Halal



Halal

Part of a series on Islam
Usul al-fiqh

(The Roots of Jurisprudence)

Fiqh
  • Qur'an and Sunnah
  • Taqlid (imitation)
  • Ijtihad (interpretation)
  • Ijma (consensus)
  • Madh'hab (school of law)
  • Minhaj (method)
  • Qiyas (analogical reasoning)
  • Urf (society custom)
  • Islamic jurisprudence
  • Bid‘ah (innovation)
  • Madrasah (school/seminary)
  • Ijazah (authorisation)
  • Istihlal
  • Istihsan (discretion)
  • Risalah (dissertation)
Ahkam
  • Halal (legal)
  • Wajib/Fard (obligatory, duty)
  • Mustahabb (favoured)
  • Mubah (neutral)
  • Makruh (disliked, abominable)
  • Haraam (illegal, prohibited)
  • Baatil (void, incorrect)
  • Fasiq (corrupt)
Scholarly titles
  • Mujtahid (scholar of islamic law with comprehensive understanding of the texts and reality)
  • Marja (authority)
  • Alim (scholar; pl. Ulema)
  • Mufti (interpreter)
  • Qadi (judge)
  • Faqih (jurist)
  • Muhaddith (narrator)
  • Mullah
  • Imam
  • Mawlawi
  • Sheikh
  • Mujaddid (reviver)
  • Hafiz
  • Hujja
  • Hakim
  • Amir al-Mu'min in reg. hadith
  • Maulana
This box: view  talk  edit

Halal (حلال, alāl, halaal) is an Arabic term meaning "permissible". In the English language, it most frequently refers to food that is permissible according to Islamic law. In the Arabic language, it refers to anything that is permissible under Islam. It is estimated that 70% of Muslims worldwide follow Halal food standards and that the Global Halal Market is currently a USD 580 billion industry. Its antonym is haraam.



Even more about Halal

Halal

Establishing Genuine Certification Standards Critical for Halal Industry By Ayub Khan The lure of the lucrative Halal market has managed to attract a whole range of purely profit ...

Read more...

Halal.com

Halal (حلال, ḥ alāl, halaal) is an Arabic term meaning "permissible". In the English language, it most frequently refers to food that is permissible according to Islamic law ...

Read more...

© 2006–2007 How To Cooking

Valid XHTML | CSSSitemap