Category: Agama

  • UK Police Face Backlash Over Allahu Akbar Chant During Anti-Terror Exercise

    UK Police Face Backlash Over Allahu Akbar Chant During Anti-Terror Exercise

    Efforts to fight terrorism should not be hampered by perpetuating sterotypes against Muslims, said the Muslim Council of Britain (MCB), after police in England used the phrase “Allahu Akbar” at an anti-terror training exercise.

    Monday’s exercise at a shopping mall in Manchester comprised more than 800 volunteers, including a masked man dressed in black who, in video footage, was seen running and shouting the words before setting off an explosion.

    Miqdaad Versi, assistant secretary general of the MCB, told Al Jazeera that “by using this word [in the terror training], Muslims around the world are being associated with terrorists”.

    “Muslims use this term in prayers and is a perfectly noble term and we must not allow the terrorists to hijack it,” said Versi.

    Assistant Chief Constable Garry Shewan from Greater Manchester Police said while the exercise was based on a “suicide attack by an extremist Daesh [ISIL] style organisation”, the use of the word was unacceptable.

    “On reflection we acknowledge that it was unacceptable to use this religious phrase immediately before the mock suicide bombing, which so vocally linked this exercise with Islam.

    “We recognise and apologise for the offence that this has caused.”

    Versi added that “using this term in such exercises is not helpful in any way” before welcoming the police for “recognising the problem and for apologising”.

    Reactions raced through social media, mostly on Twitter, where people condemned the act.

    “I’m disgusted by Manchester Police using ‘Allah hu Akbar’ in a terrorism training exercise. Once again demonising Muslims and Islam,” said a Twitter user.

    Police said there was no specific threat in Manchester and that the exercise was devised in December, a month after the Paris attacks that killed 130 people.

    A British Muslim Labour party candidate, Sadiq Khan, was sworn in as London’s new mayor this month after receiving the largest number of votes of any London mayoral candidate ever.

    Some of the fault lines surrounding Khan’s election were visible on social media where many users mocked what they saw as xenophobic responses to Khan’s mayorship.

     

    Source: www.aljazeera.com

  • Terrorism Is Political Problem, Not A Religious One

    Terrorism Is Political Problem, Not A Religious One

    Recently, in the aftermath of attacks by the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) in Europe, Singaporean leaders warned against the danger of Islamophobia.

    Mr K. Shanmugam, Home Affairs and Law Minister, expressed his fears that non-Muslims in Singapore could start developing a set of attitudes internally towards Muslims as a reaction to terror attacks elsewhere in the world, and noted that there were signs that this was already happening. He urged non-Muslims to reach out and engage Muslims here so as to maintain the nation’s social cohesion.

    In a similar vein, Dr Yaacob Ibrahim, Minister for Communications and Information, recently stressed the role of religious leaders in promoting understanding about “how Muslims and non-Muslims can live together side by side in peace and harmony”.

    This interfaith approach is not limited to the ministerial level. Teachers in secondary schools and junior colleges that I visit often ask me to include something about the importance of interfaith dialogue in my lectures about the Middle East.

    Interfaith dialogue is aimed at keeping the peace in the wake of all the attacks and should be encouraged, but it is equally important that we help the young to understand and historicise the emergence of terrorism.

    Singaporean students who I visit often ask me to explain the phenomenon of ISIS, or even of Al-Qaeda, which are in essence not a religious problem and cannot be understood using a religious approach. It is a political problem closely associated with the transformations of the role of the United States, as well as the global political landscape, from the Cold War to a post-Cold War era. Hence, we have to move beyond interfaith dialogue, and adopt a political lens to help young Singaporeans understand this political problem.

    An analogy may help illuminate the situation. When, for example, the presumptive Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump quotes from the Bible and portrays himself as an ideal Christian candidate for American evangelical voters, we do not try to understand the problematic phenomenon of Mr Trump only through the lens of Christianity. Rather, the economic problems faced by many working-class Americans and their disillusionment with establishment candidates, Republican or Democrat, are more relevant. Similarly, approaching Al-Qaeda or ISIS only through the lens of Islam misunderstands the nature of the problem completely.

    POLITICAL ALLIANCES MATTER

    Thus, apart from promoting interfaith dialogue, we need to teach students about how US Cold War-era policies and alliances took on new significance in a post-Cold War world.

    For example, US interventions in the Middle East and Central Asia in the Cold War era empowered some parties who consequently turned against US interests in a changed global political context after the fall of the Soviet Union. While these interventions may have made strategic sense during the Cold War, they set in motion other elements that gradually came to acquire a different logic in the post-Cold War world.

    A salient example to illustrate this point is Osama bin Laden, who once fought with US and Saudi aid against the Soviet Union in Afghanistan in the 1980s, only to “turn against” his former patron on Sept 11, 2001.

    In a similar vein, some of the US’ Cold War-era alliances that previously held strategic value against the Soviet Union have transmogrified into strategic liabilities.

    For example, Mr Lawrence Wilkerson, a retired US Army colonel and the former chief of staff to then US Secretary of State Colin Powell, has candidly shared his views in multiple interviews that the close alliance between the US and Israel, which made strategic sense during the Cold War era, was now a strategic burden for the US.

    In his open letter to the US in 2002, Osama stated that Al-Qaeda’s undertaking of the Sept 11 attacks was motivated by the Israeli occupation of Palestine – this was the first reason given in his letter, among a list of others.

    However, Osama previously had few qualms fighting on the side of the US against the Soviet Union during the Cold War in the 1980s. Why, then, was the Israeli- Palestinian issue not a priority for him at that time?

    This shows that the resistance to the US that consciously promotes itself as, and claims to be, “Islamic” is not an eternal fact, but is of a very recent vintage that emerged in a changed post-Cold War world that reinterpreted US Cold War strategy antagonistically.

    TERROR ATTACKS: POLITICAL, NOT RELIGIOUS, AT THEIR CORE

    To understand the emergence of ISIS – an issue experts and specialists are fervently debating over – requires a prior understanding of the background of these developments.

    Ultimately, there is no simple cause or reason for the post-Cold War transformations because every event emerged from a context that itself was constituted by a previous context. Nevertheless, the historical vantage point offered by the political framework sketched out above is needed if one wants to recognise that this new pattern of terrorist attacks – all of which should be condemned, whoever the perpetrator – is not religious at its core, but political.

    What is missing in many pre-tertiary education systems around the world is this political and historical approach in teaching about the post-Cold War world. Such a curriculum should be implemented at a national level.

    European countries and the US have long been models for Singapore, but the recent attacks in Paris and Brussels, not to mention the rise of racism and intolerance in the US, reflect most potently the failure of these societies to integrate their minorities.

    This makes it clear that Singapore has to strike its own path, and take a proactive approach to maintaining racial and religious harmony domestically. Singapore is a small and open society; while we cannot avoid the fact that Western media, with its predominance, overwhelms us with its own Islamophobic biases, we can – we must – train our citizens to be savvy in managing the daily influx of such information.

    Since 2013, I have been making volunteer visits to secondary schools, junior colleges and the National University of Singapore to give lectures precisely on this topic. Over the years, I have collected hundreds of little feedback slips from the students I have lectured to and exchanged e-mails with their teachers, thereby refining my pedagogical approach and presentation content.

    Based on my personal experience lecturing at over a dozen schools in Singapore over the past three years. I would say it is possible to implement this curriculum and for the Ministry of Education to design “just-in-time” resource packages to provide a timely response to this pressing topical issue.

    If we are serious about maintaining racial and religious harmony in Singapore, as Mr Shanmugam and Dr Yaacob have exhorted us to do recently, then we have to start with our young, and proactively shift the paradigm for understanding the terrorist threats to the US-dominated world order from a religious one to a geopolitical one.

    • Koh Choon Hwee is a PhD student in Middle East history at Yale University. Prior to this, she spent two years in the American University of Beirut in Lebanon working on her master’s.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Alvin Tan Muat Naik Gambar Hanya Untuk Jenaka – Bekas Teman Wanita

    Alvin Tan Muat Naik Gambar Hanya Untuk Jenaka – Bekas Teman Wanita

    Vivian Lee, bekas teman wanita blogger Alvin Tan, memberitahu Mahkamah Sesyen semalam (10 Mei) bahawa lelaki itu memuat naik gambar berserta kapsyen yang mempersenda umat Islam hanya untuk berjenaka dan melihat reaksi masyarakat.

    Vivian Lee atau Lee May Ling, 27 tahun, berkata Tan memberitahunya sedemikian selepas dia (Tan) menyunting gambar berserta kapsyen bertajuk ‘Selamat Berbuka Puasa (with Bak Kut Teh…fragrant, delicious and appetising (‘Selamat Berbuka Puasa (dengan) Bak Kut Teh, Wangi, Enak dan Menyelerakan’).

    Lee berkata Tan kemudian memuat naik gambar berserta kapsyen itu ke laman Facebook miliknya tanpa mendapat kebenaran daripadanya terlebih dahulu walaupun Lee merupakan seorang daripada pentadbir bagi akaun Facebook berkenaan.

    Dia berkata pada mulanya, Tan enggan memadam atau menukar kapsyen itu tetapi selepas menerima kecaman dan penghinaan pelbagai kaum dan masyarakat, Tan menulis kapsyen baharu iaitu ‘Ampunkanlah kami’ ‘Selamat berbuka puasa dengan rendang ayam’.

    “Kapsyen baharu itu digantikan selepas melihat sentimen negatif daripada masyarakat yang boleh menimbulkan kemarahan. Kapsyen itu diharap dapat memperbetulkan dan menjadikan keadaan lebih baik,” kataya.

    Ketika pemeriksaan utama oleh peguamnya Chong Joo Tian semasa membela diri di hadapan Hakim Abdul Rashid Daud, Lee berkata dia dan Tan bergaduh berikutan tindakannya memuat naik gambar berkenaan.

    Wanita itu berkata Tan turut menolaknya ketika cuba mengambil komputer riba milik Tan.

    “Kami bergaduh. Saya rasa sedih, tidak gembira dan marah dengan tindakan Tan. Saya suruh dia padam kesemuanya namun Tan enggan dan memberitahu itu hanya untuk jenaka dan mahu melihat reaksi masyarakat,” katanya.

    Menurutnya gambar itu diambil secara ‘selfie’ di sebuah kedai makan di Jalan Ipoh pada 10 Julai 2013.

    Lee, saksi tunggal pembelaan, berkata demikian dalam perbicaraan kesnya dan Alvin Tan atau Tan Jye Yee yang didakwa menyiarkan gambar mereka sedang menikmati hidangan dengan kapsyen bertajuk ‘Selamat Berbuka Puasa (with Bak Kut Teh.. fragrant, delicious and appetising)’ dan mengandungi logo halal di laman Facebook mereka.

    Mereka didakwa bersama-sama melakukan kesalahan itu pada 9.00 pagi, 12 Julai 2013 mengikut Akta Hasutan yang membawa hukuman denda RM5,000 (S$1,690) atau penjara tiga tahun atau kedua-duanya, jika sabit kesalahan.

    Pada 14 April lepas, Hakim Abdul Rashid memerintah Lee membela diri terhadap pertuduhan itu.

    Pada perbicaraan kes itu yang bermula pada 23 Nov lepas, hanya Lee yang hadir manakala Tan telah melarikan diri ke luar negara.

    Ketika pemeriksaan semula Timbalan Pendakwa Raya Wan Shaharuddin Wan Ladin, Lee menafikan dia bersama-sama Tan memuat naik gambar itu.

    Lee juga tidak bersetuju dengan cadangan Wan Shaharuddin bahawa dia boleh memuat naik gambar itu kerana dia tidak memiliki akaun facebook, komputer dan telefon bimbit pintar bagi membolehkan gambar itu dimuat naik.

    Mahkamah menetapkan esok untuk hujahan kedua-dua pihak selepas pihak pembelaan menutup kesnya semalam (10 Mei).

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Pembahas Madrasah Aljunied Menang Anugerah Pembahas Terbaik Di Qatar

    Pembahas Madrasah Aljunied Menang Anugerah Pembahas Terbaik Di Qatar

    Pelajar Madrasah Aljunied Al-Islamiah, Nazihah Mohamad Pauzi berjaya menjulang anugerah pembahas terbaik dalam Kejohanan Bahas Antarabangsa di Doha, Qatar baru-baru ini.

    Tiga anugerah pembahas terbaik dari kalangan negara-negara bukan Arab diberikan, dan Nazihah merupakan salah seorang penerimanya.

    Kesemuanya, empat pelajar Madrasah Aljunied Al-Islamiah mewakili Singapura dalam kejohanan tersebut, iaitu Harithatunnu’man Hasbi, Muhammad Hariz Ramli, Humaira Julfikar Khan dan Nazihah Mohamad Pauzi.

    Ini adalah kali kedua Madrasah Aljunied diundang untuk mengambil bahagian dalam kejohanan bahas dwi-tahunan itu, yang diadakan dalam Bahasa Arab.

    PENCAPAIAN MEMBANGGAKAN

    Pencapaian Nazihah selaku Pembahas Terbaik boleh dibanggakan kerana ia menunjukkan mutu pendidikan madrasah di Singapura. Ini sehinggakan ia berjaya melahirkan pelajar yang mempunyai bakat dan potensi yang besar, serta mampu menguasai pelbagai bahasa khususnya Bahasa Arab.

    Semasa dihubungi BERITAMediacorp, Nazihah berkongsi pengalaman bertutur bahasa Arab di sana.

    “Ia satu pendedahan bagi saya terhadap berbual dalam Bahasa Arab kerana pengalaman berbual Bahasa Arab antara kami di sekolah itu lain daripada kami berbual dengan mereka (para peserta negara lain). Jadi itu pun telah memperbaiki perbualan saya dalam Bahasa Arab,” kata Nazihah.

    Dia juga mengambil peluang tersebut dan menjadikannya sebagai latihan untuk bertutur dalam bahasa Arab secara berkesan.

    “Jika kita belajar tetapi tidak mempraktikkannya, ia akan menjadi susah. Memang mencabar untuk berbual dalam Bahasa Arab tapi saya menjadikannya satu motivasi untuk berbual dalam Bahasa Arab,” kata Nazihah lagi, kepada pihak kami.

    Nazihah kemudian berkata, dia menghargai pelbagai usaha pihak madrasah untuk menanamkan rasa sayang akan bahasa Arab.

    Walaupun demikian dia mengakui, menggunakan bahasa Arab dengan kumpulan penutur asli memang bukan mudah: “Ia memang sangat susah tetapi ia pengalaman yang amat baik.”

    PASUKAN S’PURA MENANG 1, KALAH 4

    Di peringkat saringan, pasukan dari Singapura itu mengalahkan Croatia tetapi tewas di tangan India, Kuwait, Ukraine dan Brazil. Ini menyebabkan mereka gagal mara ke peringkat suku akhir.

    Pada tahun ini, 53 negara mengambil bahagian dalam kejohanan tersebut, khususnya negara-negara Arab dan Teluk.

    Negara-negara bukan Arab yang turut mengambil bahagian termasuk Amerika Syarikat, Britain, Croatia, Ukraine, Bosnia, Malaysia, Turki dan Singapura.

    Tuan rumah Qatar muncul sebagai juara dalam kejohanan bahas ini, manakala Syria adalah naib johan.

    Pasukan Madrasah Aljunied itu berada di Qatar dari 10 April sehingga 13 April untuk menyertai kejohanan tersebut. Mereka diiringi oleh pembimbing mereka, Ustaz Mohamad Nasrullah Refa’ie.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Muslim Charity To Put ‘Allah Is Great’ Posters On Buses To Portray Islam In A Positive Light

    Muslim Charity To Put ‘Allah Is Great’ Posters On Buses To Portray Islam In A Positive Light

    Hundreds of British buses will carry adverts praising Allah as part of a campaign launched by the country’s biggest Muslim charity to help victims of Syria’s civil war.

    Islamic Relief hopes the posters, which bear the words “Subhan Allah”, meaning “Glory be to God” in Arabic, will portray Islam and international aid in a positive light.

    Buses will carry the advertisements in London, Birmingham, Manchester, Leicester and Bradford.

    These cities have large Muslim populations and the charity hopes it will encourage people to donate generously ahead of the start of Ramadan on 7 June.

    According to Islamic law, Muslims are supposed to donate 2.5 per cent of their income to the poor and needy.

    Known as Zakat, the pratice is regarded as one of the “five pillars of Islam”.

    Many people choose Ramadan to donate their Zakat, as the month of fasting is regarded as a month of blessings.

    Muslims believe the rewards for all good deeds are greater during Ramadan than during the rest of the year, according to Muslim Aid.

    The charity hopes the campaign will help young Muslims channel anger about the war in Syria and discrimination at home into humanitarian work, thereby preventing them from becoming involved with extremist groups.

    Imran Madden, the UK director of Islamic Relief, said: “In a sense this could be called a climate change campaign because we want to change the negative climate around international aid and around the Muslim community in this country.

    “International aid has helped halve the number of people living in extreme poverty in the past 15 years, and British Muslims are an incredibly generous community who give over £100 million to international aid charities in Ramadan.”

    The new campaign will appear on buses from 23 May on 640 buses around the country.

    The adverts will have a special resonance in London as the city elected its first Muslim mayor, Sadiq Khan, on Thursday – despite a Conservative campaign which repeatedly accused him of having connections to extremists.

    An estimated three million Muslims are believed to live in London – around 50 per cent of British Muslim population.

    Transport for London (TfL), which regulates the advertisements appearing on the city’s buses, has a clause banning campaigns linked to a “political party or campaign” but does not prevent religious advertising.

    It can ban ads if it believes the campaign is likely “to cause widespread or serious offence”.

    In 2012, a Christian charity had its adverts cancelled by then Mayor Boris Johnson after it was accused of claiming to “cure” gay people.

    In 2009, the British Humanist Association drew complaints after it ran a campaign saying “There’s probably no God. Now stop worrying and enjoy your life”.

    In response, Christian groups ran a counter-campaign saying there “definitely is a God” a month later.

     

    Source: The Independent UK

     

deneme bonusu