Category: Agama

  • Qariah S’pura, A’tii Qah Suhaimi, Duduki Tempat Ke-3 Di Majlis Tilawah Al-Quran Antarabangsa

    Qariah S’pura, A’tii Qah Suhaimi, Duduki Tempat Ke-3 Di Majlis Tilawah Al-Quran Antarabangsa

    Seorang Qariah Singapura berjaya meraih tempat ketiga dalam Majlis Tilawah Al-Quran Peringkat Antarabangsa Ke-59 di Kuala Lumpur, malam Sabtu (20 Mei).

    Ahli seni khat, A’tii Qah Suhaimi mengumpul markah amat dekat dengan pemenang tempat kedua, dari Brunei.

    Johan Qariah ialah peserta Malaysia.

    Ini kali kedua A’tii Qah menyertai Tilawah Al-Quran Peringkat Antarabangsa anjuran Jabatan Kemajuan Islam Malaysia, JAKIM.

    Kali terakhir pada tahun 2009, apabila beliau yang waktu itu pelajar tahun akhir pra-universiti di Madrasah Aljunied al-Islamiah, dan mendapat tempat kelima.

    A’tii Qah yang kini penolong mudirah di sebuah sekolah pendidikan khat, perlu mengatasi masalah Sinusitis yang sering menimbulkan masalah di ruang berhawa dingin.

    Hasilnya, beliau bejaya mendapat 86.01% mata, berbanding pemenang tempat kedua yang mendapat 86.63% mata.

    “Waktu pertandingan itu sendiri, saya memang dan sediakan, bawa air di tepi, takut kalau tersedak kah, sebab Sinusitis turut menjejas tekak juga. Lepas itu saya sediakan tisu juga, tapi bila sudah di atas pentas, semua tak ada masalah, jadi lebih fokus pada bacaan sahaja,” ujar beliau.

    Dengan kemenangan ini, A’tii Qah membawa pulang wang tunai RM20,000 (S$6,400) beserta beberapa buah tangan.

    Beliau menambah: “Rancangan saya pada masa depan, insya-Allah akan fokus pada dua perkara. Yang pertama saya akan dengar semula rakaman bacaan saya dan mengenal pasti apa kelemahan-kelemahan saya, insya-Allah akan cuba memperbaiki kekurangan tersebut. Dan akan mendalami lagi ilmu tarannum Al-Quran dan ilmu Al-Quran itu sendiri.

    “Dan fokus kedua pula adalah untuk masyarakat Islam kita, insya-Allah saya ada rancang untuk sebarkan ilmu ini dari segi mengajar dan membimbing orang perlahan-lahan, sebab saya tahu ramai yang masyarakat Islam kita ini sebenarnya berbakat dan mempunyai bakat yang luar biasa, jadi kita kena mendekati orang-orang seperti ini untuk menjadi pelapis masa akan datang insyaAllah.”

    Majlis Tilawah ke-59 itu dimenangi Qari dari Iran, dan qariah dari Malaysia, yang masing-masing membawa pulang hadiah kepingan emas bernilai RM70,000 (S$22,450), wang tunai RM40,000 (S$12,830) dan piala iringan.

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Free Carpooling App For Mosque-Goers To Be Launched In Time For Ramadan

    Free Carpooling App For Mosque-Goers To Be Launched In Time For Ramadan

    Three weeks ago, 15 youths from the Malay/Muslim community decided to come together and create a free carpooling app for mosque-goers.

    Terawhere, now in the final stages of development, will be launched on Friday, tying in with the start of Islam’s holy month of Ramadan.

    Before going to the mosque, drivers can key in a meeting time and location, and share their vehicle number plate and car colour using the app.

    Those looking for a ride to the same mosque can use an in-app map to search for a nearby driver.

    Ahead of the launch, 400 passengers and drivers have already signed up through a link provided by the app creators, after discovering the app online, said co-developer Tengku Hafidz, 24.

    The app, which will be rolled out for Android phones for a start, was unveiled at the Touch of Ramadan Celebrations launch yesterday.

    Its name draws reference from terawih prayers: The main form of night worship during Ramadan.

    Speaking to reporters at the launch at Masjid Al-Ansar in Bedok North, Minister-in-charge of Muslim Affairs Yaacob Ibrahim applauded the idea of carpooling.

    “There are a (few) more improvements they have to make, but I think the idea of carpooling and sharing, especially during the month of Ramadan, is certainly a wonderful idea, not only to save the environment but also to build communities,” he said.

    Healthy eating will feature heavily during Ramadan this year, with the Health Promotion Board partnering the South-East Mosque Cluster to print a booklet of 20 healthy recipes, including for dishes such as chicken nasi biryani and curry fish.

    “I’m glad there’s a lot more information now that’s being spread so that people can understand what are the healthy dishes that they can continue to cook,” said Dr Yaacob.

    Mosque madrasah and mosque kindergarten students between the ages of five and 16 will be issued 10,000 donation cans, and they will be encouraged to save their daily pocket money during Ramadan in these cans.

    Funds will go to the Straits Times School Pocket Money Fund after Hari Raya. The aim is to raise $850,000.

    Junyuan Secondary School student Mohd Irfaan Mohd Ariffin, 15, received his can yesterday and said he will be depositing S$5 daily — all of his pocket money — over the next few weeks.

    “Even though Muslims are (taking part) in this programme, it also serves the needy who are non-Muslim … it’s an impressive way to promote racial harmony,” said Irfaan.

    The line-up of activities includes Quran Hour: A time for all Muslims to recite the Quran together across the various mosques on June 11.

     

    Source: http://www.todayonline.com

  • Trump Described Islam As “One Of The World’s Great Faiths” And Called For Tolerance And Respect For Each Other

    Trump Described Islam As “One Of The World’s Great Faiths” And Called For Tolerance And Respect For Each Other

    US President Donald Trump on Sunday (May 21) pivoted away from his strident assessment of Islam as a religion of hatred as he sought to redefine US leadership in the Middle East and rally the Muslim world to join him in a renewed campaign against extremism.

    Addressing dozens of leaders from across the Muslim world who had gathered in Saudi Arabia, Mr Trump rejected the idea that the fight against terrorism was a struggle between religions, and he promised not to scold them about human rights in their countries. But he challenged Muslim leaders to step up their efforts to counter a “wicked ideology” and purge the “foot soldiers of evil” from their societies.

    “This is not a battle between different faiths, different sects or different civilisations,” Mr Trump said in a cavernous hall filled with heads of state eager to find favour with the new president. “This is a battle between barbaric criminals who seek to obliterate human life and decent people, all in the name of religion, people that want to protect life and want to protect their religion. This is a battle between good and evil.”

    The president’s measured tone here in Saudi Arabia was a far cry from his incendiary language on the campaign trail last year, when he said that “Islam hates us” and called for a “total and complete shutdown” of Muslims entering the United States.

    Throughout his visit here, a less volatile president emerged, disciplined and relentlessly on message in a way he is often not at home. He did not brag about his electoral victory and avoided tangents. With few exceptions, he stuck carefully to his teleprompter. His mood has been sober and careful.

    By refusing to hold news conferences or answer questions during brief photo opportunities, Mr Trump orchestrated a sense of diplomatic calm that contrasted sharply with the chaos that usually surrounds him in Washington. He has not used Twitter as a cudgel against adversaries since his overseas trip began.

    In his speech on Sunday, he made no mention of the executive orders he signed after taking office barring visitors from several predominantly Muslim countries. Instead, he described Islam as “one of the world’s great faiths” and called for “tolerance and respect for each other”.

    While in the past, Mr Trump repeatedly criticised President Barack Obama and others for not using the phrase “radical Islamic terrorism”, his staff sought to ensure that he would not use it before this Muslim audience. The final draft of the speech had him instead embracing a subtle but significant switch, using the term “Islamist extremism”. Islamist is often defined to mean someone who advocates Islamic fundamentalism, and some experts prefer its use to avoid tarring the entire religion.

    When that moment in the speech came, however, Mr Trump went off script and used both words, Islamic and Islamist. “That means honestly confronting the crisis of Islamic extremism and the Islamists and Islamic terror of all kinds”, he said. An aide said afterward that the president was “just an exhausted guy” and had tripped over the term, rather than rejected the language suggested by his aides.

    But if the speech during the second day of a nine-day overseas trip was intended as a sort of reset from his campaign and early presidency, it was also meant to turn away from Mr Obama’s approach. Rather than preach about human rights or democracy, Mr Trump said he wanted “partners, not perfection”. And he said it was up to Muslim leaders to expunge extremists from their midst.

    “Drive them out,” he said. “Drive them out of your places of worship. Drive them out of your communities. Drive them out of your holy land. And drive them out of this earth.”

    Mr Trump received a warm welcome in the room as Muslim leaders put behind them the messages of the campaign and the attempted travel ban, and he has gotten along well with fellow leaders, who have turned to flattery.

    “You are a unique personality that is capable of doing the impossible,” President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi of Egypt told him.

    “I agree!” Mr Trump responded cheerily, as laughter rolled through the room.

    A few moments later, Mr Trump returned the compliment, in a fashion. “Love your shoes,” he told Mr el-Sissi. “Boy, those shoes. Man!”

    But some activists back in the United States gave the president mixed reviews at the start of his trip.

    “While President Trump’s address today in Saudi Arabia appears to be an attempt to set a new and more productive tone in relations with the Muslim world, one speech cannot outweigh years of anti-Muslim rhetoric and policy proposals,” Mr Nihad Awad, the executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, said in a statement.

    The speech was meant as a centrepiece of Mr Trump’s two-day stay here before he heads to Jerusalem early Monday, and it was part of a larger drive to plant the United States firmly in the camp of Sunni Arab nations and Israel in their confrontation with Shiite-led Iran. To firm up such a coalition, he spent hours meeting individually with leaders from Egypt, Bahrain, Qatar and Kuwait, then with more Muslim leaders in larger groups.

    “This administration is committed to a 180-degree reversal of the Obama policy on Iran,” said Mr Mark Dubowitz, the chief executive of the Foundation for Defence of Democracies, a nonprofit research organisation in Washington. “They see the Iranian threat as fundamentally linked to the nature and behaviour of the regime and its revolutionary and expansionist ideology.”

    Mr Trump toured the new Global Centre for Combating Extremist Ideology in Riyadh, which employs 350 technicians tracking online radicalism and monitoring 100 television channels in 11 languages. The Trump administration and Saudi Arabia also announced the creation of a joint Terrorist Financing Targeting Centre to formalise long-standing cooperation and search for new ways to cut off sources of money for extremists.

    Mr Trump made little mention of human rights in any of the meetings, and he promised in his speech not to do so publicly. “We are not here to lecture,” he said. “We are not here to tell other people how to live, what to do, who to be, or how to worship. Instead, we are here to offer partnership — based on shared interests and values — to pursue a better future for us all.”

    That approach drew bipartisan criticism back in Washington. “It’s in our national security interest to advocate for democracy and freedom and human rights,” Senator Marco Rubio, R-Fla, said on CNN’s State of the Union. On the same program, Representative Adam B Schiff, D-Calif., called it “a terrible abdication of our global leadership”.

    Ms Michele Dunne, the director of the Middle East programme at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said the president had laid blame for terrorism on Muslim leaders who he says have not done enough. “There are elements of truth to Trump’s narrative,” she said, “but it ignores the deeper grievances, the political and economic injustices, that make young people in the region especially susceptible to extremist ideologies at this particular time.”

    And yet the change in the president’s tone about the relationship between Islam and terrorism was striking. As he assailed Mr Obama last year for not using the phrase “radical Islamic terrorism”, Mr Trump asserted that “anyone who cannot name our enemy is not fit to lead this country.” He used the phrase again in his inaugural address in January.

    Even after Lt General H R McMaster, the national security adviser, told his staff that the phrase was problematic and should not be used, the president defiantly repeated it days later in an address to a joint session of Congress.

    Still, Lt Gen McMaster said in an interview broadcast on ABC’s This Week on Sunday that Mr Trump had been listening to the Muslim leaders he has met since becoming president and understood their views better. “This is learning,” Lt Gen McMaster said.

    Secretary of State Rex W Tillerson told reporters, “The president clearly was extending a hand, and understanding that only together can we address this threat of terrorism.”

    While Mr Trump’s administration is still appealing court rulings that blocked his temporary travel ban, the president has not publicly raised the issue as much lately, and the page on his campaign site calling for the “total and complete shutdown” of Muslim immigration has been taken down.

    Some advisers who advocated stronger action and language about what they call the Islamic threat have either left the administration or faded in influence. Mr Michael T Flynn, McMaster’s predecessor as national security adviser, was fired for other reasons. Mr Stephen K Bannon, the president’s chief strategist, has lost sway. And Mr Sebastian Gorka, a deputy assistant to the president, has been reported to possibly be leaving the White House at some point.

    Even so, the hard-liners found enough to be happy with in the speech. After the president was finished on Sunday, Mr Gorka wrote on Twitter: “After 8yrs disastrous terror-enabling policies we now have @POTUS: ‘We r going 2 defeat terrorism & send its wicked ideology in2 OBLIVION.’” NEW YORK TIMES

     

    Source: http://www.todayonline.com/world

  • Noor Mastura: My Relationship With The Hijab Strengthened Because My Mother Did Not Force It Upon Me

    Noor Mastura: My Relationship With The Hijab Strengthened Because My Mother Did Not Force It Upon Me

    I remember the first week I started wearing the hejab. I was ready to take it off by the second week. My friends laughed at me. Mind you, they were Muslim.
    My friends who weren’t Muslims however – were incredibly supportive. Yes you Sumalatha Navan .

    My mum was the happiest when I wore it. My sisters followed immediately and wore it too. So when I came back home one day and plopped myself at the dining table and blurted out to mum that I didn’t want to wear the hejab anymore, I anticipated drama and was so ready to rebut with a host of carefully constructed responses.

    Mum was cooking but when the bomb dropped, she didn’t flinch. And without hesitation she said, okay. And I thought it was one of those ‘Mum-okays’ – you know that one – “okay fine, but don’t ever come back to this house again”
    But no – she actually meant – okay.

    And I said “Mum, I’m really going to take it off.” She stopped stirring the ladle, looked at me straight on and asked “Did I ask you to put it on?”
    “No”
    “Why did you put it on?”
    “Because I wanted to at that time”
    “And why do you want to take it off now?”
    “Because I don’t feel right. ”

    And she said the magic words I’ll always thank her for.
    “It was your decision then, it is your decision now.”

    But I still felt that she didn’t get it. She didn’t think i would actually take it off. We were meeting her friend at a mall that afternoon so she took off first and i told her I’ll drop by after.

    I left home without the hejab. When I saw her and her friend, she looked at me as if nothing happened. It was so weird for me. Mum was actually okay with this????

    She sat and talked and laughed and ate like everything was alright and nothing was amiss. We left and went to the station to catch a bus home. While waiting, mum and I took selfies together and she was happily smiling and holding me and hugging me like I didn’t let her down.

    Even till this day, i don’t know if I did.

    But I’ll tell you what I know. I lasted 3 days without the hejab. I made my decision and I’ve never looked back. Today, I’m as comfortable as I am with it or without it. And it is my sacred companion.

    If my mum reacted otherwise – I honestly don’t know the kind of relationship I’d be having with my hejab. If any.
    But this gratitude that comes with the freedom to choose – either way- is priceless.

    And one can only hope that through this process, we are blessed with the likes of my mum, my friend and this dad right here. (See link for story)

     

    Source: Noor Mastura

  • Rudy Marican: Apa Dah Jadi Dengan Masyarakat Islam Kita, Mak Sendiri Pun Tak Ambil Kisah?

    Rudy Marican: Apa Dah Jadi Dengan Masyarakat Islam Kita, Mak Sendiri Pun Tak Ambil Kisah?

    Malam ne hati saya rasa amat sedeh hingga saya jadi sanggat emotional dan tak tahu macam mana nak tolong satu lagi mak chik yang di tinggalkan oleh anak anak nya!

    Lima anak dewasa dan satu pun tak takut Allah bila dengan hati yang keras mereka tak nak ambil tahu pasal mak langsung walaupun mak dah tua dan sakit! Macam mana saya tak menagis dalam kesedehan bila dengar macik ne mengadu pada saya. Anak anak bergadoh dengan satu sama lain tak nak jaga mak!!!

    Apa dah jadi pada masyarakat Islam saya? Kenapa mereka buat begini pada mak sendiri ?

    Ada kah mereka tak sedar yang mereka juga akan tua dan anak anak akan buat yang sama pada mereka?

    Ada kah mereka tak faham agama kita…ia itu cara yang paling senang nak masok shurga ia lah jaga orang tua kita dengan penuh kaseh sayang ..walaupun kita tak ada cukup duit…dan hidup kita penuh dengan cabaran???

    Tapi kalau dengan hati penuh ikhlas dan kaseh sayang kita tetap jaga orang tua kita…Allah akan memberi kita ganjaran yang amat besar..kenapa kita maseh nak dengar bisikan Shaitan???? Saya sedeh sanggat kerana saya sendiri dah tanamkan mak kesayangan saya!!

    Saya bermohon kapada anda tolong lah buat perubahan sebelum terlambat kalau anda rasa anda dalam golongan ne…saya tak ada niat nak kecikkan hati sesiapa ya…cuma saya amat sedeh bila macik menangis kat saya..

    Memang mak kita tak sempurna sepenuhnya…tapi kita pun tak sempurna kan? Jadi ingat satu aje…kita boleh pileh kawan…tapi kita tak boleh pileh mak…itu juga ujian kita dari Allah semasa dalam dunia sementara ne!

    Tiap tiap hari kita berdoa supaya Allah maafkan dosa dosa kita , tapi tanpa kita sedari dosa besar kita terhadap mak kita…bila kita tak bantu sikit pun kepada mak yang mengandongkan kita 9 bulan dan kemudian mengalami kesakitan yang amat dahshat untok melahirkan kita!

    Saya berdoa anda cuba lah …memang jaga mak kadang kadang ujian nya berat tapi Allah dah janji Janna kan…? Mesti lah cabaran nya berat sikit…sabar lah…banyak doa supaya kita lulus ujian ne dengan cemerlang…

    Saya berdoa malam ne …kalau saya dapat menpengarohi satu anak untok menjaga mak atau ayah dengan penuh ikhlas dan kaseh sayang…saya akan amat bershukur pada Allah!

    Salam dari saya dan maafkan saya kalau bahasa saya kurang sempurna ya!

     

    Source: Rudy Marican

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