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Four-day meat ban in Mumbai during Jain fasting period

Do you support this four-day meat ban in Mumbai during Jain fasting period? (For Indians only)


  • Total voters
    62
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In my native, Even Muslims do not eat meat. We have many well developed town with population of around 1 to 2 lakh where you shall not find a Omlet lorry. People are totally vegetarian whether they are Hindus or Muslims.



Something is new. NO 1 enemy of secular is in power. They need every reason to cry.
How do you guys survive without non veg ?
I mean what you eat daily?
 
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How do you guys survive without non veg ?
I mean what you eat daily?

We eat vegetable food. Ther are numerous varieties. If my mother prepare one variety evry day, it shall not repeat during the year.

our regular food is Roti, Shak (Subji- cooked vegetables), RIce , Dal, Milk Butter milk, Farasan (Made of Besan), Various pickles, curd and salad. We eat Thepla, Rotala etc on some odd day.

Frankly speaking the smell of Non veg will do me a vomit.I have experienced this twice in past.
 
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I eat beef and nobody can stop me, says Indian minister
893133-kirenrijijuAFP-1432725306-187-640x480.jpg

Days after an Indian minister said that those who want to eat beef can move to Pakistan, India’s Minister of State for Home Kiren Rijiju lashed out at his colleague, sayingthat he eats beef and ‘nobody can stop him from doing so’.

“I eat beef. I’m from Arunachal Pradesh, can somebody stop me? So let us not be touchy about somebody’s practices,” Rijiju said.

“This is a democratic country. Sometimes, some statements are made which are not palatable,” the minister said as he lashed out at Indian Minister of State for Parliamentary affairs Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi.
“If a Mizo Christian says that this is the land of Jesus, why should someone have a problem in Punjab or Haryana? We have to honour the sentiments of each place and each location,” he said.

“If Maharashtra is Hindu majority, or if Gujarat is Hindu majority, Madhya Pradesh is Hindu majority, if they are to make laws which are conducive to the Hindu faith, let them be.” Rijuju went on to say.

“But in our place, in our state where we are majority, where we feel whatever steps we take, you know, laws which are conducive to our beliefs, it should be. So they also should not have a problem with the way we live, and we also should not have a problem with the way they live,” he added.

Read: India police seek cow ‘mugsh
“This country is a multi-racial, multi-religious, multi-communal country. We must respect each other’s practices. There cannot be any force on anybody about your practices, your faith. So if anybody makes a statement which is forcing or imposing your belief, your faith, your practices on another community, another believer, it is not good,” Rijiju said.

Earlier last week, Indian Minister of State for Parliamentary affairs Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi, stood firmly in support of the ban on cow slaughter in India, saying those who wish to eat beef should go to Pakistan.
“It is not about loss or profit … it is an issue of faith and belief. It is a sensitive issue for the Hindus,” Naqvi said at “Manthan” conclave organised by TV channel Aaj Tak.

“Those who are dying without eating beef can go to Pakistan or Arab countries or any other part of world where it is available,” he said.

This article originally appeared in The Indian Express.
I eat beef and nobody can stop me, says Indian minister - The Express Tribune

 
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I eat beef and nobody can stop me, says Indian minister
893133-kirenrijijuAFP-1432725306-187-640x480.jpg

Days after an Indian minister said that those who want to eat beef can move to Pakistan, India’s Minister of State for Home Kiren Rijiju lashed out at his colleague, sayingthat he eats beef and ‘nobody can stop him from doing so’.

“I eat beef. I’m from Arunachal Pradesh, can somebody stop me? So let us not be touchy about somebody’s practices,” Rijiju said.

“This is a democratic country. Sometimes, some statements are made which are not palatable,” the minister said as he lashed out at Indian Minister of State for Parliamentary affairs Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi.
“If a Mizo Christian says that this is the land of Jesus, why should someone have a problem in Punjab or Haryana? We have to honour the sentiments of each place and each location,” he said.

“If Maharashtra is Hindu majority, or if Gujarat is Hindu majority, Madhya Pradesh is Hindu majority, if they are to make laws which are conducive to the Hindu faith, let them be.” Rijuju went on to say.

“But in our place, in our state where we are majority, where we feel whatever steps we take, you know, laws which are conducive to our beliefs, it should be. So they also should not have a problem with the way we live, and we also should not have a problem with the way they live,” he added.

Read: India police seek cow ‘mugsh
“This country is a multi-racial, multi-religious, multi-communal country. We must respect each other’s practices. There cannot be any force on anybody about your practices, your faith. So if anybody makes a statement which is forcing or imposing your belief, your faith, your practices on another community, another believer, it is not good,” Rijiju said.

Earlier last week, Indian Minister of State for Parliamentary affairs Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi, stood firmly in support of the ban on cow slaughter in India, saying those who wish to eat beef should go to Pakistan.
“It is not about loss or profit … it is an issue of faith and belief. It is a sensitive issue for the Hindus,” Naqvi said at “Manthan” conclave organised by TV channel Aaj Tak.

“Those who are dying without eating beef can go to Pakistan or Arab countries or any other part of world where it is available,” he said.

This article originally appeared in The Indian Express.
I eat beef and nobody can stop me, says Indian minister - The Express Tribune

He can eat that in the state where it is not banned but not where it is banned. In most of the states, it is banned so no question of eating beef as it is not available.
 
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India Just Made Eating Burgers Illegal
Scarfing down a shitty fast food hamburger or munching on a late-night diner Reuben is sometimes inadvisable, but in most of the world, it’s almost never a crime. The same cannot be said in the Indian state of Maharashtra, where it’s now illegal to sell or eat beef. Violators of the law, signed into effect yesterday by Indian president Pranab Mukherjee, would face a fine and up to five years in prison.

So why the beef with beef? Last week, we reported on the fraught nature of the meat in India, where the slaughter of cows and the sale and consumption of their flesh tends to bring the nation’s often-buried issues of Islamophobia to the fore. In the Hindu-majority country, the processing of beef had been limited to the western state of Maharashtra, where Mumbai is located and where a large portion of India’s 138 million Muslims live. Previously, beef processed in Maharashtra’s slaughterhouses was sold to local Muslims, or else exported to other Asian countries. But increasingly, slaughterhouse employees and beef vendors have complained of being attacked by members of Hindu nationalist groups. The Hindu-majority government didn’t exactly seem to discourage such attacks, with India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi previously criticizing the country’s former, more left-leaning United Progressive Alliance (UPA)-ledgovernment for promoting a “pink revolution to butcher cattle and export meat.”

Last month, in the face of such attacks—both verbal and physical—on their industry,Maharashtra’s beef dealers announced an indefinite strike, and beef was removed from many area stores and stalls. The response of many of the country’s Hindu nationalist groups? Meh, we pretty much don’t give a ****.

“We don’t care if the butchers shut shop or announce a strike,” Laxmi Narayan Chandak, head of the Maharashtra unit of Vishwa Hindu Parishad, told Reuters.

With the president’s outright ban on the slaughter, sale, and consumption of cows, the government’s previously veiled anti-Muslim stance seems pretty clear. Of course, the ban is not without its detractors: beef traders, who say it will leave thousands jobless, plan to appeal the new law, and others have expressed concern for India’s poor, for whom inexpensive beef is a key source of protein.

Within hours of the ban’s announcement, many Indians took to Twitter both in support of, but more often in opposition to, the new law: the hashtag #BeefBan has become one of the most-used terms on the site, appearing more than 22,000 times in less than 24 hours. Many anti-ban tweets carried a thick sheen of sarcasm, questioning how such a targeted law could go into effect in a supposedly secular country.

“Eat what we tell you to eat. Watch what we tell you to watch. Wear what we tell you to wear. Don’t complain. We are a democracy. #BeefBan,” user @lindsaypereira wrote.
Beef Is Now Illegal in Much of India | MUNCHIES
 
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That's not right ..religion should be kept private affair of an individual ..Administration should not grow sensitivities towards religious moralities
 
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We eat vegetable food. Ther are numerous varieties. If my mother prepare one variety evry day, it shall not repeat during the year.

our regular food is Roti, Shak (Subji- cooked vegetables), RIce , Dal, Milk Butter milk, Farasan (Made of Besan), Various pickles, curd and salad. We eat Thepla, Rotala etc on some odd day.

Frankly speaking the smell of Non veg will do me a vomit.I have experienced this twice in past.
So u don't even have egg
 
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Just 4 days ban what a big deal in it? is there anybody gng to die for such a ban.

Are we really thinking meat will not be served in any restaurant/hotel in Mumbai? I bet you it will be available if you really wanted it.

There is nothing in it to get proud .You can't restrict anything in India thats obvious.
 
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