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McDonald pays up Hindu veggie groups in US

CHIDANAND RAJGHATTA

 

TIMES NEWS NETWORK[ TUESDAY, JULY 12, 2005 09:25:53 PM ]

 

 

WASHINGTON: Several Hindu and vegetarian groups in the United States

had a happy surprise in the mail last week.

 

Healthy cheques for sums ranging from $50,000 to $1.4 million -- part

of the $10 million court-ordered settlement in the case involving

their beef against McDonald's.

 

Some four years after Seattle-based Indian-American lawyer Harish

Bharti sued the fast food giant for misleading customers by claiming

their French fries were vegetarian, McDonald's mailed out the

cheques, in addition to the apology it issued in March 2002.

 

The money, McDonald's said, will go "to Hindu, vegetarian and other

groups whose charitable and educational activities are closely linked

to the concerns of these consumers (having dietary restrictions)."

 

Among the groups that benefited from the class-action bonanza are

International/American Gita Society, which got $50,000; Hinduism

Today Endowment, $250,000; Supporting Excellence in Education,

$900,000; Council of Hindu Temples of North America $200,000; SSV

Temple, $50,000; and Hindu Students Council, $500,000.

 

Vegetarian groups that were awarded include Vegetarian Resource Group

($1.4 milion), ADAF Vegetarian Nutrition Dietetic Practice Group

($600,000), Preventive Medicine Research Institute ($550,000), North

American Vegetarian Society ($1 million) Vegetarian Vision, Inc.,

($250,000); and American Vegan Society, $500,000.

 

They are among the 24 groups selected to receive compensation from

over 250 groups that were initially considered under the terms of the

settlement.

 

Also among the beneficiaries were Jewish, Muslim and Sikh groups

which joined the lawsuit claiming that the fries were not

kosher/halal etc.

 

McDonald pays up Hindu veggie groups in US

CHIDANAND RAJGHATTA

 

TIMES NEWS NETWORK[ TUESDAY, JULY 12, 2005 09:25:53 PM ]

 

Surf 'N' Earn -Sign innow

 

<<Previous|

 

"It was quite a surprise," said Paramacharya Palaniswami of the Hindu

Monastery in Kaui, Hawaii, which received a check for $ 254,773.19

drawn on Chicago's Banco Popular. "I guess we will be inspired to do

more things for vegetarianism."

 

As a first step, the monastery plans to place the amount in an

endowment for publication of its Hinduism Today magazine.

 

None of the principle will be touched, so that it will be a perpetual

source for funding outright 1,000 or more free subscriptions a year

forever, or subsidize a larger number, the Paramacharya told TNN in

an interview from Hawaii.

 

He also said the "the supersized endowment will educate Americans,

especially youth, about the merits of a veggie lifestyle, which has

been a Hindu ideal for 6,000 years."

 

The victorious groups have however asked customers to take note of

the fact that McDonald's made no changes in their fries, which still

have beef-flavoring.

 

Under the terms of the settlement, McDonald's is only required to

make a better disclosure, not change the way its fries are made.

 

"Sure, the oil is vegetable. But make no mistake about it. There is

meat in those luscious Golden Arches french fries," Paramacharya

Palaniswami said.

 

Attorney Harish Bharti did not return calls seeking comment

 

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/msid-1168727,curpg-

1.cms

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