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Farah Nadya and her husband Jahabar Shalih with their two young children. Photo: Facebook/Farah.NF

Singapore supermarket says sorry for ‘no India, only Malay’ remark after Muslim couple ‘shooed’ away from iftar snacks

  • Jahabar Shalih and Farah Nadya said they were left feeling ‘pretty frustrated’ by their experience at the NTUC FairPrice outlet in Our Tampines Hub
  • The supermarket, which offers free snacks to Muslim customers during Ramadan, has apologised. It didn’t clarify how it verifies a customer’s religion
Singapore
A major supermarket chain in Singapore has apologised to a Muslim couple after one of its staff members insisted that complimentary snacks provided to Muslim customers during Ramadan were only for Malays.

Jahabar Shalih, 36, and his wife Farah Nadya, 35, said that they were doing their usual grocery shopping with their two young children at Our Tampines Hub’s NTUC FairPrice outlet on Sunday evening when a male employee “shooed” them away from the snack stand.

Jahabar is Indian, while Farah is Indian-Malay.

Farah on Sunday recounted the “distasteful” encounter in a Facebook post, which has garnered more than 1,000 reactions.

Speaking over the phone on Monday, Jahabar said that he had decided to check out the Iftar Bites station in the supermarket after his wife alerted him to the initiative.

FairPrice Group rolled out its Iftar Bites station on March 23, offering complimentary beverages with snacks or dates at 60 of its outlets to Muslim customers during the month-long Ramadan period.

As part of the initiative, Muslim customers are given refreshments, such as canned drinks and Milo packets, 30 minutes before and after iftar, the meal taken after evening prayers during Ramadan. These are placed on tables in the supermarkets, with a sign to Muslim shoppers to help themselves as they break fast.

“I walked over just to read what was on the board [be]cause I thought it was generally a nice gesture by NTUC and it is,” Jahabar said. “As I started reading it this staff from NTUC approached me and he told me ‘no India’ … and I was like ‘what’?

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“He said ‘No India, only Malay’ and I was like ‘that’s strange’.”

When Jahabar asked the male employee what he meant, the man, who was not identified, only repeated that “India cannot take”.

Jahabar then tried to explain that Muslims could come from the Indian community, and the staff member replied that he “had no education” and simply received instructions from “people at the top”, according to Jahabar.

“I just walked off, pretty frustrated, I continued shopping.”

This staff from NTUC approached me and he told me ‘no India’ … and I was like ‘what’?
Jahabar Shalih, frustrated shopper

“My wife really felt that [the incident] should be brought up. The reason is not to discredit the staff or to have anything done, but being accountable to my son who was there … who is asking such questions now,” he said.

Jahabar said his five-year-old son attends a mixed-race school and is starting to ask about the differences between races and religions.

“I have to clarify with him race and religion are completely different. You can be one race and you can have a religion which is completely separate.”

After the incident, Jahabar and his wife had to tell their son that the employee was mistaken, and that they were not sure what was happening either.

Apology hamper declined

Responding to queries about the incident, FairPrice said it is aware of the post on social media, adding that it has engaged the couple “to address their concerns” and have closed the matter “amicably”.

“We take this matter seriously and would like to apologise for the incident. We have since also counselled our employee accordingly.

“We would like to clarify that iftar packs are offered free of charge to all Muslim customers during the month-long Ramadan period.”

The statement added that this is the 15th year FairPrice is running the community initiative.

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The supermarket operator did not answer a query on how it verifies a customer’s religion.

Confirming that a FairPrice customer service officer had contacted her on Monday, Farah, who owns a healthcare company, said that the couple appreciated the quick customer service response by FairPrice and had declined a hamper offered by the outlet manager as apology.

“I reinforced to [the officer] that our intention is not for the staff to be reprimanded but to create awareness and hope that this translates into better staff training especially for customer-facing staff members,” she said.

This article was first published on CNA
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