Category: Agama

  • Malay Pakcik Tearful, Thankful To Compassionate Chinese BMW Driver Who Did Not Pursue Any Damages

    Malay Pakcik Tearful, Thankful To Compassionate Chinese BMW Driver Who Did Not Pursue Any Damages

    Met with an accident today, rear ended by a Malay uncle driving a van at a slip-road.

    He came out of the vehicle extremely apologetic, kept shaking his head saying he will be responsible for the damage. As I was reassuring him the damage is not significant, he told me it is to him, especially since it’s during the Ramadan period and Hari Raya is coming up.

    I choked.

    I told him to use the money meant for the repair and put it to good use. Bring his family for a nice meal etc.

    He cried and hugged me, kept asking if I am for real. He said he is heading to the mosque for night prayers and asked for my name, promising to pray for me. Pretty much lost for words.

    Happy holidays my Muslim friends. I can sleep better tonight.

     

     

    Source: Johnny Yang

  • MHA: Political, Controversial Social Issues Should Be Decided by Singaporeans Alone

    MHA: Political, Controversial Social Issues Should Be Decided by Singaporeans Alone

    The Government has always taken the position that foreigners and foreign entities should not interfere in our domestic matters (“Clarity needed on ‘interference by foreign entities’” by Ms Corinna Lim; yesterday).

    Political and controversial social questions should be decided by Singaporeans alone.

    The Speakers’ Corner was established to provide a space for Singaporeans to express themselves, without requiring a permit, on the condition that there is no participation of foreigners.

    In line with this condition, the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) is reviewing Speakers’ Corner rules to make clear that foreign entities should not fund, support or influence such events held at the Speakers’ Corner.

    We will adopt a practical approach.

    When this review is complete, the ministry will set out the parameters.

    The Government is committed to diversity and inclusiveness, and expects the same of businesses operating here with respect to their employees.

    However, advocating positions on Singapore laws and policies on socially divisive issues is an entirely different matter.

    That is a right that must be reserved for Singaporeans.

    The MHA statement of June 7 made it clear that this applies equally to those who advocate lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) causes, as well as those who oppose LGBT causes.

    Lee May Lin (Ms)

    Director

    Information Planning and Strategy

    Community Partnership and Communications Group

    Ministry of Home Affairs

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Rising Trend Of Halal Labelling Generates Concern

    Rising Trend Of Halal Labelling Generates Concern

    The paint tin has a silhouette of a mosque on the label, while the paint company’s brochure has the face of a pig crossed out.

    Indonesian company Bernahal uses these images to show its wall paint is halal, or permissible for Muslims, part of a growing range of goods aimed at winning over pious Islamic consumers in a global market estimated to be worth US$2 trillion (S$2.7 trillion) a year.

    To emphasise its appeal, Bernahal says the chemicals in its paints are free from lard, which is considered unclean in Islam.

    In Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim nation, there are many other items touted as halal, such as a computer mouse, headscarves and even shirt buttons.

    In Malaysia, it is the government’s Islamic Development Department, or Jakim.

    In Singapore, it is the Islamic Religious Council (Muis), while in Indonesia, it is the Indonesian Ulema Council’s Food and Drugs Supervisory Agency.

    Makers of products such as canned food or those selling meat such as chicken must first apply to the local Islamic authority to carry the halal logo.

    Applicants need to ensure their supply chain uses ingredients and processes permitted under Islamic law.

    Beyond the requirements of having no pork, no lard, no alcohol and a clean processing environment, a supplier of chicken or sheep, for example, must have the animals slaughtered by Muslim workers reciting the name of Allah in abbatoirs certified by Jakim.

    Biscuits and mineral water are examples of food that do not generally have to carry the halal logo. But manufacturers seek certification to attract more Muslim customers.

    A company or seller will be allowed to carry the official halal stamp once the Islamic body is satisfied the conditions are met, and occasional spot checks are carried out to ensure compliance.

    Muis says it conducts “unannounced post-certification audits”. Once approved, the validity of halal certification lasts for one to two years, depending on the firm’s past track record, among other things.

    In Malaysia, there are discussions whether to introduce halal supermarket trolleys that cannot be used by buyers of pork. There is also a recently launched halal Internet browser and halal household detergents.

    Some think the frenzy over “halal” products has gone too far and accuse businesses of exploiting pious Muslims who fear touching or eating items deemed unclean, or haram, meaning forbidden.

    But others say it is the Muslims who insist on the halal label.

    A director at Malaysia’s Islamic Development Department (Jakim), Mr Sirajuddin Suhaimee, told The Straits Times that “the push power of consumers has nudged the industry to get halal certification”.

    “People ask for a halal toilet bowl because it comes into contact with humans. Same for plastic bags and packaging that have contact with food,” said Mr Sirajuddin.

    Datuk Hooi Lai Lin, chief executive of Ken Rich Corporation, which produces halal personal care products and household detergents, said: “We just want to cater across the board and give comfort to all Muslims.

    “Even though our cleaning products are not consumed, a lot are touched by people.”

    Lumin Spring International Group produces mineral water that has the Jakim halal logo. “If we tell buyers that our water is Malaysian halal-certified, it sells better,” said company director Philip Ting.

    The drive to make more products and services halal has grown in the past three decades as Muslims have become more observant of Islam, as shown by the growing number of Muslim women who wear the tudung or headscarf around the world.

    “It’s not a choice. We must use halal goods,” Perak state’s mufti, Tan Sri Harussani Zakaria, told The Straits Times.

    But a worry is that Muslims are buying these products simply because of the halal stamp, without asking whether a can of paint, a computer mouse, a bottle of water or that colourful headscarf needs the label in the first place.

    “Muslims are required to eat halal, but the problem is when people practise religion beyond the nature of Islam itself,” Mr Mohd Asri Zainul Abidin, Perlis state’s mufti, told The Straits Times.

    “Traders are commercialising religion and halal by promoting what Muslims should use and consume,” he added.

    Such commercial uses of the label have spurred a group of auditors, including Muslim Singaporeans, to form a new association to help governments certify manufacturers using halal guidelines and standard practices.

    The International Association of Halal Auditors, which will be registered in Indonesia by the end of this year, will possibly be the first halal body in the world to be led by professionals, said Mr Imran Musa, 51, one of the main initiators.

    The Singaporean is the chief executive of Ark Incorporation, a Singapore company that has audited 40 companies worldwide for halal compliance since 2011.

    Among the group’s aims is to quash “halal extremism” and set the record straight on what is “genuinely halal and good”, Mr Imran told The Straits Times.

    “Having unnecessarily stricter rules towards halal will lead to halal extremism. Who would have thought of halal paint, halal tudung and halal condoms?” he said.

    “Halal extremism is slowly creeping in as some clerics impart their own judgment, hence making halal more stringent.”

    Mr Imran has so far gathered 50 auditors from Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Australia, South Korea, Japan, Thailand, New Zealand, Germany, Italy and Britain to join the association.

    He said the proposed group has received the backing of Indonesia’s top Islamic authority, the Indonesian Ulema Council (MUI), which is also the halal certification body in the country.

    Halal certification currently has no universally accepted standard, with different countries imposing varying interpretations of the Islamic rules for what is permissible.

    Some go beyond what the religion requires, in what is described by Mr Asri as being “halal crazy”.

    To add to the headache, halal approvals issued previously for products can be reversed depending on circumstances, MUI’s deputy secretary-general, Tengku Zulkarnain Rafiuddin, told The Straits Times.

    For instance, kopi luwak, made from coffee beans which are ingested and excreted by civets, is halal in Indonesia as the waste matter can be washed away. But if the coffee beans break up in the animals’ bodies before they are expelled, the beans become haram, he said.

    Kopi luwak is halal in Singapore. But it is haram – not permissible for Muslim consumption – in Malaysia.

    Manufacturers say stricter requirements translate into more time, money and paperwork which, in turn, drive up costs of goods.

    Typically, a company can take anything from two to five months and spend US$4,000 to US$67,000 to get their products halal-certified in Singapore, Malaysia and Indonesia, officials say.

    Mr Martin Wissler, sales international manager for Germany-based Martin Braun group, which exports pastry and baking ingredients, said he hopes to deal with a single body with clear guidelines.

    He told The Straits Times: “This is actually what we are looking for as a manufacturer… We wouldn’t mind paying for such good services provided we can save a lot of time.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Yasir Qadhi: Stresses In LGBT Lifestyle, Lax Gun Controls, Not Islam, Triggers For Orlando Massacre

    Yasir Qadhi: Stresses In LGBT Lifestyle, Lax Gun Controls, Not Islam, Triggers For Orlando Massacre

    It has now been confirmed, by multiple sources, that Omar Mateen, the shooter in the Orlando massacre, was himself gay. He frequently visited the same club that he committed the massacre in, and he attempted to initiate dates on a famous gay-dating app.  Additionally, he was born and raised in America.

    His wife, father and community have all claimed that he was not religious in the slightest.

    Multiple eyewitness reports indicate that he would get drunk at the very club he committed the massacre in, and would have to be kicked out because of his unruly behavior.

    Colleagues and acquaintances have mentioned that he was a loner, a social introvert, and prone to make violent statements and threats against other people.

    His wife left him because he beat her and was physically abusive.

    Yet, the media continues to ask questions about ‘radical Islam’ and about Islam’s stance on homosexuality. What blatant hypocrisy!

    He wasn’t a ‘radical Muslim’.

    He was a mentally deranged psychopathic American closet homosexual who was battling with his sexual identity.

    Instead of concentrating on his mental issues, and on the easy gun laws that our country is notorious for, politicians and media pundits wish to cast all of that aside, and choose the easier target of questioning his faith, and of Islam’s stance on sexual issues.

    The guy was mental, plain and simple. Islam’s stance on homosexuality is IRRELEVANT to this massacre, period.

     

    Source: Yasir Qadhi

  • WAAPD: Reject PinkDot & LGBT Agenda Through Intellectual, Policy Engagement, Not Violence

    WAAPD: Reject PinkDot & LGBT Agenda Through Intellectual, Policy Engagement, Not Violence

    Message from waapd admins In response to the recent post on violence.

    WAAPD is made up of a cross section of Singaporeans from all walks of life, belief systems, ethnicity, gender and creed.

    We were set up to discuss the attempt to promote a homosexual movement in Singapore. This movement is not part of our traditional family values.

    We are clear that our position is to reject the promotion of the homosexual lifestyle.

    We do not condone the advocacy of violence.

    As is expected in a group of thousands of Singaporeans, we will not know the inclination of every member.

    We would like to inform every WAAPD member that we will delete any post that promote violence as they come to our attention.

    We would also not hesitate to report such matters to the authorities and ban the member from the group if we believe a threat is real.

    WAAPD is a public advocacy group.

    PinkDot and the homosexual movement should be rejected through intellectual and policy engagement.

    We are confident that our members can come together and engage on that level.

     

    Source: Syed Danial in We Are Against PinkDot in Singapore

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