Jihad Watch
I asked in writing about a previous story on this settlement:
"'There
was no evidence that the chain set out to deceive customers.' So why
the $700,000 payout?" This story makes the answer clear: it is a form of
tribute, of jizya. Now a Muslim attorney in Dearborn is angry that the
payout is mostly going to various Muslim groups, not to those who were
"injured" by eating "false halal" chicken sandwiches. The attorney for
the Muslim who filed the complaint explains that there is no way to tell
who ate the forbidden sandwiches, the money is going to various
community charities.
Then
there is the $20,000 to Ahmed Ahmed. What will the money do? He has
eaten forbidden chicken, and thereby transgressed Allah's law. Will the
$20,000 he receives relieve his anxiety over the possibility that he
could be consigned to an eternity of drinking molten lead in hellfire
(Qur'an 18:29) for this? Will Allah be more likely to forgive him
because he finagled the kuffar out of $20,000 for a chicken sandwich?
The theological questions multiply.
An update on this story,
and a Jizya Alert from Dearborn: "DEARBORN: Group wants share of
settlement money over McDonald's non-halal chicken," by Joe Slezak for
the Press & Guide, January 24 (thanks to Lookmann):
DEARBORN - An attorney in the city is upset
that those who ate chicken that was labeled as halal, but really
wasn't, won't be sharing in the $700,000 awarded in a lawsuit.
McDonald's
and Finley's Management Co. agreed Jan. 18 to pay the money over the
non-halal chicken, which was served at the McDonald's at 13158 Ford
Road.
Ahmed
Ahmed of Dearborn Heights filed the lawsuit in September 2011 after
finding that the chicken wasn't halal, which means that it didn't meet
Islamic requirements for preparing food.
Ahmed
is expected to get $20,000, the Huda Clinic in Detroit is expected to
get about $275,000, about $150,000 is expected to go to the Arab
American National Museum in Dearborn and about $230,000 is expected to
go to attorneys. The exact amounts will be determined at a hearing.
Attorney
Majed Moughni, who runs the Facebook site Dearborn Area Community
Members, has started a campaign to have the money paid to those who ate
the "haram" chicken, not those he said were not "injured." He's asking
those who did to "like" the entry and leave contact information for
themselves and others who ate the meat.
As of late Thursday afternoon, the campaign had nearly 700 "likes," nearly 600 comments and 60 "shares."
Moughni said in an email that the community is "showing its outrage over the sale of false halal chicken sandwiches."
For
food to meet the halal standard of preparation, God's name must be
invoked before an animal providing meat for consumption is slaughtered.
Islam forbids the consumption of pork.
Two
of the four McDonald's in the city advertise that they sell halal
Chicken McNuggets and McChicken sandwiches, meaning that they have to
get the meat from an approved halal provider. The other restaurant, at
14860 Michigan Ave., was not involved in the suit.
Ahmed's
attorney, Kassem Dakhlallah, told The Associated Press that there was
no evidence of problems in production, but the Ford Road location sold
non-halal chicken when it ran out of halal. Ahmed and Dakhlallah
investigated the matter and sent a letter to McDonald's Corp. and
Finley's Management Co., the franchisee, but didn't get a response, so
they filed a lawsuit as part of a class action in November 2011.
Dakhlallah
told The AP that since it would be impossible to determine who ate
haram chicken at the restaurant, both sides agreed to give money to
community-based charities.
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