Malaysia: Halal Buddy lets you scan food for Halal Ingredients

By Ellia Pikri – Vulcan Post

When you’re in Malaysia, it’s easy to look for the halal logos on restaurants and food items, certified by JAKIM.

We’re fortunate over here; Malaysia’s take on the halal industry has actually been emulated worldwide and according to the Minister of International Trade and Industry Datuk Seri Mustapa Mohamed, Malaysia has been assisting other countries and worked with their halal bodies in terms of getting halal certification.

But what about when you’re in a foreign country?

In America itself, non-Muslims are opening up to the idea of halal food through the halal food trucks that they have there.

But until the concept of halal takes a more global place (and let’s be real, they’ll probably have to overcome the stigma of Islamophobia first), there is a real need for Muslims overseas to have more accessible halal food.

And to put a dent in that problem, HalalBuddy is a Malaysian-developed app that scans through the food’s ingredients to tell if the food is suitable for consumption.

Halal Is More Than A Cert 
HalalBuddy’s letter of Letter of Award from Malaysia Debt Ventures Berhad (MDV)

Right now, I can already hear some Muslims rightly wondering: what’s the difference between HalalBuddy and existing apps like ScanHalal or Check Halal?

For one thing, those apps are developed to check if the food or restaurant is halal-certified. Meanwhile HalalBuddy is intended to scan food that doesn’t have a halal certification but may still be completely halal for Muslims to eat.

Founder and CEO Suhail Azmi says that he came up with the idea for HalalBuddy thanks to his sister’s own struggles while she was studying in Glasgow.

“During her years there, she had to struggle a lot in finding halal products especially whenever she went out shopping at the local malls.”

“It is almost impossible to find halal-certified products near her campus. Therefore, in order for her to find products which are halal, she had to check the halal status of ingredients of the products, especially food, one-by-one through Google. She also had to seek for help from her friends just to ensure that the products she was about to purchase were confidently halal.”

As it happens, Suhail himself was working on his Masters in Computer Vision.

“At that time, I was doing my research on Optical Character Recognition (OCR), a CV technique to extract text from images. Therefore, upon seeing my sister’s struggles, I was later on inspired to utilise the knowledge into something that perhaps could actually provide convenience for Muslims who are staying abroad in future.”

But he only really started to work on HalalBuddy after he had worked in Petronas for 3 years and realised that no one else was going to work on it if he didn’t. So he tendered his resignation, went to pitch the idea and won a grant from Skim Permulaan Usahawan Bumiputera (SUPERB) 2015 Q3.