jugular veins but leaves the spinal cord intact.[2] The objective of this technique is to cause the animal to lose consciousness as quickly as possible by cutting the oxygen flow to the brain and therefore inflict the least pain on the animal.[citation needed]

Dietary laws

Islam has laws regarding which foods can and cannot be eaten and also on the proper method of slaughtering an animal for consumption, known as dhabihah. However if there is no other food available then a Muslim is allowed to eat non-halal food.[3] Surah 2:173 states:

If one is forced because there is no other choice, neither craving nor transgressing, there is no sin in him.

Surah 5:5 states:

"This day are (all) things good and pure made lawful unto you. The food of the People of the Book is lawful unto you and yours is lawful unto them."

Explicitly forbidden substances

A variety of substances are considered as harmful (haraam) for humans to consume and, therefore, forbidden as per various Quranic verses:

  • Pork (i.e., flesh of pig)[Quran 2:173]
  • Blood[Quran 2:173]
  • Animals slaughtered in the name of anyone but Allah. All that has been dedicated or offered in sacrifice to an idolatrous altar or saint or a person considered to be "divine"[Quran 2:173] [Quran 5:3]
  • Carrion (carcasses of dead animals)[Quran 2:173]
  • An animal that has been strangled, beaten (to death), killed by a fall, gored (to death), savaged by a beast of prey (except by a human)[Quran 5:3]
  • Food over which Allah's name is not pronounced (or at least not in a name other than Allah)[Quran 6:121]
  • Alcohol and other intoxicants[Quran 5:090]

Comparison to Jewish dietary laws

There is similarity between the laws of Dhabiĥa halal and kashrut. In Surah 5:5 of the Qur'an it is written: "The food of the People of the Book [Jews and Christians] is lawful for you as your food is lawful for them."

Whether Muslims' factory-slaughtered meats meet halal standards is an ongoing debate, and the answer depends largely on the individual being asked.[4]

In Non-Islamic countries

File:Baozi-Halal-label-2570.jpg
A package of halal-certified (see green label on the package) frozen food (steamed cabbage buns) from Jiangsu province, China
A halal meat store sign in Hankou, China, ca. 1934-1935. China traditionally has a sizable Hui Muslim population.
Halal certificate issued for dairy products by a German registered merchant
File:HalalCertAustralia.jpg
Australian halal certificate for chocolate.

In South Africa Most chicken products have a halal stamp. The South African National Halal Authority issues certificates and products bearing this logo range from water, snacks, and even meat free products (Which may contain non-halal ingredients). The South African National Halal Authority (SANHA)also licenses the usage of the Halal logo in restaurants where the food is halal but also no-alcohol or pork products can be served. [5]

In Dearborn, Michigan, the home of one of the largest Muslim and Arab populations in the United States, some fast food restaurant chains such as the McDonald's Corporation have introduced halal chicken nuggets.[6] In the United Kingdom, China, Malaysia or Singapore, halal fried chicken restaurants having thousands of outlets serve halal foods, such as the Chicking Fried Chicken, Kentucky Fried Chicken, Brown's Chicken, and Crown Fried Chicken companies. As of February 2009, Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurants in the U.K. began to sell halal meals in several restaurants.

Also, in New York City there are numerous halal food carts in business which serve gyros, chicken platters, and other halal fast foods, whereas in Europe, there are many of the Muslim-owned Döner kebab shops.

A law passed by a county in Ohio in 2005 bans the sale, distribution, or production of food mislabeled "halal," when county authorities determine that the food does not meet Islamic dietary standards. Similar laws protect kosher foods in most of the United States, and in many other countries, states, or provinces.[7]

McDonald's, Pizza Hut, and Kentucky Fried Chicken have been declared to be halal in Sri Lanka by the Jamiyathul Ulama, the only authority able to give out the certification there.[citation needed]

While the introduction of halal meats in some American restaurants is still ongoing, for the first time in the United States, in early 2004, halal meats began to be offered in some chain grocery stores, in particular by the H.E.B. Grocery company. The Tex-Mex Beef Co. based in Houston, Texas, was one of the first halal meat and poultry distribution company to offer halal meats in the U.S. at the retail store level.[citation needed]

In 2008 and 2009, twelve stores in the Mary Brown's chain in Ontario and Alberta become 100% halal.[8] Numerous halal meat markets also exist in Southern Ontario and Metro Vancouver.

Thailand also has a noticeable population of Muslims and Halal-meat shops country-wide.

Within the People's Republic of China, which has a sizable Hui Muslim minority population, halal food is known as "Qingzhen" (Chinese: 清真; pinyin: qīngzhēn; lit. 'pure truth'). Halal restaurants run by Hui Chinese resemble typical Chinese food, only that they do not serve pork. Dishes specific to Hui Chinese are known as Chinese Islamic cuisine.


Dhabiḥa

Dhabiḥa is relatively difficult to adhere to in non-Muslim countries:

  • The abundance of pork and non-dhabiḥa meats at restaurants presents a rather-difficult problem to overcome. While a Muslim will not order a non-dhabiḥa halal dish, there is a concern about cross-contamination. This is likely to occur when the dhabiḥa halal dish is prepared with the same cooking tools and in the same kitchen as other non-dhabiḥa halal dishes. Food particles and juices from the two dishes are likely to be exchanged, technically rendering the dhabiḥa halal dish as haraam.
  • Many apparently meat-free dishes, and even some desserts, contain pork, such as most kinds of gelatin, or other non-conforming substances. There is some disagreement about food additives such as monosodium glutamate (MSG) that may use enzymes derived from pig fat in the production process. It is difficult to avoid such additives when eating out since they are usually not listed on restaurant menus. Some Muslim organizations compile tables of such additives.[9]

Since the turn of the 21st century, there have been efforts to create organizations such as the Muslim Consumer Group that certify food products as halal for Muslim consumers.

"Halal" is an Arabic word meaning "lawful" or "permissible", and the term not only covers food and drink, but also to all matters of daily life. When it comes to halal food, most people think of meat foods only. However, Muslims must ensure that all foods, particularly processed foods, pharmaceuticals, and non-food items like cosmetics, are also halal. Frequently, these products contain animal by-products or other ingredients that are not permissible for Muslims to eat or use on their bodies.

The leading North American halal food producer and distributor in the United States is the Midamar Corporation. Midamar is the first company in the USA to slaughter halal beef in USDA inspected plants.{Midamar Milestones} This company has been in operation since 1974, and it is based in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, the home of the oldest mosque in the Americas still standing. The children of Muslims who settled in Iowa around 1900 discerned a need to start producing halal beef and chicken catering to the tastes of American Muslims. Midamar is the first company in the USA to slaughter beef in USDA inspected plants.

Since 1991, mainstream manufacturers of soups, grains, cosmetics, pharmaceuticals, prepared foods, and other products, as well as hotels, restaurants, airlines, hospitals, and other service providers have pursued the halal market. These companies purchase halal-certified products. Halal certification tells Muslims that their ingredients and production methods have been tested and declared permissible by a certification body. It also allows companies to export products to most Middle Eastern countries and South East Asian Countries. The oldest and most well-known halal certifier in the United States is called the "Islamic Services of America". Something that companies which intend to export halal products must keep in mind, when choosing a certifier, is whether or not the certifier is recognized by foreign governmental bodies.[10]

  • In 1986, the "Islamic Meat & Poultry Company" was founded in Stockton, California. Islamic Meat & Poultry is a halal-only, U.S. Department of Agriculture-inspected, hand-slaughtering and meat-processing facility. This company follows the principles of slaughtering and meat-processing according to the Islamic Shariah.

Also in Europe, several organizations have been created over the past 20 years in order to certify the halal products. A survey recently published by a French association of Muslim Consumers (ASIDCOM) shows that the market of halal products has been developed in a chaotic way. The certification organizations do not have a common definition of "halal" nor agreed upon control procedures and traceability. The controls implemented by individual agencies are all very different: it can go from an annual audit of the slaughterhouse to checking each production with permanent controls in place and on-going independent.[11]

Criticisms

Animal welfare

Before the Second World War, religious slaughter was protected in several countries aroun 1933 when Hitler came to power and it was noticed by democratic countries that a move was afoot to ban Jewish and Muslim slaughter. Legislation was introduced to specifically permit Jewish and Muslim slaughter in The United Kingdom, Scotland, Eire, South Africa, etc.[12]

tolerated in Europe, except for four countries (A Swiss ban was introduced by a national plebicite in 1893 after an antisemitic campaign that was waged in the German speaking cantons that were Lutheran (Catholics voting against). Effective bans were introduced in Switzerland in 1893, in Norway in 1930, in Poland in connection with Hitler's invasion in 1936 (punishment for slaghtering animals according to the Jewish rite was being sent to a concentration camp) and Sweden in 1938). Religious slaughter without stunning was prohibited in nazi occupied Europe from 1936 to 1944 (Germany in 1936, Italy in 1938, then in the majority of the other European countries according to the Nazi Germany occupation progress between 1940 and 1944)[13].[14][15][16] See also: Animal welfare in Nazi Germany.

The ritual method of slaughter as practiced in Islam and Judaism has been described as inhumane by animal welfare organisations in the U.K. and the U.S.A., who have stated that it "causes severe suffering to animals."[17][18] These animal welfare organizations hope to forbid the right to practise the ritual slaughter without stunning in Non-islamic countries.

In 1978, a study incorporating EEG (electroencephalograph) with electrodes surgically implanted on the skull of 17 sheep and 15 calves, and conducted by Wilhelm Schulze et al. at the University of Veterinary Medicine in Germany concluded that "the slaughter in the form of a ritual cut is, if carried out properly, painless in sheep and calves according to EEG recordings and the missing defensive actions" (of the animals) and that "For sheep, there were in part severe reactions both in bloodletting cut and the pain stimuli" when captive bolt stunning (CBS) was used.[15][19] This study is cited by the German Constitutional Court in its permitting of dhabiha slaughtering.[20]

In 2003, the Farm Animal Welfare Council (FAWC), an independent advisory group, concluded that the way halal and kosher meat is produced causes severe suffering to animals and should be banned immediately. FAWC argued that cattle required up to two minutes to bleed to death when such means are employed. The Chairperson of FAWC at the time, Judy MacArthur Clark, added, "this is a major incision into the animal and to say that it doesn't suffer is quite ridiculous."

Halal and kosher butchers deny that their method of killing animals is cruel and expressed anger over the FAWC recommendation.[18]

Majid Katme of the Muslim Council of Britain also disagreed, stating that "it's a sudden and quick haemorrhage. A quick loss of blood pressure and the brain is instantaneously starved of blood and there is no time to start feeling any pain."[18]

In April 2008, the Food and Farming minister in the UK, Lord Rooker, stated that halal and kosher meat should be labeled when it is put on sale, so that members of the public can decide whether or not they want to buy food from animals that have been bled to death. He was quoted as saying, "I object to the method of slaughter ... my choice as a customer is that I would want to buy meat that has been looked after, and slaughtered in the most humane way possible." The RSPCA supported Lord Rooker's views."[21]

The same years, the French Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Fishing has published ASIDCOM’s Bibliographical Report on Religious Slaughter and the Welfare of Animals, as a contribution within the framework of a meeting on animals and society organized in the first half of the year 2008.[22] This report quotes scientific papers and French veterinary PhD which support the equality or even possible superiority of religious slaughter to other methods of slaughter.[15] This report quotes in particular the Ph.D work of Dr Pouillaude which concludes by: "religious slaughter would thus be a less stressing mode of slaughter. Conclusions of all the scientific experiments converge towards a firmly supported certainty: properly carried out, religious slaughter is the most humane way because it leads to less trauma to animals to be killed to be consumed for its meat".[15][23]

For the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations and the Humane Society International, "the animals that are slaughtered according to kosher and halal should be securely restrained, particularly the head and neck, before cutting the throat" as "movements (during slaughter) results in a poor cut, bad bleeding, slow loss of consciousness, if at all, and pain."[24]

In Europe, the DIALREL project has occurred in order to address issues relating to religious slaughter by encouraging dialogue between the both Muslim and Jewish communities and a few scientists (mainly veterinaries) as well as gathering and dissemination of information.[25] Started the 1st November 2006, this European project has been finished in summer 2010. Both the Muslim and Jewish communities were frustrated with the process of dialogue because of the scientific community's views on animal slaughter.[26][27][28][29]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Islamic Food and Nutrition Council of America." 22 Nov 2010<http://www.ifanca.org/halal/>
  2. ^ http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-11375523 from BBC - Diners 'unknowingly eating Halal' at Wembley - 20 September 2010
  3. ^ World faiths, Teach yourself - Islam by Ruqaiyyah Maqsood. ISBN 0-340-60901-X. Page 204
  4. ^ Adibudeen (21 October 2004). "One Ummah Network - Halal and Zabiha Meat". Oneummah.net. Retrieved 2 June 2010.
  5. ^ http://halal-hub.org/cert_body.php
  6. ^ "Halal McNuggets - Halal McNuggets a Hit in Detroit". Islam.about.com. 20 April 2010. Retrieved 2 June 2010.
  7. ^ Religious food gets protection - 08/05/05
  8. ^ Mary Brown's Website "?".
  9. ^ Food additive numbers
  10. ^ "?". Islamic Services of America.
  11. ^ "Survey on the Halal certification agencies (December 2009)". ASIDCOM. Retrieved 11 September 2010.
  12. ^ The Right to Practice Shehitah Berman, Munk, Munk
  13. ^ The Right to Practise Shehitah. Berman, Munk, Munk
  14. ^ Nizard-Benchimol, Sophie (1997). L’Economie du Croire. Une anthropologie des pratiques alimentaires juives en modernité (Ph.D. thesis). Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales.
  15. ^ a b c d "Benefits of religious slaughter without stunning for animals and humans (2010)". ASIDCOM. Retrieved 23 April 2010.
  16. ^ F BERGEAUD-BLACKLER (2004). "Nouveaux enjeux autour de l'abattage rituel musulman : une perspective européenne (Emerging around the Muslim ritual slaughter: a European perspective)" (PDF). Cahiers d’économie et sociologie rurales, n° 73, page 11.
  17. ^ Blackstock, Colin (15 May 2003). "Halal killing may be banned". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 4 May 2010.
  18. ^ a b c "Halal and Kosher slaughter 'must end'". BBC News. 10 June 2003. Retrieved 4 May 2010.
  19. ^ Schulze W, Schultze-Petzold H, Hazem AS, Gross R. Experiments for the objectification of pain and consciousness during conventional (captive bolt stunning) and religiously mandated (“ritual cutting”) slaughter procedures for sheep and calves. Deutsche Tierärztliche Wochenschrift 1978 Feb 5;85(2):62-6. English translation by Dr Sahib M. Bleher
  20. ^ Das Bundesverfassungsgericht
  21. ^ "CIWF Halal and kosher meat should not be slipped in to food chain, says minister
  22. ^ Contribution of the meeting on animals and society (Meeting organised in 2008 by the French Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Fishing)
  23. ^ Pouillaude-Bardon, Sylvie (1992). L’abattage rituel en France (The ritual slaughter in France) (Veterinary Ph.D. thesis). National Veterinary College of Toulouse (France).
  24. ^ Guideline for Humane Handling, Transport and Slaughter of Livestock, Religious or ritual slaughter, "?". "?".
  25. ^ DIAREL Website, Encouraging Dialogue on issues of Religious Slaughter
  26. ^ ASIDCOM (3 March 2010). "Interview with Dr. Joe M. Regenstein : "A live worth living"". ASIDCOM.
  27. ^ "EU FUNDED BODY DEFAMES SHECHITA AND PUBLISHES AGENDA-BASED FLAWED RESEARCH". Shechita UK. 5 January 2010.
  28. ^ Mrs Rezgui, Pr Joe M. Regenstein, Mr Di-Spigno (28 October 2010). "Religious Slaughter in Europe : Consumer Deception and DialRel's Failure". ASIDCOM.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  29. ^ Cody, Edward (14 October 2010). "Letter From France: Hamburger chain's decision sparks tensions over Islam". The Washington Post.

External links

  • Halal Certification - South America [1]