Halal Pork - Muslims have themselves to blame
Investigations following the detection of horse meat DNA in burgers sold in
British supermarkets eventually also led to the discovery of pork DNA in
processed food supplied as halal produce to prisons throughout the UK. The the
response is probably as scandalous as the discovery. On the non-Muslim side the
emphasis was on this having been an unfortunate isolated accident. On the Muslim
side it was a lot more muted than that concerning cartoons nobody every saw.
Somehow one got the impression that as long as only prisoners were affected it
didn't matter all that much and, in any case, they had consumed the food
unknowingly and thus were forgiven. The only key concern was that other services
and outlets would not also have been supplied by the same firm, McColgan Quality
Foods of Northern Ireland. The firm's website has been taken offline, making it
impossible to check who certified them as halal in the first place.
No lessons will be learned as long as nobody addresses the systemic failures.
The discovery of pork in halal labelled products is both an insult and a wake-up
call to all Muslims, not just those who ate the food. Unless the system of halal
certification and the use of halal labelling on food products changes, this will
not be the last incident, just as it has not been the first. South
African Muslims
had a similar experience earlier this year of an unscrupulous butcher selling
pork as halal meat. Years ago, the certification of halal food containing pork
was questioned in Singapore.
The key question, therefore, is: who has the right to declare a product as halal?
In the UK there are one major organisation, the Halal
Food Authority (HFA),
and a minor one, the Halal
Monitoring Committee (HMC).
Whilst the former gives the impression that it is an official body with the use
of the word authority, this is only a name it chose for itself. There is no
regulation covering the approval and auditing of halal food products. The
latter, HMC, was dissolved as a company after the UK tax office decided that the
firm did not benefit from a VAT exemption and demanded some seven hundred
thousands of pounds in back payments. As the company could not re-bill its
customers, it had to close down, but its work continues as an unincorporated
association of individuals. Halal Monitoring Committee is the only UK Muslim
body insisting that halal meat should only be certified as such if it has not
been previously stunned.
Halal has become big business, and the majority of companies profiting from it
are not small and medium-scale Muslim family butchers and slaughter houses but
large non-Muslim corporations. The list of certified suppliers on the HFA
website has hardly a Muslim sounding name on it. All of them use stunning and
mechanical slaughter processes. The halal element of their operations is reduced
to a tape running with Qur'anic blessings and a Muslim slaughter man watching
the conveyor belts. Once stunning had been declared as acceptable by scholars,
Muslim conscience could be bought off with the supply of cheap halal meat on a
mass scale. The same happened in the banking sector with so-called halal
mortgages where interest was re-labelled and declared halal by hand-picked
Muslim scholars and the market opened up and was exploited by non-Muslim banks
such as HSBC.
Muslims have become consumers, and most are not worried where their food
originates from as long as somebody tells them it's ok to eat and, of course, as
long as it's not pork. Many take refuge in the Qur'anic permission to eat the
food of the Jews and Christians, forgetting that their food is only permitted if
it is in all other respects complying with Islamic dietary rules, in other
words: their stunned meat is no less forbidden than their pork. Neither becomes
halal just because it is produced by Jews or Christians. The permission only
indicates that since they worship the same God, Muslims need not worry about
their food having been dedicated to some other deity or idol.
I have come to a point where I probably trust Jewish food products more than
Muslim ones. Jews don't permit non-Jews to process their food. They don't allow
anybody outside their faith to take control of any of the processes of food
production in order to label an item as kosher. What Muslims need to realise is
that if you entrust the safeguarding of your religious requirements to people
who do not share your faith, you cannot expect them to be all too zealous about
it and things will inevitably go wrong. When our halal food is produced by
non-Muslims with a remote nod of approval by some self-appointed and
non-regulated body happy to cash in on selling the halal label, the selling of
pork in halal produce was only an accident waiting to happen.
Muslims in the West, and those in the East sucking up to the West, have bent
over backwards to please in order to be tolerated and share the affluence of
materialism. We have allowed ourselves to be disarmed. Whilst Sikhs, for
example, are at least permitted to wear a turban and a token plastic dagger, we
haven't even held onto such symbolic relics of our identity. We've willingly
taken off our garments and thrown away our arms; we were not conquered, we
surrendered readily. How then, do we have a right to demand sensitivity and
respect?