JOHOR BAHRU – Dressed in matching pink traditional Malay outfits, Singaporean Rozana Abdul Rahman and her two children stood beside a goat pen at a Johor Bahru farm, carefully choosing the animal for this year’s korban – or sacrifice – ritual.
The family later watched as the goat was slaughtered according to Islamic rites before the meat was packed for distribution to needy families in Malaysia.
“I wanted my family to experience korban the way it was done in the kampung before – choosing the livestock, witnessing the slaughter and giving the meat to the needy,” Madam Rozana, a teacher, told The Straits Times on May 27 at Osman Goat Farm in Kangkar Tebrau in Johor Bahru.
Amid Singapore’s food import restrictions preventing fresh lamb or beef from being brought into the Republic, a growing number of Muslim Singaporeans are crossing the Causeway to perform korban during Hari Raya Haji, in order to experience how the ritual was performed back in the kampung days. The meat from the ritual is distributed to charities in Malaysia.
Korban refers to the Islamic ritual slaughter of livestock performed during Hari Raya Haji and the three following days, commemorating the end of the haj pilgrimage. The meat is distributed to the Muslim community, especially needy families. Hari Raya Haji in Singapore fell on May 27.
“Most Singaporeans are used to korban being done overseas on their behalf. But here, we can choose the goat ourselves, witness the ritual and the atmosphere is very lively,” said Mr Ferdouse Abdul Rahman, a Singaporean who works in the oil and gas industry.
Goat meat being weighed at a collection and distribution centre run by Malaysian charity Erth al-Mustafa Foundation at Osman Goat Farm in Johor Bahru during Hari Raya Haji on May 27.
ST PHOTO: HARITH MUSTAFFA
Some livestock farmers in Johor who spoke to ST noted that demand from Singaporeans to perform the korban has risen steadily after the Covid-19 pandemic – from a handful then to the low hundreds in recent years.
In addition to the growing desire for the kampung experience, the livestock operators cited tighter regulations and a limited supply of live animals for korban services in Singapore as key reasons for the shift.
Osman Goat Farm, which supplied 1,200 goats for korban this year, received few visitors from across the Causeway before the pandemic.
According to the farm’s owner, demand for korban livestock from Singaporeans has risen about 20 per cent in the last five years – with around 300 bookings recorded this year over the four days of the Hari Raya Haji period.
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