Tag: Christian

  • Salah Kah Amalan Hari Ibu Jika Ianya Mengeratkan Lagi Talian Antara Ibu Dan Anak?

    Salah Kah Amalan Hari Ibu Jika Ianya Mengeratkan Lagi Talian Antara Ibu Dan Anak?

    Setiap kali ada sambutan-sambutan tertentu, setiap kali juga timbul perbalahan dan perbezaan pendapat di kalangan masyarakat. Yang sambut dengan yang tidak sambut menengahkan hujah masing-masing dengan pilihan-pilihan yg dibuat.

    Bukankah perbezaan pendapat adalah satu Rahmah? Cuma nya bagaimana kita mengendalikan perbezaan pendapat tersebut asal yg memberi hukum jgn sampai kelihatan sikap “holier than thou” dan hampir kepada sikap memperlekehkan orang lain…Jaga Hati!…

    Yang nyata bukan hanya semalan atau pada hari tertentu, dari awal tahun pun, dari seminggu lepas pun dan pada hari-hari yang akan datang pun, insyaAllah, kita lihat masyarakat setempat menyayangi ibu mereka. Bawa keluar jalan, meraikan mereka, menggembirakan mereka, menyanjungi jasa mereka…Salah ke? Bukankah ini satu sunnah?…

    Saya tak fikir mereka melakukan aktiviti bersama ibu-ibu mereka atas dasar ikut-ikutan budaya Kristian, nauzubillah…

    Yang nyata saya suka dan ramai yg suka melihat gambar-gambar gembira, ucapan-ucapan dan saling doa-mendoakan antara ibu dan anak. Salah ke?…Bukankah mendoakan ibumu, ibumu, ibumu satu sunnah?…

    Teruskan untuk meraikan ibumu bukan hanya semalam tapi pada hari-hari seterusnya…Saya pasti anda akan melakukannya…

    Yang suka boleh Like. Yg tak suka…tak perlu kata apa-apa.

    Selamat Hari Isnin!

     

    Source: Suriati Abdullah

  • Amos Yee Out On Bail, $20,000 Put Up By Youth And Family Counsellor Vincent Law

    Amos Yee Out On Bail, $20,000 Put Up By Youth And Family Counsellor Vincent Law

    Teenage YouTuber Amos Yee was back at the State Courts on Tuesday (Apr 21) for a bail review. He had been remanded at Changi Prison since last Friday, after no bail was posted for him following a pre-trial conference that day.

    The 16-year-old appeared in court handcuffed and dressed in a purple jumpsuit just after 4pm, and looked calm. Three lawyers, Alfred Dodwell, Chong Jia Hao from Dodwell & Co LLC, and Ervin Tan from Michael Hwang Chambers LLC told the court they would be acting for Yee pro bono. Mr Dodwell said a bailor was on the way, but offered no further details.

    Yee’s parents were at the State Courts on Tuesday, as well as a few other members of the public who said they were there to show moral support for the teen. Activist Jolovan Wham and was spotted at the Court as well.

    Yee’s pre-trial conference has been moved forward to Apr 30, 3pm.

    He was charged with multiple offences on Mar 31, after posting a video which contained disparaging remarks against Christians. On Apr 14, Yee posted on his blog and made two Facebook posts asking for public donations. Doing this meant he flouted his initial bail conditions – which disallowed him to post materials online.

    The Court on Friday changed the police bail to a court bail, and set new conditions for bail such as making the YouTube video private and having to report to an Investigation Officer at Bedok Police Station every day at 9am.

    YEE BAILED OUT BY YOUTH COUNSELLOR

    Youth Councillor Posts Bail For Amos Yee

    At about 6.10pm, Yee was brought to the bail centre, still handcuffed and with ankle restraints, accompanied by more than five officers. Youth and family counsellor Vincent Law posted bail for him.

    Mr Law said that he came forward to post the S$20,000 bail as he is a Christian, and wanted to show he was not offended by Yee’s posts. “It seems the charges say he made disparaging remarks about Christianity. I’m a Christian and I’m stepping up to say I’m not offended,” he said, adding that he, too, is a parent.

    The 51-year-old, who is not related to the Yee family, hopes that Yee will also be willing to be counselled by him, and that he may respond better to a third party.

    Yee was released at about 7pm.

    YEE AGREED TO PULL DOWN OFFENSIVE POSTS: LAWYER

    Lawyer Alfred Dodwell Acting For Amos Yee

    Mr Dodwell is on the board of directors for socio-political website The Independent.Sg. Asked about his pro-bono contribution to the case, he told Channel NewsAsia: “Because he’s a 16-year-old boy and everybody requires and needs legal representation. Needless to say, I have been following these news and I learnt that he’s not had any lawyer come forward to represent him and it is not easy for anybody to manoeuvre through the criminal justice system let alone a 16-year-old.

    “We may not agree with him on what he has posted… (but) if it is a crime it has to be proven in the court of law and it needs some level of representation, that’s what we’re doing in this case.”

    Mr Dodwell said he had yet to meet with Yee to “have a discussion with him on where he wants to go with this”, but that his client has been cooperative so far, having “immediately agreed” to pull down the offensive posts.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

     

  • Petaling Jaya Residents Protest Outside Church Building, Say Cross Challenging Islam

    Petaling Jaya Residents Protest Outside Church Building, Say Cross Challenging Islam

    About 50 residents gathered outside a new church in Taman Medan, Petaling Jaya today to demand that the cross affixed to the house of worship be removed as it was “challenging Islam”, The Star Online reported today.

    According to the news portal, the locals demonstrated peacefully during the church service at 10am for the cross to be taken down.

    The protesters said the presence of a cross in a Muslim-majority area posed a challenge to the religion and could sway the faith of the youth, The Star Online reported.

    The news portal reported a village leader later pacified the group and spoke with the church’s priest on their behalf.

    “After meeting with the priest, the church agreed to take down the cross by next Sunday. If they have the authority to run, we cannot stop it,” the group’s leader, Datuk Abdullah Abu Bakar, was quoted as saying.

    “But we ask out of concern, being a Malay area, that they take down the cross.”

    Police reportedly arrived on the scene at 10.30am to manage the crowd, just as the Sunday service was ending.

    The Star Online reported that the cross was taken down by church leaders a few hours after the protest.

    This was not the first time a protest was held against a church.

    On November 2, 2014, Muslim NGO, Pertubuhan Sahabat organised a demonstration to protest the construction of the four-storey Praise Emmanuel Assembly church in Petaling Jaya.

    The NGO said there were already three churches in the vicinity, adding it was not appropriate in a neighbourhood that counted 70% of its residents as Muslim.

    The group had demonstrated at the church building site at Jalan PJS 8/9, saying that building a four-storey church in the area would be an insult to the Muslims living there.

     

    Source: www.themalaysianinsider.com

  • Sabah Christian Angry That Daughter Was Converted To Islam Without His Knowledge

    Sabah Christian Angry That Daughter Was Converted To Islam Without His Knowledge

    PAPAR, Feb 8 — Sitting on the porch of his wooden stilt house, Sabahan rubber tapper Jilius Yapoo’s eyes welled up with tears when he recalled his shock earlier this week when he saw his 16-year-old daughter in a tudung (Muslim headscarf) for the first time.

    The staunch Christian dusun said he had gone to his daughter’s hostel to take her home for the weekend when the teenager emerged garbed in the tudung, looking upset.

    “She was wearing the tudung and showed it to me. I teared up and she looked at me and cried.

    “She told me she had converted into Islam and could not back out now. I was absolutely speechless,” said Jilius, choking back tears.

    The father of eight from the Kaiduan village in Kawang lodged a police report on Wednesday after being told by his relative that his daughter was seen in the Muslim headscarf at her school SMK Kinarut.

    He said he had earlier tried to take the matter to the school’s Parents Teachers Association meeting but was allegedly rebuffed and told to calm down.

    Jilius said he had also tried to see his daughter the day of the meeting, but was not able to.

    “It was only two days later that I went to pick her up from school to take her home for the weekend when I got to see her, but she said she would not be coming home this week,” the distraught father lamented to Malay Mail Online when met at his home yesterday.

    “She is only 16, underaged, and should not need to make a decision like this. Even if she had willingly declared the words (shahadah, the Islamic declaration of belief Allah and Muhammad), and wanted to convert, she and the school should have informed me,” said Jilius.

    Malay Mail Online had on Thursday reported that authorities are investigating the alleged “Islamisation” of a Christian student in SMK Kinarut near here by the school hostel’s warden.

    It is believed that the school’s former hostel warden had incited the conversion of the student with the recital of the shahadah, forcing her into embracing Islam despite being “underaged”.

    According to the student’s mother, Jaina Yassin, her daughter had a lot of Muslim friends in school but never mentioned anything about changing her faith.

    “We used to pray as a family with our pastor, who came to the house sometimes. When we heard she was wearing a headscarf and had converted, our hearts just sank.

    “How can this happen?

    “We have three other children studying in the same school and I fear this might happen to them as well,” she said, adding that the church pastor had suggested they consider transferring her out of the school.

    The family, with Jilius as the sole breadwinner, earns a small income of up to RM350 a month.

    The money is used to support the ten people living in their home, which is in the rural West coast of Sabah.

    The village consists mostly of subsistence farmers and there is no telephone reception or television available, although there is electricity and running water.

    “I sent her to school for her to learn and get an education. Not to be converted into another religion.

    “As long as she is underaged and under my care, she cannot make this decision. When she reaches the age of consent, then it is up to her,” said Jilius.

    Village safety and security committee chairman Michael Frederick said it was unusual for the school to allow a religious conversion without asking for the student’s parent’s permission.

    “Usually they notify parents just to take their students out from school and a letter needs to be produced and signed by parents and acknowledged by the committee.

    “We are not against freedom to choose religion but I hope the authorities will look into this and ensure it was carried out properly in the future, without ill motives from the school, and with parents consent.

    “We cannot have students going to school one religion and coming out another,” said Michael.

    Sabah police have said that the case has been referred to the state religious authorities for further action.

    State Education Department director Datuk Jame Alip when contacted said that the matter is now in the hands of the police. He declined further comment.

    Christian groups in Sabah have recently cried foul to alleged furtive attempts to convert Bumiputera followers of the faith to Islam.

    In January 2014, a group of indigenous Sabahan villagers from the remote Pitas district were reportedly deceived into embracing Islam for RM100 by a Muslim welfare group.

    Sabah Council of Churches as well as the Roman Catholic Church of Sabah had also complained officially to the Education Ministry last year of a covert ploy to convert under-aged Christian students at the residential Labuan Matriculation College to Islam.

     

    Source: www.themalaymailonline.com

  • UMNO Lodges Police Reort Over Malay-Language Christian Books Found Among Flood-Relief Items In Kelantan

    UMNO Lodges Police Reort Over Malay-Language Christian Books Found Among Flood-Relief Items In Kelantan

    KUALA LUMPUR — UMNO has lodged a police report over Malay-language Christian books that were found among flood relief items in Kelantan, claiming they could threaten the Muslim faith.

    News website Utusan Online reported today (Feb 5) that the books titled “Isa Al-Masih Kalimatullah” (Jesus Christ the Word of God) and “Kisah Tentang Yesus Kristus” (The Story of Jesus Christ), which contained cartoons, were distributed by a non-governmental organisation (NGO) on January 21, together with food items and daily necessities to residents at Kampung Slow Machang in Pasir Mas.

    The news report, however, did not mention if the Christian books contained the word “Allah”, the Arabic word for God that has been the contention of a few court cases involving a government ban and seizures of materials containing the word.

    Muslim coalition Pembela said last month that the Catholic Church must no longer use the Malay language in its Herald weekly as continuing to do so was to challenge the Federal Court decision that upheld a government ban on the paper from describing God as “Allah”.

    Christian compact discs (CDs) and books containing the word “Allah” were confiscated from a Sabahan at the Kuala Lumpur International 2 airport in Sepang last October and returned to him about two weeks later.

    Two cases involving the right of Christians to use the word “Allah” remain pending in court, which are Sarawakian Jill Ireland Lawrence Bill’s suit against the Home Ministry for confiscating her Christian CDs and the Sabah Sidang Injil Borneo church’s suit over the seizure of children’s books.

     

    Source: www.themalaymailonline.com