A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Back to 500BC.
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, February 17, 2013
Who needs Halaal?
Hejaaz
Hizbullah-16
Feb, 2013
When the big international fast food chains came
to Sri Lanka they did not have halaal certification. However subsequently most
of these chains went ‘halaal’. This had nothing to do with any ‘Islamist’
conspiracy to take-over Sri Lanka. It was a pure case of demand and supply and
the pursuit of profit. The same applies to Islamic banking. There is nothing
surprising about almost every player in the financial services market providing
Islamic banking as bankers want to make money in as many ways as they can. So
this whole brouhaha about ‘halaal’ really defies logic. The only reason why the
All Ceylon Jamiyathul Ulema [ACJU] is a body of choice for it’s the only body
that the Muslim consumers accept and find legitimate and in marketing – consumer
is king.
Therefore
‘Who needs ‘halaal’ certification? It’s certainly not the Muslim consumer but
the businesses that crave for halaal recognition. I say this because there was a
time before halaal certification. Even then there were brands that had
established consumer goodwill and trust to the effect that their products were
‘halaal’. So take away the ACJU halaal certification and market forces will come
into play and either some other body will issue the license or producers
themselves will find ways to build consumer confidence. In fact all what the
ACJU has done is made it easy for anybody to access the Muslim market for their
goods and services. It has particularly helped new players to enter the market.
To those thinking only in religious terms, ‘new’ translates often to
‘non-Muslim’ as Muslim businesses find it easier to establish consumer goodwill
even without certification.
So
as a Muslim consumer, the future of halaal certification does not trouble me.
The forces of economics and the fight for market share will ensure that products
that meet halaal requirements will continue to be available.
However
what does worry many Muslims is how this ‘non-issue’ is being banged about by a
fringe few and made into a national problem. What we see is not an ‘issue’ but
an agenda and a campaign of hate with ‘halaal certification’ merely an excuse.
They are waiting to pick a fight and so they pick on anything. This is evident
in many ways. Firstly despite all the shouting and the screaming we are yet to
hear a clear and cogent articulation of the grounds for protest. If there were
good reasons then we would have heard it by now.
Secondly
the methodology to put forward their purported grievance are angry protests
which are inflammatory and provocative? It is in this methodology that one sees
some serious danger signs. If this was a genuine issue then what we would have
had is an informed debate and dialogue, not a protest with a pig head on
display.
Thirdly
there is also a complete disregard for the truth, facts and honesty. For example
at one press conference it was stated that the money collected was being used to
fund Al-Qaeda. If this was a genuine allegation then what was needed was not a
press conference but a police complaint. Much like the Law College entrance
paper being leaked – a lot of noise – little hard evidence. Then they said that
the money was being used to buy lands. Evidence? That products will be cheaper
without halaal certification fees. Once again – where is the evidence? In fact
what we see is that the ACJU can hardly pay for its own certification costs with
the fee collected.
The
level of misinformation is comically evident in that some are demanding that
they be entitled to consume ‘non-halaal’ products – products that are unfit for
consumption by Muslims. It is comical for if food is to be ‘non-halaal’ it would
certainly have meat or alcohol and that is something that even the Buddhists who
are making the demand would not be permitted to consume.
Without
doubt the ‘halaal issue’ is part of a deliberate strategy of creating
inter-communal tensions and scarily, an open clash – with obviously the Muslims
the victims. Small pockets of tension and violence are being reported and one
waits to see how the government and authorities will respond to this and how far
they will allow this to go on. In fact a particular rabble-rouser stated that it
was inevitable that we as a society will reverse ourselves by around a hundred
years with an open anti-Muslim riot as that happened in 1915. Any of this would
certainly not be in the best interests of the Sinhala Buddhists.

