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  • Anak Derma Ginjal Pada Bapa

    Anak Derma Ginjal Pada Bapa

    ENCIK Abdul Hadi Ahmad bak sudah jatuh ditimpa tangga.

    Kesemuanya bermula apabila isterinya, Cik Noraini Arjob, 50 tahun, disahkan menghidap penyakit barah buah dada lebih lima tahun lalu.

    Penyakit yang dihidapi isterinya sudah tentu menjejas kesejahteraan keluarga lima beranak itu.

    Namun, dalam kesibukan memberi perhatian kepada kesihatan dan rawatan isterinya itu, beliau pula disahkan menghidap penyakit ginjal yang berfungsi hanya lima peratus sekitar dua tahun lalu.

    Tubuh yang lemah dan hilang fokus menyebabkan beliau bak layang-layang putus tali.

    Encik Hadi, 49 tahun, ayah tiga anak, adalah pemilik Offshore Entertainment Production, sebuah syarikat penganjur konsert artis dan kumpulan popular antarabangsa seperti Janet Jackson, Maher Zain, Kenny Loggins, serta kumpulan Michael Learns to Rock dan Earth, Wind and Fire.

    Rawatan dialisis yang menjenuhkan, memaksa beliau membatalkan kesemua tugas yang dijalankan bersama isterinya di luar negara.

    Namun, bak awan mendung berarak pergi, beliau lega apabila doktor mengesahkan ginjal anak tirinya, Cik Nurain Sudin, 26 tahun, sepadan dan serasi dipindahkan kepadanya.

    Anak kandungnya, Cik Nursyahira, 19 tahun, seorang pramugari, didapati tidak layak menjadi penderma kerana usia bawah 21 tahun.

    “Alhamdulillah, Allah yang mengaturkan ini semua. Sebenarnya saya tak sampai hati kerana Nurain punya kehidupan sendiri. Tetapi dia sendiri yang mahu dermakan ginjalnya lebih-lebih lagi doktor jamin dia tak akan hadapi apa-apa masalah selepas pemindahan.

    “Ayah mana yang tak bersyukur dan tersentuh jika anaknya sendiri sanggup derma ginjalnya kepada saya!” tambahnya yang kelihatan sebak seketika.

    Namun, Encik Hadi dan Cik Nurain terpaksa menjalani pelbagai ujian dan pemeriksaan sekitar setahun sebelum pemindahan akhirnya dijalankan di Hospital Mount Elizabeth 10 Mei lalu.

    Beberapa bulan sebelum itu, Encik Hadi telah menjalani pembedahan bagi memastikan jantungnya mantap sebelum pemindahan ginjal.

    Pembedahan tanpa sebarang masalah itu dijalankan sekumpulan doktor bedah yang diketuai Konsultan Nefrologi atau pakar ginjal, Dr Stephen Chew Tec Huan.

    Cik Nurin, seorang kakitangan pentadbiran di Wisma Teroka Singapura (SDC), berkata: “Saya tak teragak-agak berikan ginjal kepada ayah apabila doktor kata ayah perlukannya. Saya serahkan segala-galanya kepada Allah.

    “Ayah adalah payung dan segala-galanya bagi kami sekeluarga.”

    Menurut Encik Hadi, kos pemindahan tersebut dan pembedahan jantung yang dijalani menelan sekitar $140,000.

    “Alhamdulillah rezeki yang Allah beri dapat saya bayar kesemuanya. Ini berkat doa dan menjaga ibu saya dan ibu mentua saya,” tambahnya sambil mengucapkan terima kasih kepada Dr Chew dan pasukannya serta para jururawat berdedikasi dan melayannya dengan baik.

     

    Source: www.beritaharian.sg

  • Youth Puts Studies On Hold To Care For Cancer-Stricken Maid In At Her Own Home

    Youth Puts Studies On Hold To Care For Cancer-Stricken Maid In At Her Own Home

    He dreams of pursuing circus arts in an overseas university.

    But Mr Marshall Lim, 22, has put his plans on hold, all so he can accompany his maid home to Indonesia to look after her.

    The helper, Ms Jariyah, 40, has Stage 4 cancer and has decided to return to her hometown in Central Java to reunite with her family after working for Mr Lim’s family for 15 years.

    She has taken care of Mr Lim since she joined the household in 1996 when he was two years old. She also took care of his brother, Mayor, who is now 19 and a polytechnic student.

    Mr Lim said of Ms Jariyah: “She’s my other mother. She treats me and my brother like her sons.”

    Affectionately calling her “Auntie Jar”, he added: “Once Auntie Jar is settled down and better, I can always come home to continue my physical training to audition for circus school.”

    His mother, Ms Margaret Tan, 49, let Ms Jariyah return to her family in Cilacap once it became clear she has only months to live.

    Said Ms Tan, a divorcee: “I discussed with my boys about Jariyah returning home, and we decided Marshall could accompany her back.”

    They left on Sunday.

    Ms Tan made arrangements to pay for her hospital bills using insurance payouts when Ms Jariyah was diagnosed with Stage 4 cancer.

    She even raised funds by asking friends to contribute.

    FAMILY

    Breaking down as she spoke to The New Paper on Tuesday, Ms Tan, who would only say she worked in the medical field, said Ms Jariyah had become family.

    She was her pillar of support when Ms Tan got her divorce in 2005.

    Said Ms Tan: “She was in a divorce once too, so I think she understands how it’s like. We bonded over this and found support in each other.

    “She took good care of the family during my divorce. She would give me advice and even talk to the boys.

    “I’m very grateful for that. She even made sure I was eating well. She went through a lot of hard times with me.”

    When money got tight in 2009, Ms Tan could not keep Ms Jariyah.

    Ms Tan said: “I found a good employer for her. She visited at least once every two months when she was with her second employer.”

    Ms Jariyah returned to Indonesia in 2012 but came back to work for Ms Tan in 2014.

    What would have been a happy-ever-after was cut short when Ms Jariyah started getting sick a year later, often running fevers.

    Eventually, she was diagnosed with cancer of the liver last month. It has spread to the lungs and uterus.

    In tears, Ms Tan said: “She’s not my domestic helper, she’s my closest friend. I just can’t accept the fact that she has cancer.”

    They tried treatments and herbal remedies, but ultimately Ms Jariyah decided treatment was “too expensive”.

    She then asked Ms Tan to let her return home to her parents.

    From Cilacap, Mr Lim told The New Paper on Wednesday that he has been looking after Ms Jariyah.

    She has fevers several times a day. He sometimes takes her out, like to the beach, for fresh air.

    Mr Lim said Ms Jariyah’s new house, which she hoped to build with her salary, had been under renovation since January. Due to lack of funds, the work stopped.

    He said: “Auntie Jar and I want to concentrate on getting well first before continuing renovations.”

    His bigger concern now is getting “healthy food” for her.

    MAKING DO

    “There’s a lack of variety in terms of fruit and vegetables, and berries – which are good for fighting cancer but are not available. I buy what is available and make do with what I have.

    “We also brought some quinoa from Singapore.”

    He has been helping with the chores at Ms Jariyah’s house.

    He said: “Auntie Jar’s daughter is still making food for me, so I have to force her to let me do chores or I’ll do it myself.”

    He has not planned when he will be returning to Singapore and does not have a long-term visa to stay in Indonesia.

    Said Mr Lim: “I guess I’ll stay for a month. Longer if possible, I’m not really too sure.

    “I just want her to be happy and healthy. If she’s happy with her family here, then I’ll be happy for her.”

    I’m very grateful for that. She even made sure I was eating well. She went through a lot of hard times with me.

    – Ms Margaret Tan, Ms Jariyah’s employer

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • 6 Months Imprisonment For Attacker OF Madrasah Students

    6 Months Imprisonment For Attacker OF Madrasah Students

    A single act of racially aggravated violence wounds the victim, and by extension, the collective interest of society, said a district judge on Friday (May 20) as he sentenced a former security officer to six months’ jail.

    Koh Weng Onn, who attacked three madrasah students on April 1 this year, had pleaded guilty to two charges — causing hurt with racial aggravation, as well as committing a rash act causing hurt.

    District Judge Mathew Joseph noted that 48-year-old Koh, who suffers from a disorder with delusions of persecution, had made 355 police reports since 2008, many of them against Malay and Indian subjects.

    “The racial pattern in these reports poses a risk of the accused getting into similar situations (again),” he said.

    According to court documents, Koh started to have a bad impression of Malays several years ago, when he confronted a group for allegedly talking about him, and claimed that they started to hit him until he ran away.

    Around 7pm on March 31 this year, Koh was walking towards a coffee shop at East Coast Road when he saw two Malay women cycling towards him. He took a chair and pushed it towards them, sparking a dispute.

    A male Malay cyclist, who was behind the women, started having a shoving match with Koh. The police were called, and the parties apologised to each other.

    The next day, he was walking towards the MRT station along Paya Lebar Road at around 7.22am, when he passed a 16-year-old student. He suddenly kicked her and swore at her in Hokkien, leaving his victim shocked by the sudden blow.

    A minute later, Koh passed a 14-year-old student, and swung a plastic bag containing a filled 1.5-litre bottle towards the side of her face.

    As he entered Paya Lebar MRT Station and rode the escalator down, he saw a group of girls riding the escalator in the opposite direction.

    Koh waited till all of them, except the last girl, had passed him, before swinging his plastic bag at the 14-year-old’s face.

    Koh later defended himself, saying that the sight of the three girls, all students of Madrasah Al-Maarif Al-Islamiah, reminded him of the encounter with the cyclists, and thus angered him.

    Calling for a sentence of six months’ jail, Deputy Public Prosecutor Ang Feng Qian noted that Koh had confessed that he committed the offences because the victims were Malay. He also chose the girls specifically because they were young and female, to reduce the chances of retaliation and reprisal, she added.

    Defence lawyer Sunil Sudheesan, who pleaded for a jail term of three months, said Koh’s delusions had contributed to his offences.

    Mr Sunil added that the fact that an anonymous entrepreneur from an Arab-Muslim family had stepped forward to seek legal help for Koh and offered to foot his bills showed that Singaporeans are not “short-sighted”.

    Mr Sunil said: “They know the difference between someone who is a racist and a bigot, and someone who has (a) mental illness.”

    District Judge Joseph noted that Koh’s family had apologised on his behalf previously. “In a world (divided) by sectarian strife, the exhortation to love your neighbour becomes exceedingly crucial. And it’s all the more important for a nation like Singapore,” the judge said.

    Koh’s older brother, Mr Muhammad Johan Koh, told TODAY that the family accepted the sentence, adding: “He knew he committed an offence and needs to face the consequences. After serving his sentence, he will resume his treatment at the Institute of Mental Health. We will get the help we need to get him better.”

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • I Met Mesut Ozil Doing Umrah

    I Met Mesut Ozil Doing Umrah

    Mesut OziiL datang umrah..

    masyAllah..pelajar Madinah bertemu Mesut OziiL di Mekah…

    semoga menjadi Asbab Hidayat..amin..

     

    Source: Brunei fm

  • Meet A Muslim Brother, Malik Abdul Aziz

    Meet A Muslim Brother, Malik Abdul Aziz

    Profil: Malik Abdul Aziz (Mike Tyson)

    1.Dia pernah juara dunia tinju kelas berat.
    2.Dia menjatuhkan spink cuma 90 detik.
    3.masuk Islam, sudah hajji dan pernah khuruj ke Markas Nizamuddin, India
    4.ujarnya:lebih baik miskin tapi bahagia daripada kaya tapi sengsara.
    5.semoga berkah dan tersebar hidayah…

    Aamiin.

     

    Source: Islam Agama Ku

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