France: Schools Will Not Serve Halal Food in Some Towns
04/05/2014
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In the recent French elections, the National Front took over the political leadership of several towns, and Marine Le Pen announced that schools in those places would return to the custom of serving pork, and kids could eat it or not.

Why do schools have to provide special food for finicky or religious kiddies at all? Changing to bring-your-own lunches would solve a raft of conflicts, plus the taxpayer would not be charged for a cost that should be on the parents. The care and feeding of children was earlier thought to be a responsibility of the family, but in America liberal forces have successfully transferred that task to the government.

One byproduct of free-to-them food is waste, from Los Angeles to Lyon. The mayor of the French town of Arveyres observed, “Often children who did not take the substitute dinner complained as well and left the pork. It distressed the staff to see how much food was wasted.”

Food is an important cultural signifier. As soon as a tribe of immigrants arrive, the first thing they do is open a restaurant serving the dishes of the dear homeland they left. Such businesses often become the center of the balkanized ethnic neighborhoods that today’s tribal immigrants now seem to prefer.

Islamic halal food has been resisted in France. Halal meat has been blessed by Muslims for Allah and is slaughtered in a particularly brutal fashion.

Dozens of citizens wearing pig masks protested Quick fast food chain in Lyon after it announced in 2010 that all of its food would be halal. (Watch Marche des Cochons.)

Several hundred Parisians attended a sausage and wine party in 2010 near the Arc de Triomphe to protest hostile Muslim incursion despite the event being banned by police.

As usual, the media persists in calling Le Pen “far right” even though many voters apparently regard her positions as mainstream.

Pork or nothing for pupils in far-right towns: Le Pen, The Local, April 4, 2014

School cafeterias will stop serving non-pork options to children in towns won by the far-right National Front party in local elections last week, its leader Marine Le Pen told media on Friday.

Le Pen reignited a longstanding controversy on Friday when she told a French radio station that in towns won by the party’s candidates school cafeterias will no longer serve non-pork substitution meals, which generally go to Muslim and Jewish children.

“We will accept no religious requirements in the school lunch menus,” Le Pen told RTL radio. “There is no reason for religion to enter into the public sphere.”

Le Pen’s anti-immigrant party made historic gains in last week’s municipal elections when it landed 11 mayorships, which was seen as a significant electoral breakthrough for the party.

The question of France asserting its traditional values among its growing Muslim population has been a key issue for the National Front and school dinners being used as a political football in France is nothing new.

In March 2013 the school in the village of Arveyres in the Gironde region of south-west France stopped offering an alternative meal for children who did not eat pork, which is forbidden under Jewish and Muslim dietary laws.

Around 30 of the 180 children had up until then been offered a substitute meat when pork was on the menu, France’s TF1 television reported.

Parents of some of those pupils affected took umbrage to the decision.

“We are not asking for halal or kosher meat,” one mother told France blue radio. “We just want a meal with substitute protein.”

Certain parents even offered to cook meals for the children and bring them to school but their offer was dismissed by the town’s mayor because it would be “logistically hard to implement and ethically shocking”.

The mayor of Arveyres, Benoit Gheysens told AFP the move was being taken because of the cost of providing alternative meals, many of which went to waste.

“Often children who did not take the substitute dinner complained as well and left the pork. It distressed the staff to see how much food was wasted,” Gheysens said.

The mayor, who believes the school in Arveyres is not the only one in France facing such a dilemma, has vowed that the children will get all the protein they need saying vegetables, salads and lentils will be offered when pork is on the menu.

The mayor said pork was served no more than once a week.

The issue of halal meat is often a controversial topic in France and has been used as a political football, especially when elections approach.

Le Pen the launched a fierce row before 2012’s presidential elections when she claimed all meat from abatoirs in the Paris region was prepared using Islamic halal traditions and non-Muslim consumers in the capital were being misled.

Former president Nicolas Sarkozy then waded into the row suggesting that meat should be labelled to tell consumers how the animal was slaughtered, which Jews and Muslims reject because they fear it will lead to them being stigmatized.

The French Council of the Muslim Faith (CFCM) hit back, slamming what it said was the use of Muslims as “scapegoats” in the election campaign.

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