Category: Sosial

  • Filipina Scolds Woman Who Questioned Her For Having ‘Singapore’ Emblazoned In Shorts

    Filipina Scolds Woman Who Questioned Her For Having ‘Singapore’ Emblazoned In Shorts

    A reader sent us a video of a commotion in a hawker centre. According to the reader the woman, a Singaporean, questioned the Filipina about why she had ‘Singapore’ emblazoned in the back of her shorts. The Filipina who got upset with the woman’s question went ballistic with her attracting many onlookers.

    According to the reader, the woman is a maid who had engaged in a game of weekend netball before the incident.

    Do you think the word ‘Singapore’ should be better respected?

     

    Source: www.theindependent.sg

  • Shamma Al Mazrui – Menteri Termuda Di Dunia

    Shamma Al Mazrui – Menteri Termuda Di Dunia

    Biarpun usianya masih muda, pencapaian wanita cantik ini sudah boleh dikira besar. Shamma Bint Suhail bin Faris Al Mazrui menyandang jawatan sebagai Menteri Negara Emiriah Arab Bersatu (UAE) bagi Ehwal Belia.

    Cik Shamma, 22 tahun, ialah menteri paling muda bukan setakat di negaranya, malah di dunia setelah dilantik secara rasmi pada bulan Februari 2016, menurut laman Kabinet UAE.

    Di rantau di mana berpuluh-puluh juta penduduk dibawah usia 25 tahun menganggur, wujudnya ketidakadilan antara jantina, kekurangan akses kepada pendidikan, maka tidak hairanlah jika pelantikan Cik Shamma disambut baik, lapor laman Newsweek Timur Tengah.

    Dua tahun selepas tamat pengajian dari Universiti New York (NYU) – Abu Dhabi dengan ijazah dalam jurusan ekonomi dan setelah beliau memperolehi ijazah Sarjana dari Universiti Oxford sebagai penerima Biasiswa Rhodes, Cik Shamma dilantik memimpin generasi muda di negara beliau dan menjadi jambatan antara generasi muda dengan entiti-entiti awam UAE.

    (Gambar: Sky New Arabiah/YouTube)

    SESIAPA PUN BOLEH TERIMA BIASISWA BERPRESTIJ RHODES

    Meskipun beliau seorang penerima Biasiswa Rhodes, yang dianggap sebagai salah satu biasiswa berprestij di dunia, Cik Shamma meyakini bahawa “sesiapa pun boleh menerima biasiswa Rhodes jika mereka mendapat latihan dan bimbingan bagaimana mempersiapkan diri supaya disenarai pendek”, menurut Iman Ben Chaibah, seorang penulis di laman Sail Magazine, yang merupakan kenalan Cik Shamma.

    Berkongsi tentang pengalaman yang dilaluinya sebelum beliau dilantik, Cik Shamma berkata beliau ternampak catatan Twitter Perdana Menteri merangkap Naib Presiden UAE, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, yang sedang mencari Menteri Belia UAE yang seterusnya lantas beliau menghantar permohonannya.

    “Selepas saya buat permohonan, saya tidak terlalu memikirkannya, maka saya terkejut melihat nama saya disenarai pendek. Saya ditemu bual dan mereka bertanya soalan-soalan yang mencabar. Saya ditanya tentang kemahiran-kemahiran saya dan apa kekuatan saya,” kata Cik Shamma dalam wawancara bersama Newsweek.

    Mengulas tentang pelantikan Cik Shamma sebagai Menteri Belia, Sheikh Mohammed berkata: “Kami akan memberi majlis (belia) sepenuh tanggungjawab dan kami menjangkakan pencapaian yang terbaik daripada beliau dan majlisnya.

    “Para belia mewakili sekitar separuh daripada masyarakat Arab, maka logik untuk memberikan mereka suara dan peranan mentadbir negara,” tambah Sheikh Mohammed seperti yang ditukil oleh laman Televisyen Bebas Afrika.

    (Gambar: NYU Abu Dhabi/YouTube)

    MUDA, CANTIK, PETAH, BIJAK – TAPI TETAP RENDAH DIRI

    Pencapaian dan kejayaan Cik Shamma sejauh ini boleh dijadikan inspirasi ramai belia, khususnya di Timur Tengah. Beliau cantik, muda, petah, bijak serta memecahkan siling kaca – suatu gabungan ciri yang diidamkan ramai orang. Namun beliau dengan rendah diri pernah menekankan bahawa kisah kejayaannya tidak relevan.

    Ternyata harapan beliau besar terhadap golongan muda UAE dan beliau mahu setiap anak muda UAE mencatat kisah kejayaan mereka sendiri.

    Cik Shamma menambah, beliau mahu membantu anak-anak musa mencapai lebih daripada apa yang sudah beliau kecapi, lapor laman The National.

    “Kisah di sebalik kejayaan saya biasa-biasa saja, dan saya berharap agar anda semua (golongan muda) mencapai lebih daripada apa yang saya kecapi.

    “Saya tidak mahu bercakap mengenai kisah saya kerana ia kisah biasa sahaja. Tugas asas saya adalah untuk mendengar terlebih dahulu. Saya tidak akan mewakili belia dengan hanya suara dan pandangan saya, saya tidak mahu menjadi (pemimpin) sedemikian,” tegas Cik Shamma.

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Imam At Masjid Jami’ Chulia Allegedly Cursed At Christians And Jews During Friday Prayers

    Imam At Masjid Jami’ Chulia Allegedly Cursed At Christians And Jews During Friday Prayers

    This is a video, from the 6th January 2017, of the imam at Jami’ Chulia Mosque cursing Christians and Jews. This was during the Friday khuthbah. He did it again today.

    In summary, he said, “God Grant us victory over the disbelievers, God Grant us victory over the polytheists, God Grant us victory over the hypocrites and the people of envy, God Grant us victory over the Jews and the Christians, God Grant us victory over the Jews and the Christians …” The last part was repeated twice as an emphasis.

    This is 2017, and we still have unlettered people leading prayers in the mosque and supplicating as if we are all living in the Crusades and there is a huge religious war. How is this acceptable in the context of Singapore? It is only because he said it in Arabic that most people in the congregation likely did not realise.

    Islam is not at war with people of other faiths, particularly the Ahl al-Kitab, People of Scripture. This is an unbecoming relic of a different age. We should not encourage this sort of thiking or condone this sort of supplication

    ====

    Mr Terence Hekiaon Nunis, the contributor of the video confirmed in an online interview that this was not the only time he heard such supplications made in the mosque and reaffirmed that everything he wrote was factual.

    “It should be noted, also, that this was not a solitary occurrence. It was first noted on the 17th January and then again, on the day I posted this.

    Some people went there for Friday prayers. At the end of the sermon, this is what was recited as a supplication. The first few lines are innocuous and paraphrased from the Qur’anic supplication. The last part about overcoming the Jews and Christians is his own, or likely, taken from some similar supplication elsewhere, and is not from Scripture.

    The word used is “fanswurna” which I have translated as “grant victory over”, but more accurately means, “to overcome”. Translating from Arabic to English is not always easy because there are words which have no direct translation without losing the flavour of the meaning.

    In this case, the flavour is far from benign and the implicit meaning is more than just being better than them, the Christians and Jews, but to dominate them.”

     

    A Muslim Convert Once More

     

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • My Religion Says To Look After Your Neighbour, Says A Muslim

    My Religion Says To Look After Your Neighbour, Says A Muslim

    A hero neighbour, a Muslim, has told UK’s Manchester Evening Times of the terrifying moment he rescued a teenage girl and a woman after a suspected arson attack on a house.

    Hichem Haddad kicked the front door down before dragging the pair to safety during the ferocious fire in Rochdale on Monday morning.

    At its height flames could been seen shooting out of an upstairs window as 25 firefighters battled the blaze on Lloyd Street, Sudden.

    Mr Haddad, 51, said:

    “I was in my front room and I could hear someone shouting ‘Help me’, so I ran outside.

    “The girl was jumping up and down on the living room windowsill shouting out of the open window, but it was too small to climb out of. She was saying there was a fire upstairs so I shouted ‘Where are the keys?’, but she didn’t know.

    “I started kicking the door. It was a heavy wooden door and it took me three goes to kick it in. I grabbed the girl and dragged her out then got the woman out.

    “I’ve not done it to be a hero. My religion (Islam) says you look after your neighbour so that is what I did.

    “I would hope if I’m ever in a situation like this someone would do the same for me.”

    Mr Haddad also praised firefighters for bringing the blaze under control.

    He said: “The fire brigade did a fantastic job. I’d like to thank them for what they did, because this could have been a really terrible situation.”

    Houses on the street were evacuated as firefighters, who spent most of the day at the scene, feared the flames could spread.

    Families sheltered at Sudden and Brimrod Community Centre on nearby Cheltenham Street until it was safe to return to their homes.

    Melissa Walsh, of Bosworth Street, whose home backs onto Lloyd Street, said: “I heard an explosion, which I think was the window blowing out, and saw a red flash through the kitchen blinds.

    “I opened the back door and smoke just came pouring into the house.

    “The flames were just roaring out of the window. It was really scary.”

    Neighbour Tiffany Kay added: “I woke up and all I could smell was smoke, so I looked out the window and just saw flames shooting out.

    “I got everyone out of the house as quickly as possible and all the neighbours were on the street. There are lots of kids living here and it is half term so everyone was worried the fire would spread.”

    Greater Manchester Police said an investigation into the cause of the fire had been launched.

    A 35-year-old woman has been arrested on suspicion of arson with intent to endanger lives in connection with the incident.

     

    Source: Muslim Council of HK

  • Javanese Spoken To Share Secrets

    Javanese Spoken To Share Secrets

    As a child, Mr Suryakenchana Omar would often eavesdrop on his parents speaking in Javanese from his bedroom.

    “As soon as they realised I was awake, they would switch to Malay,” said the 44-year-old director of a training firm.

    Mr Haider Sahle has similar memories from his childhood spent with his grandaunt. “Whenever my elders didn’t want the children to overhear or understand what they were saying, they would speak in Javanese,” recalled the 36-year-old production editor.

    But eavesdropping helped him to pick up Javanese words and phrases.

    Mr Haider and Mr Suryakenchana serve as vice-president and honorary secretary respectively of the Javanese Association of Singapore, which was formed in 2015.

    There are 89,000 ethnic Javanese in Singapore, according to 2010 census records, making them the largest Malay sub-group here.

    But few speak the language, said Mr Suryakenchana.He added that there may be many more Javanese Singaporeans but they now identify themselves as Malay.

    According to 1825 census reports, there were only 38 Javanese residing in Singapore. But by 1891, the number had climbed to 8,541, with many first moving to Kampung Java. They assimilated quickly, picking up the more commonly spoken languages of Malay and English, said Mr Haider.

    That was what happened with Mr Mohamed Saat Mokhtar’s Javanese father, who emigrated to Singapore as a labourer in the 1940s. Although both Mr Mohamed Saat’s parents were from Java, they spoke to their children in Malay.

    “My father was looking for a better future in an environment that was alien to him,” said the 53-year- old senior manager in an engineering firm. “He had to assimilate into the culture here and make sure that his children also fit in.”

    Now, these men want to rediscover the language and culture.

    Mr Mohamed Saat has been learning Javanese primarily through conversations with his Indonesian domestic helper.

    In 2010, Mr Haider started a Javanese language class with seven others under the tutelage of linguist Gloria Poedjosoedarmo. But in 2014, the classes had to be stopped due to Dr Poedjosoedarmo’s poor health.

    Though many are interested, Mr Suryakenchana said there are few qualified Javanese teachers here, adding that the hierarchical nature of the language makes it difficult to learn.

    There are three different registers – Ngoko, Madya and Krama – and the words used differ based on the status of the audience. Ngoko is used between friends while Madya is used between strangers. Krama is used when speaking to elders and those of higher social standing.

    In Ngoko, the question “What is your name?” would be “Jenengmu sapa?”, while in Madya, it would be “Asmane sampeyan napa?”. The same question, in Krama, would be “Asmanipun panjenengan punapa?”

    Apart from vocabulary, the intonation also differs. While Ngoko is spoken in short bursts, Krama is softer and more nuanced.

    “Just to say one word, you have to think through the three levels for which word to use,” said Mr Suryakenchana, who also researches and gives talks on Malay and Javanese culture.

    He added that while the language may be lost here, the culture lives on in the enduring popularity of batik as well as nasi ambeng, a traditional dish of a mountain of rice served with various meat and vegetable dishes on a communal tray.

    Non-Javanese are also embracing aspects of the culture.

    About a third of the members of the Singa Ngalaras Gamelan Ensemble – a National University of Singapore group which plays traditional Javanese music – are not of Javanese descent.

    They include master’s student Thow Xin Wei, 33, who started playing a decade ago. In 2010, he was given a scholarship by the Indonesian authorities to further his studies in gamelan music in Solo.

    For his 25-year-old daughter’s wedding next month, Mr Mohamed Saat plans to hold a traditional Javanese ceremony complete with unique rituals such as the timbang, where the couple sit on the lap of the bride’s father to symbolise that he will treat both fairly.

    Mr Suryakenchana said the Javanese here have not been as active as other Malay sub-groups in promoting their culture. But he holds to the Javanese philosophy of “sepi ing pamrih, rame ing gawe”. “It means to work without drawing attention to yourself,” he added.

    Balancing two cultural identities – Javanese and Malay – is not a problem. “I’m both. I could be wearing baju kurung in the morning and a batik shirt in the afternoon,” he said.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

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