London Halal Food Festival opens its gates to 18,000 visitors

Foodies at the sixth edition of the Halal Food Festival in London. (Supplied)
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Updated 28 September 2022
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London Halal Food Festival opens its gates to 18,000 visitors

  • With 150 vendors, festival showcases 25 cuisines from around the world
  • Festival’s mission is to help support halal SMES

LONDON: The Halal Food Festival returned to the UK capital this year for its sixth edition with 25 cuisines on offer at more than 150 stalls.

At least 18,000 people attended the two-day event, which ran from Sept. 24-25 at London Stadium in Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park.

The scale and scope of the festival mean London now hosts one of the largest specifically halal food gatherings in the world, according to organizers. 

Kevin Jackson, director of Algebra Festivals, launched the festival with his partner Waleed Jahangia seven years ago. 

“We created an event that would put food at the heart of the community. There’s no better way of sharing culture than through food,” he said.

After two years of the COVID-19 pandemic, organizers have invested heavily in infrastructure, transforming the festival into an experience that goes beyond food.

The event featured a VIP lounge, shopping stalls, live entertainment, cookery theater, picnic area, kids play area, mechanical bull and fun competitions. 

One of the highlights was a live demonstration by NHS doctor and former “MasterChef” winner Dr. Saliha Mahmood Ahmed. 

Using bread dough to teach women how to examine themselves for early signs of breast cancer, Ahmed aimed to overcome cultural taboos that contribute to low cancer awareness among the Muslim community in the UK. 

The new additions reflect the growing view that halal is more than just about food but is a lifestyle, too. 

Jackson recalled that when he and Jahangia launched the festival, most Muslim events in London were held in community centers or school halls. 

But the London Stadium event shows the Muslim community now has access to some of the most renowned venues in the capital. 

The festival has also evolved into a cultural melting pot, with both its cuisine and its foodies coming from around the globe. 

“We’ve got people from Manchester, Birmingham, people who came on a day trip from Paris yesterday. We’ve got people from Spain. We’ve got people from Scotland. This is such a big event for the Muslim community that they travel for miles to come to it,”  Jackson said.  

Chef Fatima El-Rify of Mama Hayam reported positive feedback from visitors tasting her Egyptian cuisine. 

“They didn’t know what it was completely. They knew a little about kosheri, but now they have a really strong idea. They’re coming back for more. They’re bringing their friends. They really love kosheri and mahshi, so that’s really good.” 

She added: “I think there is nowhere else in London that you can try all these different cuisines and just have this ease of it all being halal.” 

The festival also features the timeless and the contemporary, from Jordan’s traditional Anabtawi Sweets to London’s Lola’s Cupcakes.

Apart from catering to Muslim visitors, it aims to provide an international platform for the halal economy, while helping to nurture halal small and medium enterprises. 

“We’re building business relationships. The traders all trade with one another. The suppliers, our partners here, Tariq Halal, are providing products for our exhibitors,” Jackson said. 

Founder Shahin Bharwani of Mocktail Company, which sells non-alcoholic beverages,  said that she was fortunate to have been able to exhibit at the Halal Food Festival in 2016 within months of launching her business. 

“It was brilliant in terms of being a startup to get the brand exposure needed at this type of event.” 

Festival vendors reflected on the halal industry’s growth in the past decade. 

Bharwani said: “There’s so many variations of businesses here, particularly the food. Years ago you could never imagine halal tacos hell or gourmet burgers, that type of thing, so to have those kinds of halal options now is amazing.” 

Co-partner Abid Haider of Proper Burgers said that the event “just keeps getting bigger and bigger.” 

With the industry now worth billions, the London festival is part of a growing movement placing halal on high street.

 


Alia Bhatt, Sigourney Weaver talk love for authenticity, strong women

Updated 10 December 2025
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Alia Bhatt, Sigourney Weaver talk love for authenticity, strong women

JEDDAH: On the seventh day of the ongoing Red Sea International Film Festival, two actresses — set apart by geography and time — spoke of their love for telling authentic stories and depicting strong women.

Bollywood superstar Alia Bhatt and Hollywood great Sigourney Weaver, on their respective In Conversation panels, reflected on their varied careers and the choices that led them to enduring success.

From a teenager stepping onto her first film set to a respected actress in her early thirties, Bhatt’s journey is a testament to the power of curiosity and instinct.

Bollywood superstar Alia Bhatt. (Getty Images)

“When I started out, I was ... maybe 17, 18,” she said. “I was way more enthusiastic and full of beans, trying really hard because I was just starting out.”

Her approach has evolved, but the core remains unchanged. “I’m still enthusiastic, still full of beans, but the approach is more silent. It comes with a little more sense of intent,” she said.

“I approach my work truly through pure instinct. The way I choose a part is like, ‘Oh, I've done this. Now I want to do this.’”

This approach, she said, led her to take creative risks — from “Highway” to “Udta Punjab” to Gangubai Kathiawadi” — always seeking variety.

Turning producer with Eternal Sunshine Productions was a natural progression of that curiosity. “I have a real strong passion for stories, so I like to get into it.

“And I like to think, ‘Okay, this has this potential, or this has that potential,’ and either I’m in it or I’m not, but I like to assess the initial stages of a story which is just a synopsis or first draft on paper.”

 Hollywood heavyweight Sigourney Weaver. (Getty Images) 

Weaver said she never set out to become an action hero. Initially shy and unsure, she was drawn not to specific roles but compelling stories.

When “Alien” came along, she approached the script with an open mind, unaware she was about to redefine female characters in science fiction.

“We were just trying to make a good, small movie,” she recalled. “The writers had cleverly crafted a script with a mixed-gender crew of “dirty space truckers,” deliberately subverting expectations by making the young woman the survivor and hero.

Weaver did not see it as a feminist statement at the time, but as a natural storytelling choice. Her character, Ellen Ripley, represented the idea that women could be self-reliant.

“She reminds us all that we can rely on ourselves and we don’t need a man to fly in and save us,” said Weaver.