When McDonald’s announced it would discontinue the sale of halal
chicken nuggets and chicken sandwiches at two restaurants earlier this
week, it brought to light a thorny issue riling the Muslim-American
community: inconsistent halal standards and fraudulent advertising and
marketing of Islamically permitted products.
The United States is now home to thousands of halal-compliant food
industry businesses, offering Muslim Americans a choice of offerings and
convenience that earlier generations could only have imagined.
But this booming halal market is often accompanied by a lack of
consensus about what constitutes halal — and that has caused confusion
and controversy among Muslim Americans. In addition, several
well-publicized incidents of fraud have left halal consumers vulnerable
to unscrupulous merchants and suspicious about the sources of the
products they are buying.
These problems surfaced when McDonald’s announced it would
discontinue halal nuggets and sandwiches at two restaurants in Dearborn,
Mich. The decision follows a 2011 lawsuit alleging McDonald’s falsely
advertised non-halal chicken as halal. In January, McDonald’s paid
$700,000 to settle the suit, but denied any wrongdoing.
It is not the first such settlement. In 2011, the Orange County,
Calif., district attorney obtained a $527,000 settlement against the
Super King Market in Anaheim, alleging the store falsely advertised
generic and mixed meat as halal. The store denied wrongdoing.
“There is a lot of cheating,” said Syed Rasheeduddin Ahmed, founder
of the Muslim Consumer Group, a halal certification and educational
group in Huntley, Ill. “I am glad McDonald’s stopped the so-called halal
chicken because they are not real halal.”
In part, the problem stems from the explosion of products racing to meet growing market demands.
The
number of U.S. grocers with halal products has mushroomed from 10 in
1970 to more than 2,300 in 2012, while the number of restaurants serving
halal food now exceeds 6,900, according to the Islamic Food and
Nutrition Council of America, a halal certification and education group
in Park Ridge, Ill.
U.S. consumers spent $11 billion on halal products in 2011, the nutrition council said.
“It’s a big market share,” said Timothy Abu Mounir Hyatt, managing
director of Islamic Services of America, a halal certification group in
Cedar Rapids, Iowa. “We have a lot of customers who understand the
importance of complying.”
While halal-observant Muslims welcome the plethora of choices, many
are also wary that some merchants may try and take advantage of their
religiosity to pass off products that aren’t halal.
“So long as there are few legal protections, there are often
unscrupulous merchants that get away with it,” said Shahed Amanullah,
founder of zabihah.com, a website with listings and customer reviews of
halal restaurants and grocers around the world, including several
thousand in the United States.
Indeed, the zabihah.com website (the name refers to the term used for
the Islamic ritual slaughter of an animal) includes many reviews in
which diners call out restaurants they believe are falsely advertising
halal.
Halal, which means “lawful” or “permitted” in Arabic, requires that
meat such as beef, lamb, goat, and poultry be raised and killed
humanely, and that a blessing be said at the time of slaughter.
Non-halal foods include carnivorous animals and birds of prey, as well
as pork and products derived from pork such as gelatin. Fish,
vegetables, fruits, nuts and grains are permitted.
But the halal industry is hampered by another problem, too: division
among Muslims. In 2006, a group of scholars dealing in Islamic law,
ruled that machine-slaughtered animals are halal so long as they are
blessed and butchered properly. Yet many Muslims, including Ahmed of the
Muslim Consumer Group, said that only meat that is hand cut is
permitted. Others say that a restaurant cannot be considered halal if it
also sells forbidden products like pork and alcohol.
There are several organizations in the United States that certify
products as halal and send inspectors into slaughterhouses and
manufacturing plants to verify that the work is done according to
Islamic law. A few states, including California, Illinois, Michigan, New
Jersey, and Virginia, have passed laws penalizing businesses for false
advertising of halal products.
Some Muslims say certification and guidelines do little to protect
halal consumers from false advertising. At the same time, halal
certifiers lack the manpower to inspect every individual restaurant and
grocer, and instead focus on slaughterhouses and food manufacturers.
Given the pitfalls, what’s a halal eater to do? The best defense
against fraud, Amanullah said, is education. He encourages consumers to
check zabihah.com for reviews, and to directly ask businesses owners
about their halal offerings.
“In the absence of universally accepted and verified halal standards,
halal consumers should feel free to ask for verification of sources of
halal meat so they can make up their own mind,” said Amanullah.
“Businesses committed to serving this market will be happy to oblige.”
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