In his days as a jet-setting telecoms executive, ready-to-eat meals were a regular part of Fazal Bahardeen’s luggage.
Many of the hotels he stayed in did not have halal-certified restaurants for Muslim travelers like the 47-year-old Sri Lanka-born Singaporean.
Rooms lacked markers pointing to Mecca for prayers and staff were unable to answer questions from Muslim guests about their particular needs.
“Half of my life was spent in hotels and airplanes,” Fazal said.
“But being a Muslim, I was getting frustrated by the travel industry or the hotels not being able to provide the right services. You don’t know what the prayer time is, where the prayer direction is, and you can’t find halal food.”
But halal travel is now gaining popularity as demand for products and services permitted by Islam extends beyond food and interest-free financial instruments, and affluent Muslim travelers make their influence felt.
Halal travel is expected to be worth US$100 billion annually within two years, said Fazal, who resigned from a senior management job at a major telecoms firm in 2006 and set up his own company to tap into the expected boom.
Fazal’s Crescentrating Pte Ltd is believed to be the only company in the world that rates hotels globally for their friendliness to Muslim travelers.
Its online booking portal www.crescentrating.com also promotes halal tours.
Travel commentator Yeoh Siew Hoon said there is a real demand for halal travel, led by tourists from Southeast Asia and the Middle East.
“Take Indonesia — it is one of the fastest growing outbound markets in Asia, and is the number one source of visitors
to Singapore,” said Yeoh, who operates an industry Web site www.webintravel.com.
“Tourism Australia also produces a guide to halal restaurants due to the growing numbers of travelers from Muslim countries,” she added.
Greg Duffell, chief executive of the Bangkok-based Pacific Asia Travel Association, said China’s sizeable Muslim population is another potential source of outbound travel.
“A lot of suppliers are now amending their products to meet halal standards,” Duffell said.
“It is a trend that started a few years ago. Since then, restaurants and resorts in Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam too have begun adapting their standards, so it’s beginning to branch out,” he said. “There are more designated halal restaurants in hotels now, and prayer facilities on the premises, especially at the airports.”
Crescentrating’s hotel grading system ranges from one to seven and is based on the availability of halal food as well as prayer rooms and mats — and the non-availability of forbidden items like alcohol and adult TV channels.
A rating of one is given to a hotel with no such facilities
but whose employees are trained to answer questions from Muslim guests.
This can be raised a notch if the hotel has a list of halal-certified restaurants in its vicinity — even if it does not have one itself.
The company’s highest ratings, six and seven, require a hotel to be free of alcohol, discos and TV channels showing movies unsuitable for families and children. In addition, all food and beverages must be halal.
Globally, only Dubai’s Al Jawhara Garden Hotel has a rating of seven, while three hotels in Saudi Arabia and one in South Africa are rated six.
The halal food industry is worth US$600 billion to US$650 billion a year, according to Fazal and industry reports.
Islamic finance meanwhile boomed when Muslims began to look for investments approved by their religion, and the sector has attracted non-Muslims too after the global financial crisis.
“The halal consciousness is rapidly going beyond food and finance,” said Fazal, arguing that with 1.6 billion increasingly wealthy Muslims worldwide, halal-friendly travel is likely to be the next growth area.
Muslim travelers account for seven to eight percent of global tourism expenditure, which totaled around US$930 billion in 2009, up from just three-four percent 10 years ago, Fazal said.
This share is expected to expand to 10 percent in the next two years.
Crescentrating also hopes to stamp halal-friendly ratings on theme parks, convention venues, cruise ships, shopping malls and hospitals used by medical tourists.
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