Supermarket halal

Patrick Sookhdeo  |  Features
Date posted:  1 Dec 2010
Share Add       

All over the UK today, supermarket chains, shops and restaurants are selling halal meat.

We may find it on the menu at our children’s school or the local hospital, or be offered it when we go to a sporting event. If we go for a meal with Muslim friends, any meat we are served will probably be halal. It can be hard to avoid eating this meat, especially as it is often not labelled and little information is available to the consumer.

Halal meat is prepared according to Islamic shari’a law. The word halal means ‘permitted’, so halal food is anything that sharia allows people to eat. The animals have to be slaughtered in a particular way, whereby the blood is drained out of the living (and normally conscious) animal, while an Islamic prayer is spoken over them.

Share
< Previous article| Features| Next article >
Read more articles by Patrick Sookhdeo >>

Too soft on Islam

Mr. Catherwood has set himself the unenviable task of trying to assess Islamic rage' in the context of September 11 …

How to help Muslim converts

If you were a shopkeeper in Iran, you would have to put a card in your window stating your religion, …

Give a subscription

🎁 Get 20% off a subscription for a friend this Christmas!

Tell me more

Subscribe

Enjoy our monthly paper and full online access

Find out more