Category: Agama

  • MUIS’ Hajj Confirmation Letter Never Reached Me, But MUIS’ Hajj Cancellation Letter Came To Me

    MUIS’ Hajj Confirmation Letter Never Reached Me, But MUIS’ Hajj Cancellation Letter Came To Me

    There are comments floating around saying that some Hajj applicants who did not receive their Hajj confirmation letter (stating that they get to go for Hajj during the year). All of a sudden, they received a letter saying that their Hajj application has been cancelled because they did not respond to the Hajj confirmation letter which they did not receive at all.

     

    MUIS, do you have any explanation for this?

     

    Rilek1Corner

  • (Reader Contribution) Singapore Asatizahs Earn Between $1200 (Before CPF) And $1500 Even With A Degree Qualification

    (Reader Contribution) Singapore Asatizahs Earn Between $1200 (Before CPF) And $1500 Even With A Degree Qualification

    (Reader contribution)

    Our reader sent us a screenshot of a confession saying that our Singaporean asatizahs are paid between $1200 (Before CPF) and $1500. These local asatizahs have degree qualifications from overseas universities, and yet they are paid this little. How can this be? How they want to survive in this expensive city sey?

    MUIS, PERGAS and other Muslim-related bodies need to review the salaries of these asatizahs and make sure that these asatizahs are paid more, at least on par with MOE’s standard. Or else, we will lose our local asatizahs to other overseas institutions, and local religious institutions will have to pay more to hire other overseas asatizahs to teach in our schools.

    #justiceforlocalasatizahs
    #supportlocalasatizah

     

  • Muhd Danish Abdul Malik Ditahan Reman Kerana Penglibatan Aktiviti Tailong

    Muhd Danish Abdul Malik Ditahan Reman Kerana Penglibatan Aktiviti Tailong

    Seorang lelaki 21 tahun yang didakwa melakukan gangguan tailong melibatkan kebakaran, dibawa semula ke tempat kejadian di Sin Ming Avenue. Muhd Danish Abdul Malik dituduh melakukan kesalahan itu pada 28 hari bulan lalu.

    Dia ditangkap pada 31 Ogos dan didakwa di mahkamah pada Sabtu lalu (2 Sep). Danish ditahan reman selama seminggu untuk siasatan lanjut. Mereka yang melakukan kesalahan seperti itu boleh didenda sehingga $50,000, dipenjara tidak lebih lima tahun dan disebat sehingga enam kali.

     

    Source: Berita Mediacorp

  • Singapore’s Para-Athlete Kamas Mohd Delivers Food In Wheelchair

    Singapore’s Para-Athlete Kamas Mohd Delivers Food In Wheelchair

    Like any other food delivery man, Mr Kamas Mohd carries an insulated bag and constantly checks his mobile phone for orders. Unlike other delivery men, though, the 46-year-old does not use a bicycle, motorcycle or car. Instead, Mr Kamas, who suffered a spinal cord injury from a workplace accident in 1996 and is paralysed from the waist down, goes about his daily delivery rounds on a motorised wheelchair with a bag buckled to the back of his seat and a phone strapped to his thigh.

    But he stresses that he is not slower than anyone else – he can fulfil a delivery order within the same timeframe of 35 minutes. The para-athlete, who represented Singapore at the 2015 Asean Para Games in wheelchair basketball, signed on to become an UberEats delivery partner in May. He was introduced to the work by his friend after he was asked to resign from his previous job as an assistant land leader at Bizlink Centre, a non-profit organisation that hires persons with disabilities.

    There, he managed about 70 others in packing services for goodie bags and letters. Mr Kamas suffered a broken leg last year when he fell while on the way to work. Due to his injury, doctors granted him nearly two years of medical leave in total, but his manager informed him that Bizlink was unable to keep him on the payroll for the entire time. The manager said he could return when his medical leave was over. Mr Kamas, who is divorced with no children and lives alone in a rental flat in Redhill, decided to give the delivery gig a shot.

    “I was scared I wouldn’t get the job because of my condition,” he said. But UberEats accepted him and, since May, he has been earning about $400 a week – or about $4 to $10 per delivery. His previous job paid about $530 a month. “I liked my previous job, but the salary was not enough to pay rental and buy food,” said Mr Kamas. “Now, with this job, it is easier. I can follow my own time and target, and earn more.”

    Currently, his rent, water and electricity bills, and town council conservancy fees of about $200 a month are being paid for by the Ministry of Social and Family Development. He also receives $300 cash a month. Before his leg injury, Mr Kamas paid his rent and bills on his own and did not receive any financial assistance. When the assistance ceases at the end of the year, Mr Kamas, who once lived at a void deck in Boon Lay for three years, is determined to be financially independent again.

    Now, he makes as many as 10 trips a day – up to 11 hours of work – collecting and delivering food to hungry customers in areas such as Tiong Bahru, the Central Business District, Orchard Road and Thomson Road. Rain or shine, he said, he has not cancelled an order so far. “As long as I get a trip, I will go,” said Mr Kamas, adding that he takes a raincoat with him. With his earnings from making deliveries, he has managed to save up enough money to upgrade his wheelchair set-up to a personal mobility scooter, which cost him $1,400. So far, customers’ reactions to his work have been favourable.

    Most times, when people see him in his wheelchair, they are either surprised or amazed, he said. Some even tip him generously for his service, he added. A few months ago, Mr Kamas’ story made the rounds on social media after he was featured on Stomp. A customer had praised him for travelling 2.5km on his wheelchair to her home in Stirling Road. He said that seeing his photo being shared on Facebook made him happy. “Maybe then, more people like me will realise they can also do such jobs,” he said.

     

    Source: The Straits Times

  • Saudi Man Circumambulated The Kaaba 700 Times, But Not To Perform The Haj

    Saudi Man Circumambulated The Kaaba 700 Times, But Not To Perform The Haj

    Adham Al-Hawwash, a Saudi in his middle age, had circumambulated the Kaaba about 700 times during this year’s Haj season but did not do the Haj. “I rent my wheelchair to the pilgrims and push them seven times around the Kaaba. This is how I make a living,” he said. He said he was obliged to circumambulate the Kaaba to enable the old or disabled pilgrims do their tawaf so he had no time to think of doing the Haj himself. Al-Hawwash said he was not in a good financial position that would have enabled him to do the fifth pillar of Islam and had to continue working hard to provide for his family.

    He said he started this job some years back on the advice of his mother, whose head he kisses every time he leaves his house. “I tie my waist with a piece of cloth to reduce my back pain. I also wear heavy stocking to avoid foot ache,” he said on how he prepares for work. Hawwash said he has pushed more than 100 pilgrims around the House of God at SR350-SR500 per head. “This is a tiring job but it earns me good money to spend on my family and save for the future,” he said.

    Hawwash said his job is seasonal climaxing during Ramadan and the Haj when pilgrims come in large numbers to the Grand Mosque. He also said he guides his customers to the best dua (supplication) according to the Prophet’s Sunnah. “The pushing of wheelchairs needs tactics, fair knowledge of the peak hours and a balanced distribution of strength to avoid exhaustion,” he said. Al-Hawwash said he eats dates and bananas to provide him energy, which he needs in his job.

     

    Source: Saudi Gazette