I Wonder Why This Number Is Rising So...
Politics1 min ago
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I was not sure about this either. However, I did recall a conversation I had with a taxi driver who I think was muslim and he said that his family would not have dogs in the house as it was unhygienic and against the teachings of Islam. I seem to think that he said that dogs were OK if they had a purpose (ie herding animals or guarding) but not as pets in the house. I may however, have got this wrong.
They must have a documented policy which somehow explains what they regard racism to be, and where dogs' presence or absence and all the other stuff comes from. I'd love to read it.
The Sky report is rather lacking in detail. One thing they report is that the people who submitted the report to the Welsh govt (a Climate Action group!?) included "encouraging a greater number of minority ethnic people to volunteer in the environmental sector." Are they proposing re-introducing slavery?
I'm also baffled by the seemingly lack of connection.
I know the Muslims have an aversion to dogs. I'm no particularly fond of them myself. But that's just tough (on both Muslims and me).
I think dog owners will consider that a daily deduction of two Qirat from their good deeds is a small price to pay to enable them to continue to take Rover for a walk in the park.
Thanks for posting the report mushroom.
The single reference to dogs is: dog-free areas in local green spaces
Every park in my area has a dog free area where the children's swings etc are. It is fenced off. Nothing to do with race, it is to protect children not just from dogs but from dog mess.
Muslims nor any other ethnic/religious/cultural group of people have asked Wales to give them dog free zones.