Latest Updates: halal tourism RSS

  • johnpi 8:48 am on October 31, 2009 | 1 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , halal collagen, , halal non-alcoholic beer, halal tourism, halal vinegar, ,

    Malaysia hopes to create world halal standard.

    “Malaysia’s halal certification is recognized worldwide so perhaps we can play an important role in creating a global standard,” Malaysia’s religious affairs minister Jamil Khir Baharom said in an interview on Thursday. “We need a halal certification that everyone can use easily.”

    The halal industry is based on a belief that Muslims should eat food and use goods such as cosmetics that are ‘halalan toyibban’, which means permissible and wholesome.

    But Muslim jurists do not always agree on what is halal. Islam prohibits the consumption of pork and prescribes how animals must be slaughtered, but there has been debate on the acceptability of non-alcoholic beer, collagen and vinegar.

    Rules are interpreted and enforced more strictly in some countries. Sudanese authorities have hauled up women for wearing trousers and a Malaysian woman has been sentenced to a beating for drinking beer, practices which are acceptable in some Muslim countries.

     
  • zahed 4:47 pm on May 14, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , halal tourism, ,

    Article featuring me and zabihah.com in Time Magazine (Halal: Buying Muslim) is out today in print and online. A sample:

    “Ideology does not fit within a consumer mindset,” observes [Zahed] Amanullah of Zabihah.com. “At the end of the day, people will not buy halal simply because it’s halal. They’re going to buy quality food. Ideology doesn’t make a better-tasting burger, a better car, or a better computer.” But it sure makes a powerful marketing pitch.

    This is in the international edition of Time, but possibly the US edition as well (someone over yonder will have to confirm).

     
  • johnpi 5:38 am on April 29, 2009 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , halal tourism, , , , , ,

    Arab investors to build ‘Arab cities’ in Malaysia.

    Malacca chief minister Mohamad Ali Rustam reportedly said the project, due for completion by 2012, will attract more Middle Eastern tourists and give locals a chance to experience Arabic culture.

    Arab tourists spend on average 10 times more than other tourists, according to recent reports on Malaysian tourism that showed an increasing number of Muslim Middle Eastern tourists are seeking “halal tourism” in Malaysia, Indonesia and Brunei while avoiding the U.S. and Europe because of post Sept. 11, 2001 stereotyping and racial profiling.

     
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