Category: Singapuraku

  • May The Deceased SMRT Staff Be Granted Paradise For Their Jihad In Providing For Their Family

    May The Deceased SMRT Staff Be Granted Paradise For Their Jihad In Providing For Their Family

    Do you know that going to work to seek nafkah was described as “jihad” by our Prophet s.a.w?

    Nabi S.A.W was once asked by his companion regarding a man who was physically strong and was working tirelessly on a heavy labour: the companion of Rasul asked : “Ya Rasulullah if only this strong man joins us for Jihad in the way of Allah”

    Nabi s.a.w answered: “If he works hard to feed his kids, he is in Jihad.. if he works hard to feed his old parents he is in Jihad.. and if he is working to feed himself, to exalt himself from begging then he is also in Jihad in the way of Allah”

    We hope that those who lost their life in the accident yesterday attained husnul khatimah as mujahidin in the way of Allah.. and most importantly i think it also reminds us of our daily struggle at work, our own jihad.. and to always reallign our niat so that we truly are upon Allah’s way da-iman wa abadan..

    wallahu’alam..

     

    Source: Khairul Anwar

  • Tokoh Persuratan Negara Cikgu Haji Muhammad Ariff Ahmad Meninggal Dunia

    Tokoh Persuratan Negara Cikgu Haji Muhammad Ariff Ahmad Meninggal Dunia

    TOKOH persuratan tersohor negara, Haji Muhammad Ariff Ahmad atau Mas, telah meninggal dunia hari ini pada usia 91 tahun.

    Pendeta yang lebih mesra dengan panggilan “Cikgu Ariff” merupakan salah seorang pengasas Angkatan Sasterawan 50 (Asas 50) telah menghembuskan nafasnya di Hospital Khoo Teck Phuat.

    Usaha gigih allahyarham dalam memartabatkan bahasa dan sastera Melayu sejak lebih 50 tahun telah dihargai masyarakat bukan hanya di Singapura tetapi di seluruh pelosok nusantara dan telah dianugerahi Ijazah Kehormat Doktor Persuratan Melayu yang membawa kepada gelaran Doktor’ oleh Universiti Pendidikan Sultan Idris (UPSI), Perak.

    Selain nama pena ‘Mas, arwah juga dikenali dengan nama pena uga dikenali dengan nama pena M.Arba (1940), P.L.Rajaudang (1940); M.Foerida (1943); Mas (1946); Mas Malaya (1947); Mas Tanjung Malim (1947); Mas Tomo (1947); S.P.10 (1949) dan Minamoria (1984).

    Beliau dilahirkan pada 6 Disember 1924 di Singapura. Pernah belajar di Sekolah Melayu Tanglin Besar (1933-1937); Sekolah Melayu Tanglin Tinggi (1938-1940); Syonan Nippon Gakuen + Sihan Gakko (1943); dan Maktab Perguruan Sultan Idris, Malaya (1946-1949). Beliau memperolehi Sijil Pelajaran Malaysia (Calon persendirian) (1965); Sijil Tinggi Pelajaran Malaysia (Calon persendirian) (1966); dan Sijil Perguruan SITC, Tanjong Malim, Malaya (1949).

    Selepas mengajar beberapa tahun beliau dilantik Pensyarah di Maktab Perguruan di Paterson Road, Singapura.

    Cikgu Ariff juga sebelum ini merupakan penerima Anugerah Suluh Budiman UPSI pada 2002.

    Sumbangan besar beliau menyebabkannya menerima pelbagai anugerah termasuk – Jasawan Guru oleh Kesatuan Guru-Guru Melayu Singapura (KGMS) pada 1987; Anugerah Tun Seri Lanang oleh Majlis Bahasa Melayu Singapura (MBMS) pada 1993; Bintang Bakti Masyarakat (BBM) oleh Pemerintah pada 2000 dan Pendeta dari Majlis Pusat.

    Jenazah akan dibawa pulang ke rumahnya di Nemesu Avenue dan kemudiannya akan dibawa ke Masjid Ba’alwie untuk disembahyang Asar ini.

     

    Source: www.beritaharian.sg

  • Open Letter To SMRT: Don’t Be Too Quick To Shift Blame To Deceased Staff

    Open Letter To SMRT: Don’t Be Too Quick To Shift Blame To Deceased Staff

    We have heard it all before.

    You say you are sorry. And that you share our sadness.

    But you will return to your families and sleep easy tonight, while we mourn a tragic loss. Tomorrow morning, you will not have to make the dreadful trip to the mortuary to identify the lifeless and mangled body of a loved one. How can you say that you share our sadness? You do not understand our grief.

    Yet you ever-so eloquently say that you are “very saddened by the loss.” But to you, the two young lives lost today are just a statistic; A number that you have to account for in the face of public outrage. Just collateral damage. Soon, you will forget. Your career goes on. Your life goes on.

    To us they were beloved sons, brothers, cousins, nephews, friends. Brilliant human beings who had promising futures ahead of them.

    Honest young men who woke up one morning, had breakfast with their families, and eagerly showed up for work. Brave young men who, a few hours later in the hot midday sun, responded to a train track fault only to be struck by a train. They followed your orders only to be betrayed.

    As Muslims we try to live life right, to be kind to others, and live life knowing that one day we will return to our Maker. We do not fear or resent death.

    What we resent are your attempts to clear yourselves of any fault, insisting that you have observed all the standard operating procedures. If you did everything right, then your standard operating procedures must be flimsy.

    Your carefully maneuvered words make us wonder: are you attempting to shift the blame to the deceased? You know it is easy to blame someone who can no longer speak for himself.

    Instead of being so quick to protect your interests, seek the humanity deep within you to acknowledge your mistakes and learn from them to ensure that this tragedy does not happen to any one else’s son. Will you take responsibility? Or will your public relations team continue to craft words to protect you from blame?

    At this point, the families are grieving at the loss of a beloved. But grief will soon turn into anger.

    The author is a relative of one of the deceased who passed on in the SMRT train tragedy on 22 March 2016 at 11.10 a.m.

     

    Source: http://kentridgecommon.com

  • Some SMRT Staff Upset Over Apparent Disregard For Workers’ Safety

    Some SMRT Staff Upset Over Apparent Disregard For Workers’ Safety

    In the aftermath of the two SMRT employees’ deaths, some of their colleagues are upset by what they see as an apparent disregard for workers’ safety over the need to assuage commuters’ grouses about train breakdowns. Others said they were kept in the dark about the tragedy on Tuesday (March 22) even as they had to continue performing their duties.

    Speaking to TODAY on the condition of anonymity, an SMRT engineer said: “We are very angry and sad that such a thing has happened. It was an accident that could have been avoided. Safety should always come first and not be compromised, even when the management wants problems to be fixed fast to avoid delays to the train service.”

    While “technicians on the ground are essential for the reliability of operations”, the engineer said, he was “devastated” when he heard the news that they were killed on the tracks.

    “When the machines on the track are malfunctioning, it is sometimes necessary that we have to send people down to fix them. But safety should never be compromised in the process,” he stressed.

    Another SMRT employee, who declined to be named, said that ground crew personnel were not given much information after the accident. He himself was not told about what was happening at the accident scene, or about when the station may be re-opened: “(At that time), people were asking how long the delay would last, and I said, ‘I’m not sure’.”

    He recalled that the signal light “turned to red” at around 11.20am at the station, “indicating that something had happened”. “After that, my officer gave me instructions saying that people from the platform were coming down. He said, ‘Just open the gates and let the people go out; (to) just clear the crowd’.”

    Another SMRT ground staff member said she heard that the maintenance workers were from another station and were at Pasir Ris to check on the tracks, and some of the ground crew had to leave with the police for investigations.

    Train services between Pasir Ris and Tanah Merah stations were suspended for about three hours on Tuesday afternoon when two maintenance workers were hit by an oncoming train about 150m from the train platform.

    Singaporeans Nasrulhudin Najumudin, 26, and Muhammad Asyraf Ahmad Buhari, 24, were trainees who had just joined SMRT in January. The two were part of a 15-member technical team, including a supervisor, who went on the tracks to check on a reported alarm from a condition monitoring device for signalling equipment.

    When TODAY arrived at the scene around 12.30pm, the gates to the station were closed, and SMRT officials were handing out information flyers and diverting commuters to Pasir Ris bus interchange for free bus services.

    Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF) personnel and family members of the deceased entered and exited the train station even as it was off-limits to the public at that point, while members of the press and some bystanders lingered at the station entrance.

    A 55-year-old Pasir Ris resident, who asked to be identified only as Mr Yong, said he was walking to the MRT station at around noon when he saw SCDF personnel guiding passengers — about 20 — from the stalled train to the station.

    A homemaker in her 50s, who wanted to be known only as Madam Foo, said she had gone to the upper floors of a nearby apartment block to find out “why the train is just (stuck) on the tracks like that”. “I saw a body on the track. It was already wrapped up. I got a shock, of course,” she said.

    One commuter, technician Timothy Hoong, 53, told TODAY that such an incident “shouldn’t have happened in the first place”.

    “When the train is operational, nobody should be on the tracks for safety reasons … It’s all right to delay the train service than to just go ahead with the maintenance (and resulting) in somebody getting killed.”

    Mr Hoong believes the accident may have been prevented if “proper communication” took place.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Allayarham Muhammad Asyraf Amhad Buhari Will Be Missed By Members Of His Qasida

    Allayarham Muhammad Asyraf Amhad Buhari Will Be Missed By Members Of His Qasida

    Innalilahi wainnahi rajiun Bro Muhd Asyraf bin Ahmad Buhari was one of the deceased this morning at the mrt track.

    Al Marhum was one of the member of Al khidmah qasidah group. He was such a fine young man. His parents are on the way back from their umrah. May Allah ease them. May Allah bless Muhammad Asyraf Bin Ahmad Buhari and Nasrulhudin Bin Najumudin.

    Let us read Fateha for the both of them. Al Fateha

    Al Marhum Asyraf is 2nd from left…

     

    Source: Sout Illaahi

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