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Home›Extra Times›Features›Travelog | ‘Halal tourism’ emerges as businesses serve Muslim travelers

Travelog | ‘Halal tourism’ emerges as businesses serve Muslim travelers

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October 23, 2015
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An exhibitor works at an American Halal Vacation Homes booth at The World Halal Travel Summit & Exhibition in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates

An exhibitor works at an American Halal Vacation Homes booth at The World Halal Travel Summit & Exhibition in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates

A rental company in Orlando, Florida, is offering “halal vacation homes” with curtained pool decks and rooms with prayer mats and copies of the Quran. A British company’s app lists gourmet restaurants serving halal meat in London and Dubai, while a Boston-­based developer’s app offers travel guides for 90 cities with local prayer times and a compass pointing Muslims toward Mecca for daily prayers.
The so-called “halal tourism” market was once seen as a niche revenue stream, limited to pilgrimages like the multi-­billion dollar-a-year revenue stream generated by Muslim travelers to Mecca.
But now there’s a movement in the tourism industry to widen the “halal tourism” market to cater to Muslim travelers worldwide, particularly those from wealthy Gulf Arab states.

Travelers from Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Oman will spend USD64 billion traveling this year and are expected to spend $216 billion by 2030, according to a 2014 study for the travel tech company Amadeus. The study found that, on average, a traveler from these countries spends around $9,900 per trip outside the Gulf. For Emiratis, the figure reaches $10,400.

A Muslim tourist couple walks under an arch of traditional Chinese lanterns at a shopping mall in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

A Muslim tourist couple walks under an arch of traditional Chinese lanterns at a shopping mall in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

Reem El Shafaki, a senior associate at the advisory firm Dinar Standard, said Ritz-Carlton hotels in Dallas and New York offer a good example of what hotels are doing to better serve Muslim guests. They provide halal meals upon request, have Middle Eastern chefs on staff, offer rooms with spaces that allow for gender-segregated settings and have trained frontline staff on other cultural norms.
Dinar Standard has conducted webinars for Marriott hotel staff on how to take care of Muslim guests, but El Shafaki says the hospitality industry can also market to Muslims without alienating non-Muslims. “What some hotels and destinations are doing is that they’re using the term ‘family friendly’,” she said at a conference this week in Abu Dhabi, which brought people from across the budding industry to explore the topic.

An exhibitor talks to a visitor during the opening day of The World Halal Travel Summit & Exhibition in Abu Dhabi

An exhibitor talks to a visitor during the opening day of The World Halal Travel Summit & Exhibition in Abu Dhabi

Halal in Islam literally means that which is permissible. Observant Muslims typically avoid alcohol and areas where there can be excessive nudity, like beaches and nightclubs. For women who adhere to Islam’s modest dress code, swimming can pose a challenge. That means resorts that offer gender-segregated beaches and pools have an advantage.
Roberto Silva of Florida Reality Investments says the company took 50 of its rental properties and outfitted them with a few changes, like curtains around the pool deck, to make them more comfortable for their many Gulf Arab customers, who often travel as large families to Orlando for several weeks at a time and want to be near Disney World and other parks.
“I would love to do more … Los Angeles and San Diego, there are a lot of people going there, and also New York,” he said from his stand at the World Halal Travel Summit and Exhibition in Abu Dhabi.
Along Turkey’s southern coast, several all-inclusive resorts have expansive private beaches and pools for women. One resort even built a structure in the sea to keep people on boats from catching a glimpse. Malaysia is also aggressively seeking more Muslim tourists, promoting itself as “Muslim-friendly Malaysia” in brochures at the Abu Dhabi conference.
Elnur Seyidli, chairman of a website called Halal Booking, says his company has served 43,000 customers from 75 countries. The website can filter requests to find hotels that do not serve any alcohol, or hotels that only serve alcohol in some restaurants. For meat, which should be slaughtered according to Islamic rules, the website offers filters ranging from food that is all halal, or halal meat available upon request.
“It’s about permissibility… Nothing is 100 percent halal in my opinion and nothing is 100 percent non-halal,” he told an audience at the summit. “Even for individual travelers for different trips, requirements may change.”

An exhibitor applies henna tattoos at a traditional tent during the opening day of The World Halal Travel Summit & Exhibition in Abu Dhabi

An exhibitor applies henna tattoos at a traditional tent during the opening day of The World Halal Travel Summit & Exhibition in Abu Dhabi

For those not interested in a shawarma (grilled meat) wrap on the go, Halal Gems is an app that lists gourmet halal eats in London and Dubai. The app’s founder Zohra Khaku says she’s raised money by charging listed restaurants an annual fee. In Dubai, though, the challenge isn’t so much finding halal food, but finding the best gourmet options, or as she calls it, “curated halal dining.”
Irfan Ahmad is another app developer tapping into the Muslim market. His app, called Irhal, lists sightseeing and shopping as well as maps for mosques and halal restaurants. It also comes with a compass to help Muslims find the direction of prayer toward Mecca. The app, available in both English and Arabic, has been downloaded more than 25,000 times, he said, and covers 90 cities worldwide, ranging from Amsterdam and Athens to Beijing and Bangkok, as well as U.S. cities like Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston, New York and Washington D.C.
The idea was sparked by his personal struggles finding halal food in Europe, as well as not knowing when it was dawn or dusk in different cities, which affects Muslim prayer times. He’s looking for around $1 million in investment to expand and include more cities.
“Just like any startup, one of the biggest challenges is funding ourselves,” he said. “We’ve been able to fund the entire project on our own by bootstrapping.” Aya Batrawy, AP, Abu Dhabi

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