Blog

  • Security Guard Protected Muslim Couple As They Prayed In Stadium

    Security Guard Protected Muslim Couple As They Prayed In Stadium

    Yesterday my husband and i attended a football game, it was Duhur time and we needed to pray. Finding a place to pray at a football stadium is tough, but we managed to find an empty corner. I was a bit nervous to pray because it wasn’t private at all, particularly in front of everyone, maybe i’m silly but i’m always paranoid i will get attacked while focused in prayer.

    My husband started praying and i get approached by stadium security. I thought in my head, here comes this guy, he’s gonna escort me out and tell us we can’t do this here. I was wrong, he came up to me and said “i am going to stand here and guard you guys to make sure nobody gives you any problems, go ahead and pray.”

    He allowed us to pray and stood in front guarding us to make sure we are safe. When i finished he came up to us shook our hands and told us to enjoy the game. SubahanAllah, an amazing experience i will never forget.

    #Muslims_Everyday

    By: Samantha from Boston, Massachusetts in the United States

     

    Source: Muslims Everyday

     

  • Concerned Mother Lodged Police Report – Parents Beware Of Child Kidnapping Syndicates

    Concerned Mother Lodged Police Report – Parents Beware Of Child Kidnapping Syndicates

    Astafirullahhualazim

    sekarang da sampai Spore.
    Be alert.just lock gate n door

    police-report-1

    police-report-2

    ☝?☝?☝?☝?☝?CHILDREN kidnapped from malaysia to thailand killed for organs from the child.. Be careful of your kids to and from school and shopping malls or anywhere MALAYSIA IS NOW FAMOUS FOR CHILD KIDNAPPING CASES !!!!!
    sekarang kena berhati2 kalau di rumah.

     

    Source: Aisah Sha Sha

  • Masyarakat Melayu Singapura Tiada Krisis Identiti

    Masyarakat Melayu Singapura Tiada Krisis Identiti

    Masyarakat Melayu Singapura tiada masalah krisis identiti.

    Sikap inklusif, terbuka serta identiti yang berbilang sudah lama ada dalam diri masyarakat Melayu dan ini dibuktikan sejarah.

    Lantaran itu, masyarakat Melayu perlu menggali sejarahnya, yang sudah banyak diabaikan.

    Demikian antara pandangan para sarjana semasa mengupas tentang apakah Identiti Melayu Kini Dalam Krisis, dalam satu seminar baru-baru ini, anjuran ISEAS – Institut Yusof Ishak.

    Ia berdasarkan buku tulisan Profesor Anthony Milner berjudul ‘Kerajaan Budaya Politik Melayu di Ambang Pemerintahan Penjajah, yang dilancarkan dalam sesi ini.

    SEJARAH BEGITU DIABAIKAN

    Menurut Profesor Milner, mantan Profesor Pelawat Raffles di Jabatan Sejarah NUS dan Penyampai Seminar untuk memahami pendekatan orang dan negara Melayu seperti Malaysia tentang Laut China Selatan atau hubungan etnik di Malaysia, jawapannya ada dalam lipatan sejarah.

    “Saya fikir terdapat pengabaian besar terhadap sejarah – bukan kerana sejarah penghurai segalanya, tetapi ia membantu menyediakan rujukan bagi apa yang berlaku di rantau ini.
    Bahawa dunia pra penjajahan merupakan peringatan tentang suatu masa di mana bangsa tidak begitu penting,” kata Prof Milner.

    Beliau yang banyak menulis tentang kaum Melayu dan sejarah Malaysia, dalam bahasa Inggeris menambah: “Perkembangan tentang perasaan bangsa Melayu yang jelas adalah perkembangan moden,” menurut Profesor Milner.

    Para sarjana dalam sesi itu juga berhujah bahawa sejarah juga berguna untuk mengupas identiti Melayu Singapura.

    Ini lebih relevan di tengah-tengah perbahasan tentang isu berbilang bangsa dan pengaruh agama Islam.

    ORANG MELAYU BERSIKAP TERBUKA, TAAT, INKLUSIF

    Penolong Profesor di Jabatan Pengajian Melayu NUS, Dr Sher Banu merupakan antara sarjana yang berpandangan bahawa masyarakat Melayu di Singapura tidak mengalami masalah identiti krisis.

    “Sebab, kalau kita tengok bahagian sejarah, masyarakat Melayu selalu sudah berpeluang untuk menyesuaikan diri dan juga mereka selalu bersikap cara terbuka, bersikap secara inklusif. Kalau kita lihat pemerintahan yang lalu, yang berasaskan kepimpinan Islam, kita boleh dapat contoh ciri-ciri pemerintahan yang bagus, yang dapat disesuaikan dalam konteks di Singapura dan juga di Malaysia.

    “Jadi kalau mereka ada identiti berbeza, ketaatan berbeza, ia sesuatu yang mereka berupaya menyesuaikan diri,” kata Dr Banu, yang juga menjadi Pengulas Seminar Identiti Krisis Melayu itu.

    Lantaran itu juga, penganjur seminar tersebut cuba mengupas mengapa perbincangan mengenai politik Melayu tidak boleh dikupas tanpa mengambil kira aspek budaya dan sejarah Melayu itu sendiri.

    Kalangan peserta seminar termasuklah peminat sejarah, antropologi dan budaya, selain pelajar seperti Muhd Suhail Mohd Yazid.

    Mengulas perbincangan seminar tersebut, beliau berkata: “Kita tidak boleh lupa bahawa Singapura terletaknya di nusantara, di alam Melayu. Jadi sejarah Melayu juga sejarah Singapura. Pada masa yang sama kita harus kritikal juga adakah cara pemikiran orang Melayu di zaman kerajaan juga relevan pada zaman modern kini?”

    Seminar dua jam itu dihadiri sekitar 60 peserta.

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Najib Razak Risks Backlash In Malaysia Following Deals With PRC

    Najib Razak Risks Backlash In Malaysia Following Deals With PRC

    KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak is facing grumblings back home that he is “selling off” his country after returning from China with about US$34 billion worth of deals, which could help lift the economy ahead of elections.

    The concerns emerge from a deep-seated distrust of the Chinese among Malaysia’s Malay-Muslim majority, who form the support base for the ruling United Malay National Organisation (UMNO).

    Najib was quick to dismiss the concerns after concluding his six-day visit to China.

    “Some have scaremongered that Malaysia is being sold off. This is absurd and absolutely false,” Najib said in a statement on Friday (Nov 4), insisting the projects will be owned and run by Malaysians.

    The deals include Malaysia’s first significant defence deal with China, an agreement to buy four Chinese naval vessels.

    Najib’s visit followed that of Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte, who announced his country’s “separation” from the United States and signed agreements and loan pledges worth an estimated US$24 billion with Beijing.

    Malaysia’s Transport Minister Liow Tiong Lai also defended the deals with China, dismissing fears of overt Chinese influence in the country. Speaking on the sidelines of a memorandum of understanding (MoU) signing between Malaysia’s Tunku Abdul Rahman University College and China’s Tsinghua University, he told Channel NewsAsia that “we actually attract foreign direct investment (FDI) from any countries who want to invest in Malaysia”.

    “At the same time, we buy anything also from those countries who can give us the best offer and that is natural,” he said. “So I think if we buy ships from China, it’s because China offered us the better deal. If it’s any other country, we can buy from France or we can buy from the US.”

    The minister was also asked to respond to criticism from Malaysian opposition MP Tony Pua, who referenced a media report that suggested Malaysia had spent a “ridiculous price” on the “most expensive rail infrastructure project in the world in its class” – the East Coast Rail Link project.

    Pua had questioned why Malaysia had borrowed RM55b (US$13b) from China, given that Liow had said that was not the cost of construction, but only the value of the Financing Framework Agreement.

    Liow reiterated that the price was for the “framework of cooperation”, and that it was an outline. He added that the cost was not finalised.

    UMNO leaders expect Najib to brief them soon so the party can start allaying any fears about China’s rising influence in Malaysia, said Shahidan Kassim, a senior member of the party’s supreme council and a federal minister.

    “All of this has its pros and cons, but in UMNO we must have a policy statement on this,” he told Reuters.

    ETHNICITY AND RELIGION

    Ethnicity and religion are sensitive issues in Malaysia, where Muslim Malays form a little over 50 per cent of the population of 31 million. Ethnic Chinese make up about 25 per cent and ethnic Indians about 7 per cent.

    Malaysia’s ethnic Chinese have long been a scapegoat for the Malay community, with UMNO leaders pointing to ethnic Chinese economic dominance to unite Malays and keep a firm grip on political power.

    Last year, ethnic ties became strained under the weight of two opposing demonstrations largely split along racial lines. A ‘Malay pride’ rally blocked off Chinatown in Kuala Lumpur in a show of strength following an anti-government rally dominated by Malaysian-Chinese. Najib’s government summoned China’s ambassador over his remarks ahead of the “Malay pride’ rally.

    Clashes are expected again this year as thousands of anti-government demonstrators plan to protest in Kuala Lumpur on Nov 19, calling for Najib to resign over the money-laundering scandal linked to Malaysian state investment fund, One Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB).

    A member of UMNO’s policy-making Supreme Council, Irmohizam Ibrahim, said Najib’s deals with China have stoked concerns among party leaders.

    “We’re expecting the prime minister to address these issues at our next Supreme Council meeting,” Irmohizam told Reuters.

    “We will then need to go down and explain to the grassroots that … the deals are purely for the economy and trade,” said Irmohizam, who also serves as Najib’s strategic director in the party.

    Malaysia’s opposition is questioning the China agreements but for different reasons, saying it is tilting the country toward Beijing.

    “Malaysia’s economic dependence on any single nation is unreasonable and will affect the country’s freedom and geo-political strategy and foreign policy,” jailed opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim said in a statement issued from prison.

    “GOLDEN JEWELRY”

    Najib is planning elections in the second half of 2017, a government source has told Reuters.

    The investments from China could help the prime minister pump-prime Malaysia’s economy before then. A 2017 national budget Najib announced last month calls for only a modest spending rise, amid a continuing slump in commodity prices.

    Senior UMNO leaders and urban Malays, however, are uncomfortable that Chinese money will drive the development of strategic assets, according to James Chin, director at the University of Tasmania’s Asia Institute.

    Chin says the Malay elite welcomes Chinese investment in purely commercial deals such as property purchases, but are more wary about agreements such as a 55 billion ringgit (US$13.11 billion) deal for the Chinese to develop a rail network.

    “The problem with these deals is that they are seen as selling the country’s golden jewelry,” Chin said.

    Ties between Malaysia and China reached a high point last December when Beijing came to Najib’s rescue with a US$2.3 billion deal to buy 1MDB assets, helping ease concerns over its mounting debt.

    Relations with Washington became strained after the U.S. Department of Justice filed lawsuits in July implicating the prime minister in the money-laundering probe at 1MDB, the advisory board of which Najib chaired until recently.

    SHIFTING POSITIONS

    China and Malaysia agreed to enhance naval cooperation, after sealing the deal to buy four Littoral Mission ships, fast patrol vessels that can be equipped with a helicopter flight deck and carry missiles.

    Malaysia, along with three other members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) – the Philippines, Vietnam and Brunei – are among the countries contesting territorial claims with China over the South China Sea. China claims nearly the entire body of water as its territory.

    Najib said last month the disputes should be resolved through dialogue with Beijing.

    Duterte during his visit persuaded the Chinese to let Philippine fishermen operate around a disputed shoal, before declaring his unhappiness with Washington over its criticism of his lethal antidrug campaign.

    ASEAN, meanwhile, has struggled to come up with a unified position on the South China Sea disputes at its meetings.

    “ASEAN will not go away… but increasingly the idea of the multilateral track will be downgraded as now we see a swing from two key claimants to a more bilateral approach,” said Euan Graham, director of the international security program at the Lowy Institute, a Sydney-based think-tank.

    (US$1 = 4.1950 ringgit)

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • The Elected Presidency – Statistically Speaking

    The Elected Presidency – Statistically Speaking

    I refer to the article “Parliament passes changes to elected presidency” (Straits Times, Nov 10). It states:

    “It means Singapore’s next president is likely to be Malay, as next year’s election will be reserved for Malay candidates. The amendments also raise the maximum number of Non-Constituency MPs from nine to 12, and give them the same voting rights as elected MPs. All 77 People’s Action Party MPs present voted in favour of the changes, while all six elected Workers’ Party MPs opposed them.”

    These are the statistics for the next Presidential Elections:

    • 99.9% (estimated) of the people may not qualify
    • Over 90% (estimated) of all the countries’ presidents may not qualify
    • Probability of being “Indian and the minorities” – 0
    • Probability of being Chinese – 0
    • Probability of being Malay – 100%
    • Probability of this happening in another country – slightly greater than 0 (estimated)
    • Probability of anyone in the world laughing when they know about this – close to 100% (estimated)
    • % of PAP MPs who voted for the changes – 100%
    • % of WP MPs who voted against the changes – 100%
    • % of MPs who participated in the debate – 41%
    • % of the people who may qualify under “Private-sector candidates must have helmed a company with $500 million in shareholder equity” – 0.1% (estimated)

     

    Source: http://theindependent.sg

deneme bonusu