Tag: Arab

  • Former Law Professor: Arab Culture Integral To Islam, Johor Sultan Advised

    Former Law Professor: Arab Culture Integral To Islam, Johor Sultan Advised

    The Johor sultan should realise that Arabic culture and norms are an integral part of Islam, said constitutional law expert Abdul Aziz Bari.

    “I think the sultan of Johor should consult the menteri besar or the mufti before shooting from the hip, or else he would embarrass everybody including himself.

    “He needs to realise that he is the head of Islamic religion for the state, apart from being the state head.

    “There is no question of turning the society into an Arab one; the fact remains that Arabic culture and norms have become an integral part of Islam,” the former law professor said in a statement today.

    He was responding to the Johor Sultan Ibrahim Ibni Almarhum Sultan Iskandar who had called on Malays to be proud of the Malay culture and not try to emulate Arabic culture.

    Abdul Aziz pointed out that the term sultan itself is Arabic and rooted in the Quran.

    “Perhaps the sultan of Johor ought now to be thinking of coining a new term to replace the term sultan,” he said.

    Arabic term

    Noting that Johor was the only state to use the term ‘ahlul hal wal aqdi’ to denote the members of succession council in the Johor Constitution, he also pointed out that it is an Arabic term and that the sultan should also consider replacing it.

    Jawi is also an aspect of Arabic culture which the sultan should think about, he said, adding that jawi is very much the culture of Johor as well.

    Abdul Aziz also responded to the crown prince of Johor Tunku Ismail Sultan Ibrahim, who had recalled the incidents during the 1992 constitutional crisis and reminded the government not to repeat such greed-driven episodes.

    It was the prince’s grandfather who presented then Prime Minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad with the opportunity to “whack the rulers”, Abdul Aziz remarked.

    “Some of the rulers, in fact, complained that they have been embarrassed by the incident provoked by the late Sultan Iskandar, which started with the alleged beating of the Johor state hockey coach,” he said.

     

    Source: www.malaysiakini.com

  • Mufti Perak: Menulis, Membaca Al-Quran Dalam Bahasa Selain Arab Dilarang

    Mufti Perak: Menulis, Membaca Al-Quran Dalam Bahasa Selain Arab Dilarang

    PUTRAJAYA: Menulis dan membaca al-Quran dalam bahasa selain bahasa Arab adalah dilarang, demikian tegas Lembaga Pengawalan dan Pelesenan Pencetakan al-Quran (LPPPQ).

    Dalam kenyataan hari ini (3 Mac), Pengerusinya Tan Sri Harussani Zakaria berkata ini kerana penulisan al-Quran dalam bahasa lain tanpa adanya teks bahasa Arab tidak boleh dianggap sebagai al-Quran.

    Perbuatan itu juga boleh diambil tindakan undang-undang di bawah Akta Pencetakan Teks al-Quran (APTQ) 1986 dan Akta Mesin Cetak (AMCP) 1984, katanya.

    Beliau yang juga Mufti Perak mengulas mengenai kempen “Let’s Read The Quran” bagi menulis dan membaca al-Quran dalam bahasa lain selain bahasa Arab.

    Harussani berkata sebagai pihak bertanggungjawab dalam mengawal selia pencetakan, penerbitan dan pengimportan teks al-Quran di bawah Akta Pencetakan Teks al-Quran (APTQ) 1986, LPPPQ memandang serius kempen berkenaan.

    Untuk itu, katanya, LPPPQ bersama-sama dengan pihak berkuasa agama Islam di setiap negeri akan mengambil tindakan tegas bagi menyekat gerakan dan kempen berkenaan.

    Dalam pada itu, Harussani berkata al-Quran yang diterjemahkan dalam pelbagai bahasa bagi memudahkan mereka yang tidak memahami bahasa Arab memahami kitab suci berkenaan, tidak boleh dianggap sebagai naskah al-Quran tetapi merupakan ‘terjemahan al-Quran’ atau ‘tafsir al-Quran’.

    Terjemahan al-Quran tanpa disertakan dengan teks asal dalam bahasa Arab adalah dilarang kerana takut disalah fahami dan membacanya tidak mendapat pahala, katanya.

     

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Warning! Racist Ah Pek In Jurong West Harassing Hijabis!

    Warning! Racist Ah Pek In Jurong West Harassing Hijabis!

    Untok wanita yang berhijab hatihati yeh bilerh berjalan Di jurong west

    just happen to me this morning ada apek cine nieeh main tarik ajerh tudung sesiape yang dyerh nampak . Boleh nampak that dyerh tak suke melayu . I’m consider lucky Pasal ada pakcik tolong if not taktahu laa perh Nasib I .

    Kesian. Makcik makcik tk bersalah terburai tudung yeh . I tk Sempat amek gambar apek tuu.. #12012016 . Don’t know if ada orng Sempat tk snap his pic .

    Waiting for it to kua manerhmanerh berite soo semuerh Muslims be alert .

    ***

    Muslimahs donning hijab around Jurong West area should be careful

    Just happen to me this morning…there was an ah pek who tugged at the tudungs of anyone he see. Can see that he doesn’t like Melayu. I’m consider lucky because there was a Pakcik who help me  if not i don’t know what could have happen to me.

    So pitiful those makcik-makcik innocent had their tuung taken off. I didn’t manage to take a pic of the ah pek.#12012016 ..Don’t know if other manage to take his pic.

    Waiting for it to come up in whichever news so that all Muslims can be alert

     

    Source: Nor Hanis

     

  • Malaysia, Truly Arab?

    Malaysia, Truly Arab?

    While I had hoped for my first article of the New Year to be filled with positivity and written with a light heart, I made the mistake of turning on the television on New Year’s Eve. The scene televised from Dataran Merdeka made my heart skip a beat.

    There, instead of our usual cultural dance shows and performances by local artistes while we await the countdown to the New Year, were many people dressed in Arab gear chanting and swaying their bodies to recitations exulting the Prophet Muhammad and Allah.

    I only realised that the televised scene was in Kuala Lumpur when I saw the iconic Sultan Abdul Samad building in the background.

    I waited for a few minutes in disbelief, urging the television set to change the scene to one I was more familiar with. I was waiting for the usual jingle of “Malaysia, truly Asia”, for that crowd of dancers in exuberant costumes representing the stereotypical image of a culturally diverse Malaysia that I know to be over-exaggerated, but I have to admit, I now miss.

    That image never came.

    I was secretly glad that I spent New Year’s Eve at a running event in Malacca. As I finished the run before midnight and away from the revelry of the celebrants, I could see Malaysian families coming together at the field either for the run or to usher in the New Year amid fireworks.

    My friends and I even shared a table with strangers at a famous chicken rice ball restaurant — a crowd that consisted of foreigners, locals and out-of-town Malaysians alike — enjoying what we Malaysians are most famous for: the food.

    That is the Malaysia I know, people from different ethnic groups just sitting together at a street-side stall or dingy restaurant, placing our orders in simple Bahasa or Hokkien or Tamil, even. Nearly everyone would be eating similar fare.

    Perhaps this is a grittier, more realist image of the country I love than the usual annual fanfare we put on stage.

    What I experienced on New Year’s Eve was not what was shown on television that night.

    WHAT IT MEANS TO BE MALAYSIAN

    I am sure that every Malaysian has the same wishes as those at Dataran Merdeka — a fresh new start to the year, leaving behind all the heartaches of the past year, hopes for a better Malaysia that we will continue to build together.

    What really bothered me about the televised image was the assumption that Malaysia only belongs to those of a particular religion and, it goes without saying, of a particular race.

    Yes, it was the image of a peace-loving Islam, led by none other than Indonesia-born preacher Habib Syech Abdul Qadir as-Seggaf, who professes to be a direct descendant of Prophet Muhammad himself.

    Under the country’s secular Federal Constitution, every Malaysian is allowed freedom of religion and freedom of expression — thus, the crowd in Dataran Merdeka has every right to chant their love for the Prophet and raise their voices to the high heavens in hope of a better, less arduous year.

    Believe me, I hope and pray for better, too. Yet, I saw an Arab country in that televised scene, not Malaysia.

    I did not see any of the VVIPs in baju Melayu, sampin (accompanying sarong-like cloth worn by men around the waist) and songkok — most, if not all of them, were in flowy, white jubahs (a long garb commonly worn by Muslims) complete with kopiah (traditional cap), sitting on cushions that reminded me of nomads living in the desert, rather than the usual sofas reserved for VVIPs at government-organised events.

    I did not see women during the brief televised set, though from news reports I was informed that the crowd consisted of families. It would have been wonderful if the women were in kebayas and batik sarongs, with their hair in elegant sangguls (bun hairstyle), but I do not think this was the case.

    I understand that the clothes worn there are meant for prayers, as the VVIPs led the crowd for Isya’ prayers beforehand — however, have we not seen our leaders leading prayers in baju Melayu every Raya? Are we now so immersed in Arabic culture that we have completely forgotten our own?

    We surely forgot that Malaysia consists of non-Muslims, too. Would it not have been more meaningful to hold an interfaith session, where every Malaysian can come together, pray for a better nation and a better year, and at the same time learn the nuances of the different faiths, interact with each other side by side and essentially be Malaysians?

    Surely that would have been the best way to organise such an event if it is the spiritual aspect we are aiming for.

    It is sad to think that I am reduced to feeling Malaysian only when I go for overseas conferences, at running events and at roadside stalls.

    In this new year, I urge that we all reassess our own Malaysian identities before adopting another.

    ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

    Lyana Khairuddin, a columnist at The Malaysian Insider, does research on the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) and Human papillomavirus (HPV) viruses and teaches at a Malaysian public university.o

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Datuk Noor Farida Ariffin: Don’t Sacrifice Malay Nusantara Heritage Even As You Adopt Arab Attire And Vocab

    Datuk Noor Farida Ariffin: Don’t Sacrifice Malay Nusantara Heritage Even As You Adopt Arab Attire And Vocab

    PETALING JAYA: The trend of adopting Arab attire and words is harmless as long as it does not drown out the Malay Nusantara heritage, says Datuk Noor Farida Ariffin (pic).

    Adding to the debate on whether the alleged “Arabisation” of Malay Muslims is a cause for concern, the G25 coordinator said that only small parts of Arab culture were being absorbed.

    “You have the overt symbols in the sense that you see a lot more people are wearing the abaya (black robe for women), and there are a lot of Arab words being used now,” she said.

    Noor Farida also noted that while Malay Muslims today tend to prefer words like “solat” to “sembahyang” and “iftar” instead of “buka puasa”, the changes in vocabulary are minimal.

    She, however, refuted the claims of an online news portal columnist that baju kurungs are now difficult to come by in shops as they have been replaced by abayas.

    Noor Farida said that while traditionally, baju kurungs are tailored, one can easily still purchase them in shops.

    “We Muslims pray five times a day. Many Muslim women feel that by wearing the abaya and the tudung (headscarf), they don’t even need to wear the telekung (white prayer garb) so in that way it is more convenient for them,” said the former Malaysian Ambassador to the Netherlands.

    Noor Farida added that she too wears the abaya to the mosque as its more convenient.

    “I hope that it is just for convenience rather than the fact that they think they should discard the Malay baju kurung or kebaya because it is unIslamic. So long as it is confined to harmless manifestations, it is fine, but if it’s going to go beyond that and we are going to adopt their (Arab) conservative values then that would be a cause for concern. Especially if we totally lose pride in our own culture,” she said.

    “I hope it will not be widespread as to threaten our own Malay Nusantara culture, Islam Nusantara, which is a centuries-old culture which we ought to be proud of,” she said.

    Noor Farida does not believe, however, that the Malay community are adopting Arab culture wholesale.

    “I don’t think the word ‘culture’ is very apt in the circumstance. If you talk about culture, it’s also about adopting their music and their values,” she said.

    Noor Farida, who is also the former director-general of the Foreign Ministry’s Research, Treaties and International Law Department, explained that certain Arab values, such as with regard to the treatment of women, had not seeped into Malay culture as Malay women were still very independent and are given a greater amount of respect.

    “I really would not like to see Arab values, especially Saudi Arab values, being adopted by us as they are not very respectful of women. Women occupy very low standing in the eyes of many Arabs. In that sense, I think we are still very different from them because women’s rights groups here are still very active and there is no legal impediment to women’s upward mobility in professions,” she said, adding that in the Malaysian working sector, women could “aim for the sky”.

    That being said, Noor Faida stressed that Arab culture was also very diverse. For example, Saudi culture, which is influenced by the strictly conservative Wahhabi interpretation of Islam, is far more rigid than the North African Arab culture.

    Noor Farida said that the Saudi culture’s view towards woman was not necessarily Islamic.

    She explained that during Prophet Muhammad’s time, women in Arabia were given a vast amount of rights. For example, women then had rights to property and the right to retain their own names after marriage.

    “Don’t forget that the Prophet’s first wife, Siti Khadijah, was a very successful businesswoman. In those days, women were still confined to their homes in medieval Europe. Unfortunately, we seem to be regressing. We seem to be going back to the age of ignorance, the age of jahiliyyah. In that sense it would be a pity if we were to regress and adopt conservative Arab values, especially with regard to women’s rights,” she said.

    “Many Malay Muslims equate Arab culture with Islam. They don’t realise that not all Arabs are Muslims. There are many Christian Arabs in Palestine and Syria. In Egypt, you’ve got the Coptic Christians so Islam should not equate Arab and vice versa,” she said.

    “(It is fine) for the moment so long as it is confined to attire and the absorption of a few Arab words,” she said.

    However, some elementes of “Arabisation” have also got Noor Farida peeved like the time someone gave her a “lexicon of Arabic words” to replace existent Malay greetings.

    “Honestly, I was quite irritated by that. Please let us respect our values and our culture so long as it is not against Islamic teachings,” she said.

    On Dec 8, 2014, The Star published G25’s open letter calling for a review of syariah and civil law in line with the supremacy of the Federal Constitution.

    Originally consisting of 25 prominent Malays, most of whom are former high-ranking civil servants, the group now has 53 members and many supporters among other prominent figures.

     

    Source: www.thestar.com.my