Category: Agama

  • Doa Antara Agama Dianjurkan Pertubuhan Antara Agama Singapura Semalam

    Doa Antara Agama Dianjurkan Pertubuhan Antara Agama Singapura Semalam

    PERTUBUHAN Antara Agama (IRO) Singapura menganjurkan doa antara agama di pejabat pertubuhan itu di Palmer House semalam, bagi mendoakan kedamaian, keharmonian, dan kemakmuran perpaduan umat manusia.

    Wakil agama, duta dan pesuruhjaya tinggi daripada misi diplomatik Indonesia, Malaysia, dan Perancis turut hadir bagi mengenang dan berdoa bagi mangsa bencana alam dan konflik.

    Dalam ucapannya di majlis itu, Presiden IRO, Encik Gurmit Singh, menyatakan bagaimana tragedi telah menyatukan manusia tidak kira agama, bangsa dan kerakyatan.

    “Walaupun mangsa tragedi ini berada jauh beribu batu, kita dapat rasakan kesedihan mereka,” kata beliau.

    “Masyarakat antara agama Singapura ingin mainkan peranannya secara rohani dengan memanjatkan doa dan peringatan ikhlas kami kepada mangsa bencana dalam memaparkan perpaduan kepada rakan-rakan serantau dan antarabangsa kita,” kata Encik Singh.

    Tetamu terhormat, Setiausaha Parlimen (Kementerian Pembangunan Sosial dan Keluarga (MSF) merangkap Kementerian Kebudayaan, Masyarakat dan Belia (MCCY)), Cik Low Yen Ling, menekankan perlunya rakyat Singapura terus mengeratkan dan memperkukuh keharmonian antara kaum dan agama, dan menunjukkan ihsan kepada mangsa tragedi dan bencana alam.

    “Rakyat kita mesti bersatu dalam usaha kolektif. Kita boleh mainkan peranan,” ujar Cik Low.

     

    Source: http://beritaharian.sg

  • Mufti Besar Mesir Sheikh Dr Shawki Allam Akan Kunjungi Singapura Sabtu Ini

    Mufti Besar Mesir Sheikh Dr Shawki Allam Akan Kunjungi Singapura Sabtu Ini

    MUFTI Besar Mesir, Sheikh Dr Shawki Allam, akan berada di Singapura selama empat hari dari Sabtu ini bagi Program Pelawat Unggul (DVP) anjuran Majlis Ugama Islam Singapura (Muis).

    Sheikh Dr Shawki mengunjungi Singapura atas undangan Menteri Bertanggungjawab bagi Ehwal Masyarakat Islam, Dr Yaacob Ibrahim, yang menemui beliau semasa menteri itu mengunjungi Mesir November lalu.

    Ini kali pertama ketua agama itu, yang dilantik menjadi Mufti ke-19 Mesir pada 2013, mengunjungi Singapura dan rantau ini.

    Sheikh Dr Shawki seorang pemimpin Islam dan ulama yang dihormati dan dikenali kerana dedikasi dan usahanya ke arah keamanan menerusi pemahaman masyarakat yang pelbagai dan berbeza.

    Beliau, yang dilahirkan pada 1961, merupakan Mufti Besar Mesir pertama dilantik oleh Majlis Ulama Kanan Universiti Al-Azhar.

    Jawatan Mufti Besar sebelum ini dilantik oleh presiden Mesir.

    Dalam DVP keempat itu, Sheikh Dr Shawki akan menyampaikan ceramah dan berdialog bersama asatizah, pelajar dan pemimpin agama Islam serta bukan Islam dan orang awam berkaitan tema ‘Membangunkan Masyarakat Harmoni dalam Dunia Pluralistik’.

    Beliau akan juga melakukan kunjungan muhibah ke atas Presiden Tony Tan Keng Yam dan Perdana Menteri Lee Hsien Loong di Istana serta menyertai jamuan tengah hari yang dihos Menteri Negara Kanan (Ehwal Dalam Negeri merangkap Ehwal Luar), Encik Masagos Zulkifli Masagos Mohamad.

    “Beliau antara Mufti yang agak muda secara relatif di Mesir. Beliau mempunyai pandangan progresif dan menarik mengenai Islam, mengenai Muslim di dunia Islam, termasuk mengenai masalah pelibatan wanita, tentang kebebasan bersuara,” kata Naib Dekan Akademi Muis, Ustaz Dr Mohammad Hannan Hassan, dalam satu taklimat media di pejabat Muis semalam.

    Kemuncak lawatan Sheikh Dr Shawki ialah Ceramah Muis yang akan disampaikannya dan dipengerusikan Dr Yaacob.

    Sekitar 500 Muslim dan bukan Muslim dijangka menghadiri ceramah pada 26 Januari ini dari 8 hingga 10 malam di Hotel Orchard.

    Orang ramai yang berminat menyertai ceramah itu perlu mendaftar di laman www.muis.gov.sg/cms/muisacademy.

     

    Source: http://beritaharian.sg

  • SAF To Deploy Planners In Support Of Multinational Coalition Against The Islamic State

    SAF To Deploy Planners In Support Of Multinational Coalition Against The Islamic State

    The Singapore Armed Forces (SAF) will further deploy planners to support the multinational coalition against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS), Defence Minister Dr Ng Eng Hen said in Parliament on Monday (Jan 19).

    As part of its involvement in the coalition since November 2014, the SAF has sent a needs assessment and survey team, and a liaison officer to facilitate planning and coordination between the SAF and coalition forces.

    Dr Ng revealed this in Parliament in response to questions by MP for Chua Chu Kang GRC Alex Yam on Singapore’s involvement in the fight against ISIS.

    The planners will be deployed to the Combined Joint Task Force Headquarters and the Combined Air Ops Centre, and a site-survey team to prepare for the subsequent deployment of its KC-135 tanker.

    However, Dr Ng said that it was still “premature to determine if there would be further requests” for more support from Singapore.

    He also answered another question on the risk posed to Singapore, due to its early involvement in efforts against ISIS: “It is well-nigh impossible for any security forces in any country to be able to monitor any and every citizen. And our greatest challenge indeed is if an attack occurs, what happens to the unity which we have forged over many years.

    “We must continue to use this time not only to increase our vigilance… But also to ask our community to come together and withstand such false ideologies and stand together if ever such an attack occurs.”

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Women Fighting To Preserve Diversity In Malaysia

    Women Fighting To Preserve Diversity In Malaysia

    DARTING lightly on her feet as she threw swift, hard punches, Ms Ann Osman suddenly lunged to toss her opponent to the floor. It was all over in a minute.

    Graceful yet powerful, she grinned as her opponent picked herself off the mat. The two women were in training at a martial arts gym in a suburb of Kota Kinabalu, capital of Malaysia’s Sabah state, where Ms Ann also works as a trainer.

    The photogenic Ms Ann, 29, is a prominent face in Malaysia’s mixed martial arts fight scene, not just because she is a professional female fighter but also because she is Muslim in an increasingly conservative country.

    Muslim women are often under heavy social pressure to adopt a more conservative lifestyle. But to some like Ms Ann, being a conscientious Muslim does not preclude her from embracing life in all its fullness. She said when she started out three years ago, there were only two other girls in Malaysia in the sport. Today, there are more but still fewer than 10 active in the mixed martial arts scene. As far as she knows, she’s the only female Muslim professional fighter in Asia.

    Mixed martial arts, or MMA, is a tough sport that demands participants demonstrate skills in at least two types of martial arts, both standing and ground fighting techniques. It requires strength and agility. Bruises and sprains are all part of the sport.

    But Ms Ann, whose specialities are boxing and wrestling, sees nothing unfeminine in this, nor un-Islamic. She said it was about developing physical fitness, self-defence skills and confidence, and did not preclude her from observing her religious beliefs such as the Ramadan fast.

    During Ramadan, her daily training sessions begin close to the end of the day, with time given for breaking fast before continuing. “I know I have certain responsibilities, and I try to fulfil them,” she said. She added that she was lucky to be living in Sabah, where she grew up, because race relations in this state are less fraught than in peninsular Malaysia. People also tend to be more laidback and less conservative.

    Ms Ann said her experience has generally been an encouraging one, barring the occasional criticism. “You can’t please everyone, but it doesn’t affect me,” said Ms Ann, who also runs her own tour agency specialising in outdoor activities.

    Ms Ann, of mixed Dusun-Malay heritage, said her family was initially wary, more because she is a woman than because she is Muslim. They were afraid she would suffer injuries. Fighters, she said, are trained to protect themselves. Her family became comfortable after they saw her returning safe after each training or competition, and “now, they are my No. 1 fan”.

    For her, MMA is purely about becoming fitter, and it means following her passion and giving it her all. She loves the sport because her training covers different ground every day, and is challenging. “I did an amateur competition, and then I wanted to do something bigger. I dreamt of making my professional debut,” she said. And she did so last October, becoming Malaysia’s first woman professional fighter.

    In Malaysia’s capital, Kuala Lumpur, Ms Elina Noor, a policy analyst with a prestigious think-tank, holds the same philosophy in a wholly different arena.

    Oxford-educated Ms Elina, 36, is best known for her work in analysing security threats and international relations, but also captures attention for her unconventional athletic hobbies that range from wushu to pole-dancing to the sensual bachata and kizomba dances, which are akin to the tango. All of these, especially pole-dancing and the dances which have their roots in the Cuban and African tradition, can raise eyebrows. And they have.

    “I’ve always been drawn to these non-traditional activities, for Muslim girls at least. Perhaps it’s to balance the intellectual work that I do,” she said. “Before this, it was boxing and kick-boxing.” And before that, it was roller blading and ice hockey at university.

    She acknowledged that some of these are not seen to be in line with Islamic teachings. Yet, she noted Malays have a natural sense of grace, and take to dancing naturally. It was only over the years that a sense of self-restriction and self-policing crept in.

    Her father was a little wary too, especially when it came to yoga which some regard as an extension of the practice of Hinduism. But after her assurances, her family eventually came to see it as a form of exercise, even if they do not embrace it wholeheartedly.

    “I try to be as good a Muslim as I can but it doesn’t mean that I have to put my religion out there,” she said.

    When she does yoga, there is no element of meditation but she includes a remembrance of God during the breathing exercises, and also recites the zikir, which is sometimes described as an Islamic form of the Catholic rosary.

    “We can be creative so we don’t go against what we believe in,” she said. “Islam is all about intention. My intention is to explore the physical limits of the body. Knowing how the body works does lead you to appreciate God’s work.”

    Further, Ms Elina, who used to teach pole-dancing, said they do not allow men into the studio during classes. To her, it was the intention that mattered.

    While these activities do require close-fitting and sometimes skimpy outfits, these had a purpose. Pole-dancers, for instance, needed to have skin contact with the pole for a better grip, especially for moves that see them hanging upside down.

    She acknowledges that she does struggle with the more sensual elements in the kizomba and bachata dances, but held firm to her belief that her intention was good. It was purely to dance, and it’s done in an open environment.

    In an ideal world, Ms Elina and Ms Ann might be seen as inspirations for women to pursue their dreams but Malaysia is at a crossroads as far as race relations and Islam go.

    Ms Elina noted that it is a natural part of democracy for more discordant voices to spring up, and, while that is good, it also carried risks. This is especially so if the more conservative voices get more airplay and, perhaps, more traction.

    “There is a real concern that Malaysia will go down the conservative path, and we will lose the real essence of being Malaysian,” she said. “We preach diversity but I’m concerned about the direction.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Canadian Foreign Minister Heckled During Visit To West Bank

    Canadian Foreign Minister Heckled During Visit To West Bank

    RAMALLAH, West Bank – Palestinian protesters heckled and threw eggs at Canadian Foreign Minister John Baird during a visit to the occupied West Bank on Sunday, denouncing Ottawa’s diplomatic support for Israel.

    Baird was not hit, but one of the eggs smacked onto the roof of his car after a meeting with his Palestinian counterpart at the Foreign Ministry in Ramallah.

    Several dozen Palestinian special forces armed with machine guns and riot gear made no effort to confront the egg-throwers among a crowd of about 100 protesters.

    “You’re not welcome,” the demonstrators shouted at Baird.

    Canada was among a handful of countries that voted against Palestinians’ successful bid to become a non-member state at the United Nations General Assembly in 2012. This month, Baird called a Palestinian move to join the International Criminal Court “concerning and dangerous”.

    Amid bouts of failed peace talks with Israel, Palestinians have opted to confront Israel in international bodies and the conservative government of Prime Minister Stephen Harper has become one of the most outspoken critics of the strategy.

    In a statement on Sunday, top Palestinian peace negotiator Saeb Erekat demanded an apology from Baird for visiting Israeli officials in occupied East Jerusalem last year.

    Palestinians seek East Jerusalem, which Israel captured along with the West Bank and Gaza Strip in a 1967 war, as the capital of a future state. Israel regards all of Jerusalem as its capital, a claim that has not won international recognition.

    “We regret the Canadian government’s decision to stand on the wrong side of history by blindly supporting the Israeli occupation and its apartheid policies,” Erekat said.

    Most countries deem Israeli settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem as illegal. Israel pulled troops and settlers out of the Gaza Strip in 2005.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com