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ـ[أخوكم عماد]ــــــــ[26 - 10 - 06, 07:53 م]ـ

نعم أنا أيضا سمعت الشريط الذي يفتي فيه الشيخ حسين يعقوب بحرمة شراب فيروز، لأن الشعير يتخمر و يقومون بنزع بعض الأمور منه حتى لا يكون مسكرا، لكن النجاسة لا تزول، لذلك قال أن الكلام نهائي، و الله أعلم

ـ[أبو صفوت]ــــــــ[27 - 10 - 06, 02:02 ص]ـ

وهل مجرد التخمر يكون مقياسا للحرمة

إن عصير القصب يتخمر فهل هو حرام، ومعظم العصائر تتخمر لكنها لا تسكر فهل نستطيع الحكم بحرمتها؟

ـ[أبو زكريا الشافعي]ــــــــ[27 - 10 - 06, 03:48 ص]ـ

أنظر: http://money.cnn.com/2003/01/10/news/funny/heineken/

[left]What would Mohammed drink?

Heineken hopes to tap the growing Muslim market with nonalcoholic fruit-flavored beers.

January 13, 2003: 1:39 PM EST

NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - Heineken, the big Dutch brewer, is eyeing the growing Islamic market with an ambitious plan to use its vast distribution network for a line of non-alcoholic fruit-flavored beers.

As a first step Heineken, one of the world's largest brewers, paid $280 million in October to buy Al Ahram Beverages Co. of Cairo, the biggest financial deal in Egypt's history, the New York Times reported. Al Ahram uses a special brewing process that yields no alcohol, thus allowing its malt beverages to be certified halal, or fit for consumption by observant Muslims, whose religion prohibits drinking alcohol.

The Egyptian brewer introduced its pineapple-flavored Fayrouz malt beverage in 2000 and has since added three others, including mango.

"There are 1.3 billion Muslims in the world, and many of them want to drink beer but do not because they are religiously observant or for social reasons," the Times quoted Al Ahram Chairman Ahmed Zayat as saying. "They want something fizzy, malt-based, flavored and socially acceptable."

In addition to Fayrouz, Al Ahram also brews other nonalcoholic beers under license as well as regular beers, including the Egyptian brands Stella and Sakara, and produces wine and spirits, the Times reported

و أنظر: http://www.dailystaregypt.com/articl...?ArticleID=756

CAIRO: Al-Ahram Beverages Co. (ABC), which changed hands twice in the past decade, is now firmly in Heineken's hands.

The company was nationalized in 1963 then privatized in 1997. For five years thereafter, it was headed by Ahmed El-Zayat, who turned around the company, bought out competitors and introduced several new brands including I.D. and Fayrouz.

In 2002, Heineken purchased ABC for LE 1.3 billion but El-Zayat retained management control for another three years.

In keeping with the acquisition agreement, El-Zayat's tenure at the helm of ABC came to an end in December, and Heineken brought in Marc Busain as the new chief executive officer of ABC. Despite the change at the top, the rest of the senior management team remains largely the same.

Busain hopes to maintain the spirit which El-Zayat enthused while making procedural changes to improve the company's bottom line. "We have great brands and a great quality of products," says Busain. "For instance, in January, the Heineken which was brewed and bottled in Egypt was named the second-best Heineken all over the world."

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