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Chances Are, You’re Eating Halal Meat And Don’t Know It

Cuts of halal lamb shoulder sit on a shelf at the Superior Farms plant in Denver, waiting to be sold to small speciality stores that cater to Muslim consumers.
Esther Honig
/
Harvest Public Media
Cuts of halal lamb shoulder sit on a shelf at the Superior Farms plant in Denver, waiting to be sold to small speciality stores that cater to Muslim consumers.

Wearing a heavy smock and rubber boots, Amadedin Eganwa stands over a large conveyor belt that’s carrying unconscious lambs. He faces east, towards Mecca, gently lifts the animal’s head in the same direction and under his breath he quickly says a prayer — bismillahi allahu akbar, or “in God’s name” — before swiftly cutting the lamb’s throat.

Eganwa, a practicing Muslim, performs this slaughter almost 900 times during each shift at Superior Farms slaughterhouse in Denver so that the meat is halal, meaning it’s prepared according to Islamic law.

With the Muslim population on pace to possibly become the second-largest religious group in the United States by 2040, the demand for halal meat and other foods is on the rise to the point that Nielsen reports U.S. sales increased 15 percent from 2012 to 2015. Some of the largest meat producers in the country — American Foods Group — are providing more that’s halal (in part to satisfy global, not domestic, demand). But industry experts say U.S. consumers may not be aware of it, because some large grocery chains choose not to label products halal and there’s no way to tell the difference.

“The reality of it is some [retailers] are actually concerned about the halal insignia,” Superior Farms’ vice president of sales Greg Ahart said, adding that the lack of labeling generally happens at large retailers in areas where there aren’t large Muslim populations.

Harvest Public Media's Esther Honig digs into the halal meat business.

Superior Farms' products are shipped in boxes that have a halal label. But once those products arrive at the meat counter, there'll be no halal label on the packaging.
Credit Esther Honig / Harvest Public Media
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Harvest Public Media
Superior Farms' products are shipped in boxes that have a halal label. But once those products arrive at the meat counter, there'll be no halal label on the packaging.

Superior is one of the largest lamb producers in the country, selling to small ethnic grocery stores as well as retail giants.

Five years ago, the Denver plant and one in California slaughtered lamb according to halal standards just one day a week, Ahart said. As demand rose, Superior Farms, which mostly handles lamb with some goat, became all-halal, all the time.

“It really got to be too cumbersome as time went by to maintain inventory segregation on the product that was halal versus the product that wasn’t halal,” he said.

Shane MacKenzie, who oversees Superior’s operations and has worked with the company for 21 years, said halal slaughter doesn’t slow anything down: “It’s exactly the same except for the practicing Muslim [slaughterman].”

Every step in the company’s process is approved by the federal Safe and Humane Slaughter Act, which every slaughterhouse must follow, as well as a certifying board, Halal Transactions of Omaha. Additionally, the plant is required to prevent any contamination by non-halal foods, such as pork, alcohol or the use of antibiotics since they tend to contain pork byproducts. 

 

Shane MacKenzie stands next to lamb carcasses at the Superior Farms plant in Denver.
Credit Esther Honig / Harvest Public Media
/
Harvest Public Media
Shane MacKenzie stands next to lamb carcasses at the Superior Farms plant in Denver.

There isn’t a single governing body overseeing the certification of halal meats and the standards can vary, which means there’s little data on the industry. But according to Nielsen, recent sales for halal foods in the US reached $1.9 billion, and Thomson Reuters has pegged the global market at about $415 billion.

Despite the marketing opportunities, DinarStandard research analyst Haroon Latif said, it’s fairly common for retailers to avoid halal labels.

“They may feel it’s not necessary to mention that it’s halal and, in some cases, they may fear a backlash,” according to Latif, whose company is a leader in researching the U.S. halal market.

In 2016, Thomson Reuters and DinarStandards analyzed more than 50,000 social media posts by people 18 to 35 that mentioned the word “halal.” They found 18 percent of posts had Islamophobic themes and were more likely to come from Europe, Australia and the United States.  

When it comes to serving halal, some retailers may be doing it, but don’t trumpet that fact — at least in the United States. Customers pointed out on Twitter a few years ago that burger chain Shake Shack sources meat from known halal-certified supplier Creekstone Farms. But Shake Shack denied it on social media and its website says halal meat is only at its locations in the UK and Middle East.   

So if Muslims can’t look at a label, how do they know it’s halal? Often, Latif said, they have to look at social media or websites that list certified halal manufacturers. But he thinks retailers eventually will put their fears aside as they see this market grow, treating halal like kosher, which is now mainstream.  

“Once they do the back of the envelope calculations and they understand how many Muslim consumers they’re living close to, they’ll realize the huge benefit,” he said.

As for Eganwa, the Muslim slaughterman who’s been doing halal slaughtering for about a year, he says he considers doing things according to his religious custom “a service to my people.”

Follow Esther on Twitter: @estherhonig

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Esther Honig