Praise be to Allaah.
The scholars agree unanimously that it is permissible to eat the meat of the People of the Book, Jews and Christians, if the name of Allaah is mentioned at the time of slaughter, as Allaah says (interpretation of the meaning): “Eat not of that (meat) on which Allaah’s Name has not been pronounced (at the time of slaughtering of the animal)…” [al-An’aam 6:121]. If the person mentioned a name other than that of Allaah, such as the name of ‘Uzayr or of the Messiah, then it is not permissible to eat of it, because of the general meaning of the aayah (interpretation of the meaning): “He has forbidden you… that which is slaughtered as a sacrifice for others than Allaah.” [al-Baqarah 2:173].
It is also a condition that the meat should be slaughtered in the manner prescribed by sharee’ah. If it is known that the slaughter was not done in the proper Islamic manner, e.g., by strangulation or electric shock and so on, then it is haraam.
As for the claim that some make, that it is enough merely to mention the name of Allaah when eating, this was reported regarding some Muslims who were new in Islam. The Sahaabah (may Allaah be pleased with them) asked the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) about this, saying, “O Messenger of Allaah, some people who are new in Islam brought us some meat, and we do not know whether they mentioned the name of Allaah over it or not.” The Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: “Say the name of Allaah over it and eat it.” (Reported by al-Bukhaari). The command should be understood as meaning that one should be on the safe side, provided that one does not know beforehand that the meat is not slaughtered properly. And Allaah knows best.
If the animal isn't sacrificed in the name of Allah, then how can it be halal?
Jews also believe in Allah...
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oh ok :thumbs_up
its a good altenative for muslims then
where did you hear of jews who believe that the state of israel is the messiah? (the way some feel about it, it might as well be). i've never heard of this!
The question was, "Can muslims eat kosher?". From this statement I understood that the questioner was asking if the food is halal (permissible), haram (forbidden) or makru (disliked). The Quran clearly states that the food of the "People of the Book" is halal. We are not to forbid something that Allah has allowed just as we are not to allow something that He has forbidden.
Its probably better to eat halal as:
Actually, the proper term is zabiha for meat slaughtered Islamically, which of course is also halal. At least, Jews believe in One God and do not slaughter, "In the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit" or "In the Name of Jesus." At least the Jew does not consume swine flesh as practically every Christian does.1. Halal meat is slaughtered according to the proper Islamic Bismillah, Jews use their own prayer
I've got a somewhat related question. I've heard that at times where there is no halal meat available at all, it is permissible to eat any meat available provided you say bismillah before eating it, is this true? If it is, wouldn't it just be common sense to just not eat meat until you can find some halal kind? Like eat veggies, beans, rice, etc.
Recently, my wife and I have chosen to eat only zabiha meat, vegetables, fish or seafood, but I personally would have no problem with certified kosher meat. We choose, in general, to not consume beef, poultry or lamb from USA supermarkets or restaurants except those special ones that serve zabiha meat.... wouldn't it just be common sense to just not eat meat until you can find some halal kind? Like eat veggies, beans, rice, etc.
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