2017
DOI: 10.3390/rel8040046
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Anti-Halal and Anti-Animal Slaughtering Campaigns and Their Impact in Post-War Sri Lanka

Abstract: This paper aims to examine the overall impact of anti-halal and anti-slaughtering campaigns in the context of post-war Sri Lanka. The reemergence of majoritarian ethno-religious anti-minority nationalist forces and their intensified anti-minority hatred and violence have made it challenging for ethno-religious minorities in Sri Lanka to engage in religious norms and duties. This is especially true for the Muslim community. Numerous Islamic fundamentals have been criticized and opposed. Muslims have had to endu… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(8 citation statements)
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References 14 publications
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“…Customers should seek for the international halal mark in the packaging of international cosmetic items before purchasing, and JAKIM should identify the logo (Ainin et al, 2020). (Yusoff and Sarjoon, 2017). Due to the projected high profitability of the halal cosmetics sector, manufacturers have increased their investment in halal-certified goods.…”
Section: Halal Cosmetic Industry In Malaysiamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Customers should seek for the international halal mark in the packaging of international cosmetic items before purchasing, and JAKIM should identify the logo (Ainin et al, 2020). (Yusoff and Sarjoon, 2017). Due to the projected high profitability of the halal cosmetics sector, manufacturers have increased their investment in halal-certified goods.…”
Section: Halal Cosmetic Industry In Malaysiamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this way, they were one of many loopholes used by Buddhists to absolve themselves of transgressing ethical precepts (Obeyesekere 1968). Being a scapegoat, however, is thankless work, as stereotypes of animal cruelty now contribute to Buddhist campaigns against Muslim commercial or ritual butchery (Yusoff and Sarjoon 2017). Such village dramas of the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries were suited to stereotyping whomever required it, as "any number of characters could be added without changing the nature of the performance" (Sarachchandra 1966, 79).…”
Section: Comic Punchlines and Karmic Scapegoatsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Human Rights Watch also asserted in 2019 that public officials "have made little effort to discourage public campaigns by religious figures that put the Muslim community at greater risk" (Human Rights Watch 2019). Furthermore, because Halal certification is regarded by Sinhala-Buddhist extremists as a profit-making enterprise for the Muslim community, empowering the latter to build more mosques, purchase the affections of Buddhist women and thereby eventually outbreed the endangered Buddhist majority (Yusoff and Sarjoon 2017), in March 2013, the BBS forced the All-Ceylon Jamiyyathul Ulama (ACJU) to abandon the authority to administer Halal certification, though this had been the practice for decades (Silva 2016).…”
Section: Drive For Political Powermentioning
confidence: 99%