Tag: Dr Fatris Bakaram

  • Mufti: Jangan Ragu-Ragu Minta Bantuan Pihak Berwibawa

    Mufti: Jangan Ragu-Ragu Minta Bantuan Pihak Berwibawa

    MASYARAKAT Melayu/Islam tidak harus teragak-agak dalam usaha mendapatkan bantuan pihak tertentu yang lebih arif menangani ajaran radikal dan ideologi pelampau, kata Mufti Dr Mohamed Fatris Bakaram.

    “Walaupun susah, kita tidak harus berasa berat untuk bekerjasama dengan pihak berkuasa dan bersama Kumpulan Pemulihan Keagamaan (RRG) untuk menyelamatkan orang tersayang,” ujar beliau.

    Dalam satu kenyataan semalam, Dr Fatris berkata beliau amat terganggu dengan berita penangkapan terkini, bahawa “seorang yang begitu muda boleh terpengaruh dengan kepercayaan yang keji, dan sedia mensia-siakan hidupnya”.

    “Saya ingin menggesa masyarakat agar benar-benar mengambil serius isu radikal sendiri ini,” ujarnya.

    Masyarakat perlu menghayati pengajaran daripada kes ini, lebihlebih lagi dalam bulan Ramadan yang mulia ini.

    Masyarakat telah sentiasa digesa agar mengamalkan amal maaruf dan nahi mungkar – mengajak kepada kebaikan dan mencegah kejahatan.

    Ini bermakna memupuk dan melakukan semua perkara baik dan menolak perbuatan dan kepercayaan sangat keji yang dipupuk ISIS kerana ia tidak mempunyai asas dalam ajaran Islam.

    Hal ini harus dilakukan semua dalam masyarakat, sama ada sebagai saudara, bapa dan ibu, kawan dan rakan sekerja.

    Namun, masyarakat juga perlu tahu bahawa ia tidak boleh berdiri sendiri dalam usaha untuk menolak kejahatan dan mencapai rahmah dan belas kasihan.

    “Kita berdiri bersama-sama sebagai sebuah masyarakat, bersedia untuk membantu antara satu sama lain, dan memanfaatkan kekuatan masing-masing,” ujar Dr Fatris.

    Masyarakat tidak mampu kehilangan satu nyawa pun kepada ajaran pelampau dan eksklusif, katanya.


    Orang ramai yang memerlukan bantuan boleh menghubungi Muis di talian 6359-1199, Kumpulan Pemulihan Keagamaan (RRG) di talian 1800-774-7747 atau menerusi aplikasi mudah alih RRG.

     

    Source: www.beritaharian.sg

     

     

  • Mufti Fatris Bakaram: Ikut Contoh Nabi Muhammad Dalam Menangani Cabaran

    Mufti Fatris Bakaram: Ikut Contoh Nabi Muhammad Dalam Menangani Cabaran

    [Sewaktu] di Universiti al-Azhar, saya kembali dibawa untuk mempelajari sirah Nabi sekali lagi. Namun tidak lagi hanya dalam bentuk pembentangan fakta. Kami dibawa untuk membanding sumber-sumber sejarah yang berbeza, meneliti hujah dan dalil yang menjadi sumber pemberitaan sejarah yang ada, berfikiran kritikal dan analitikal terhadap peristiwa-peristiwa yang dikhabarkan, mengkaji sebab dan akibat dari setiap peristiwa, dan mengenalpasti pengajaran yang dapat dirumuskan daripadanya.

    Kini, mungkin kerana faktor umur, atau mungkin kerana pembacaan-pembacaan saya, atau mungkin kerana pengalaman selama suku abad terlibat di dalam pelbagai isu agama di dalam kehidupan masyarakat, saya merasakan bahawa semakin saya membaca tentang sirah Nabi saw semakin saya terpesona dengan perwatakan baginda.

    Menelusuri pelbagai peristiwa tegang dan peperangan yang banyak terjadi sepanjang sejarah baginda, saya dapati faktor konflik tidak lagi menjadi titik pemerhatian pusat yang memenuhi atau mempengaruhi minda saya. Yang lebih terserlah kepada saya kini ialah keunggulan keperibadian Nabi saw dalam peranannya sebagai pembimbing dan pemimpin di sebalik segala cabaran yang dihadapi. Baginda tetap optimistik dan berfikiran positif walaupun ada kalanya berhadapan dengan keadaan yang sangat getir. Baginda tidak pernah berputus asa menginginkan kebaikan walaupun untuk orang yang mengimpikan kesengsaraan terhadap baginda. Keanggunan akhlak mulia baginda tidak pernah pudar mahupun luntur biarpun tekanan demi tekanan yang diterima seakan-akan melenyapkan segala harapan yang ada. Di sebalik keteguhan jiwa yang dimiliki, kelembutan budi dan kehalusan bicara baginda tidak pernah berubah walaupun masa banyak mengubah apa yang ada di sekelilingnya. Jauh daripada sifat tergopoh-gapah ketika berusaha mengatasi krisis yang melanda, baginda malah senantiasa tenang mengatur strategi dengan kematangan serta kebijaksanaan yang menjadi contoh tauladan sepanjang zaman.

    Inilah rahmah yang sebenarnya.
    Iman tidak pernah dipohonkan untuk menjadi payung bagi mengelakkan insan daripada basah dihujani ujian Tuhan. Sebaliknya, iman digenggam bagaikan azimat untuk meneguhkan jiwa dalam berani menghadapi apapun cabaran yang menerpa, dengan keluhuran akhlak tidak tergugat dan kelembutan budi bicara tetap terjaga.

    Sesekali tercubit hati terasa derita apabila ribut datang menjelma. Namun seorang mukmin tidak akan patah semangatnya. Kerana di sebalik kesedarannya bahawa dia hanyalah makhluk yang lemah, ada Tuhan yang diimaninya sebagai sumber kekuatan dan tempat pergantungan. Yang tiada iman menghiasi dada pula akan senantiasa mendabik dadanya, menyombong dan menyangka bahawa dialah yang hebat dan kuat berhadapan dengan apapun taufan mahupun gempa. Dia terlupa, pokok besar yang paling megah batangnya pun, akan mudah tumbang jika akarnya rapuh.

    Imam al-Bukhari meriwayatkan sabda baginda Nabi:

    ‎مَثَلُ المُؤْمِنِ كَالخَامَةِ مِنَ الزَّرْعِ، تُفَيِّئُهَا الرِّيحُ مَرَّةً، وَتَعْدِلُهَا مَرَّةً، وَمَثَلُ المُنَافِقِ كَالأَرْزَةِ، لاَ تَزَالُ حَتَّى يَكُونَ انْجِعَافُهَا مَرَّةً وَاحِدَةً»

    Bermaksud: Perumpamaan orang beriman adalah umpama tumbuhan yang berbatang lembut, ada ketikanya condong ditiup angin dan ada ketikanya pula kembali menegak. Sementara perumpamaan orang munafik pula adalah umpama pohon kayu yang berbatang besar, tetap keras menegak sehinggalah tercabut samasekali (dibantai ribut).

    Salam bersambut mengundang ramah
    Menyahut sungguh cinta yang jatuh
    Pekerti yang lembut bukannya lemah
    Yang besar angkuh menanti runtuh

     

    Source: Fatris Bakaram

  • Lunch With Sumiko – When The Going Gets Tough, Muft Fatris Bakaram Writes Poetry

    Lunch With Sumiko – When The Going Gets Tough, Muft Fatris Bakaram Writes Poetry

    My lunch with the Mufti of Singapore is held in the shadow of the Sultan Mosque.

    I’m early at The Landmark, a restaurant at the Village Hotel Bugis overlooking the swimming pool.

    It is just past 1pm and I’m suddenly aware of a different sound in the air. Ah, I realise, the call to prayer, or azan.

    Dr Fatris Bakaram, the Mufti, arrives soon after. I nod and wave my hello.

    He’s accompanied by Mr Zainul Abidin Ibrahim, director of strategic engagement at the Islamic Religious Council of Singapore, otherwise known by its Malay acronym Muis.

    A mufti is an Islamic scholar who helms the religious leadership in a Muslim community. He interprets Islamic law and provides spiritual guidance to the community, which numbers about 500,000 here.

    The Office of the Mufti is part of Muis, a statutory board under the Ministry of Culture, Community and Youth and supervised by the Minister-in-charge of Muslim Affairs.

    Among his many duties, the Mufti chairs the committee that issues fatwas, which are Islamic legal rulings.

    His office also issues Friday sermons, gives direction for programmes in mosques and Islamic education, and advises the Government on Islamic matters.

    Dr Fatris, 47, became Singapore’s third Mufti in 2011. He has also been an ustaz, or religious teacher, since the 1990s, and still conducts a class at a mosque every Sunday.

    I ask what it’s like to be in the public eye.

    “I think I manage to live with it, although at times it has caused a bit of discomfort to my wife,” he says with a laugh. He lets on that these days, she would rather he wait for her in the car when they go to the market and shops around their home in Yishun.

    The Mufti comes from a family of religious teachers. His father, Bakaram Osman, was an ustaz in the Pasir Panjang village Dr Fatris grew up in, and his mother is a housewife. He is the third of four children, and an elder brother and younger sister are religious teachers.

    His father, who died in 1995, was a major influence in his life. “He always emphasised the need to be calm in the face of challenges, and the importance of appreciating different points of view even if we disagree with them,” he says.

    “That shaped me as a person. Some of his students say they see his reflection in me. I am a person who does not vent. Even when times get tough, I have to be tough in my thoughts, in my thinking, in the process of coming to a decision, but in my interaction, Fatris is Fatris.”

    He studied at Pasir Panjang Primary School before switching to Madrasah Aljunied. In 1988, he left for Egypt’s prestigious Al-Azhar University to study Islamic theology, returning in 1993.

    After he returned, he taught at a madrasah before joining Muis. He later became a principal of a madrasah, did his master’s in education in Malaysia, and then went back to Muis where he was manager of the Office of the Mufti.

    In 2004, he was told by Muis that he would succeed Mufti Syed Isa Semait, who had been mufti since 1972 and had postponed his retirement several times.

    To prepare for his new role, he went to the University of Birmingham in Britain to do his doctorate in Islamic law.

    He took part in a week-long multi-faith conference in Germany and got to know Jewish rabbis and Christian leaders. “We had meals together, we openly discussed our different faiths. That’s when I saw the human side of religion rather than just the theological part.”

    A large part of Dr Fatris’ job is chairing the fatwa committee, and in recent years, fatwas have been issued on topics such as organ transplants.

    Fatwas, he explains, are different from religious advisories. For example, whether it is okay for Muslims to wish Christians “Merry Christmas” is not a fatwa but an advisory. (For the record, it is okay.)

    A recent fatwa he took satisfaction in shaping was on adoptions. Muslim couples who wanted to adopt or foster had some questions on the permissibility of adopting girls, as they understood that there are guidelines that a male and a female should not be in closed premises when they do not have a family relationship.

    The committee studied the Quran, prophetic precedents and sought expert opinions on child and family psychology. It concluded that no child should be denied the love and care of a family. An adopted child, regardless of gender, should be treated as part of the family.

    Muis explained its decision to religious teachers and they understood and supported the fatwa, Dr Fatris says. He is happy to see more couples coming forward to adopt and foster children.

    A few days before our interview, terror group Islamic State in Iraq and Syria claimed responsibility for an attack in Berlin that killed 12 people. I wonder if it would be insensitive to raise the issue of terrorism, but he is unperturbed when I bring it up.

    To a large degree, he says, Muslims in Singapore are very enlightened compared with those in many other countries.

    “Only a small number of individuals are attracted to deviant teachings,” he says, and points out how most Muslims will speak out if they attend classes by teachers who “get carried away” or espouse radical or extremist views.

    “Muslims in Singapore are able to differentiate between what true Islam should be, how it should be practised in Singapore, and which practices would be inappropriate here. So I take comfort in that.”

    Does he feel the need to defend Islam each time an attack happens?

    “I think we have come to a stage now where it’s not fruitful to continuously keep making statements, because it doesn’t help. We need to go beyond this,” he says firmly.

    The best way Muslims here can help to dispel the idea that Islam is a troubled religion is to be a community that is productive, which contributes to the country and upholds the values and principles of peace, he says.

    I ask what’s the most difficult part of being mufti and his reply is swift: Managing expectations.

    There are people who say the Government should do more to support Muis, but there’s also another group that wants the Government to do less as they want Muis to be independent.

    There are some who want the Mufti to be more visible in mosques, yet others say it’s inappropriate for the Mufti to be conducting classes in the mosque because of his position.

    There’s also the matter of Friday sermons. A group in Muis – including outside experts – prepares the sermons which are sent to mosques. While they sometimes check with him on what to say, he usually leaves it to them because “I want my officers to be empowered”. The imams can make adjustments to the sermons while keeping the core message.

    There are those who think it is not Muis’ job to write the sermons, but others want Muis to continue doing so as they feel Singapore is too small for different mosques to be preaching different messages.

    He has concluded that the key in managing expectations is integrity.

    “In the midst of managing those expectations, really building up your integrity is important. You just have to convince people with action, with your programmes, deliver results.”

    One result he likes to cite is Singapore’s mosque-building programme, which is wholly funded by the Muslim community.

    When Muis started the programme in 1975, there was scepticism. Today, there are 25 new, multi-function satellite mosques, many not just beautiful but also buzzing with programmes for all segments of the community, including the larger Singapore society.

    Dr Fatris points out how in many parts of the Muslim world, mosques are used only as a place of ritual and worship.

    Singapore’s mosques are also progressive. Dr Fatris relates how a visiting female Muslim community leader from Britain was surprised to learn how mosques here have prayer spaces for women, and how many of the activities are driven by women.

    “She was shocked. She asked, ‘What else?’ I said, ‘In Singapore we have female scholars, female religious teachers who will conduct lectures and we males will just sit down and listen to them and get instruction from them, not only from the males.’ She said, ‘Are you sure?’

    “It’s something that they cannot imagine in their part of their world – that Muslim men would be able to listen to a female preacher talking about religion.”

    Still, being Mufti has its challenges, and to relax, he writes Malay poetry, a passion since secondary school.

    One poem is about his dreams for his daughter and three sons. They are aged 22, 21, 19 and 16 and studying. Some lines go: “One by one, you will go on to build your own lives/Fly into the clouds without worry/Because God’s sky is your umbrella/And my prayers are your wings”.

    He writes about “anything”, he says. “Sometimes I write about life in a kampung, sometimes I write about children, about family, about religion, about society.”

    He adds self-deprecatingly: “Kampung boy, sometimes get very sentimental, romanticising about the good old days… something that my wife can read but cannot understand. My wife is totally a city person, she was raised in Toa Payoh.”

    He used to enjoy handicraft too, but “now in an HDB flat, how can you knock-knock on wood without disturbing others”, he chuckles.

    Our lunch has taken us to nearly 3pm. We decline an offer for dessert but get tea.

    Before we go, I ask if there’s anything he wants to add. He laughs and says he has shared a lot already. Then, turning serious, he adds that there is something very important he wants to talk about – the influence former mufti Syed Isa has had on his life.

    He tells me that Mr Syed Isa was mufti at a time when he didn’t have the luxury of having a team of officers behind him, but he was very confident, courageous and ahead of his time.

    He cites an example of how, back in the 1970s, Mr Syed Isa decided to base Hari Raya dates on scientific calculations rather than ritual visibility sightings. “It was very, very tough for the people to accept that but he just believed in it.”

    Today, he and the former mufti – now 78 – still have long chats whenever Mr Syed Isa is in Muis.

    Do you see yourself serving as long as your predecessor’s 40 years, I ask.

    “I do not know whether I can stay or whether I should stay that long,” says Dr Fatris. “Sometimes it gets tough.”

    But, he adds with a charming smile: “Writing poetry is a way for me to release that stress without venting my anger. It’s an outlet for me.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Yaacob Ibrahim: MUIS Kumpul $300 Dari Setiap Jemaah Singapura Untuk Tampung Kos Misi Haji

    Yaacob Ibrahim: MUIS Kumpul $300 Dari Setiap Jemaah Singapura Untuk Tampung Kos Misi Haji

    Dalam jawapan bertulisnya pula, Dr Yaacob berkata Muis mengumpulkan $300 dari setiap jemaah untuk menampung kos operasi misi Haji.

    Ini termasuk menyediakan khidmat perubatan dan kebajikan kepada para jemaah.

    Bayaran itu termasuk dalam harga pakej haji.

    Dr Yaacob menerangkan, yuran $300 yang dikumpulkan Muis dari setiap jemaah, tertera sebagai ‘Kos Perubatan dan Pentadbiran’ dalam harga pakej haji yang ditawarkan oleh pihak GSA.

    Menurutnya, yuran itu membentuk sebahagian kecil daripada harga keseluruhan pakej haji yang dibayar setiap jemaah iaitu antara $7,000 hingga $18,000.

    Bagaimanapun Dr Yaacob menambah, jumlah yuran itu sahaja tidak menampung sepenuhnya kos Muis untuk perkhidmatan perubatan dan kebajikan, iaitu sebanyak $700 bagi setiap jemaah, sejak 3 tahun lalu.

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Mufti Fatris Bakaram: Apa Cara Yang Terbaik Untuk Tangani Ajaran Ekstremis?

    Mufti Fatris Bakaram: Apa Cara Yang Terbaik Untuk Tangani Ajaran Ekstremis?

    Muqaddimah Pertama: “Ibn Taimiyyah punca pemikiran ekstremis”

    Muqaddimah Kedua: “Saya memiliki dan membaca beberapa kitab karangan Ibn Taimiyyah”

    Natijah: “Maka, saya seorang ekstremis, atau penyokong golongan ekstremis”

    Saya rasa secara umum ada tiga pilihan yang boleh diambil oleh golongan agamawan.

    Pilihan Pertama: Sokong logika ini. Bawa dan bentangkan dalil bagi mempertahankan setiap satu dari Muqaddimah Pertamanya, Muqaddimah Keduanya dan Natijahnya. Berhujah membela “kebenaran” keseluruhan struktur logika ini.

    Pilihan Kedua: Dengan menggunakan kerangka dan proses mental yang sama, tolak logika ini dan tegaskan “kebatilan”nya, dan bentangkan dalil untuk mempertikaikan Muqaddimah Pertamanya, Muqaddimah Keduanya dan Natijahnya.

    (Pilihan Pertama dan Pilihan Kedua ini tidak sempurna jika yang memilihnya tidak “masuk gelanggang” untuk berlawan hujah)

    Pilihan Ketiga: Bersama masyarakat mengatur langkah seiring sekata untuk memperkasakan keupayaan intelek, agar umat ini tidak lagi terus-terusan terperuk di dalam pola pemikiran naif dan simplistik di dalam membincangkan isu-isu kritikal seperti ekstremisme dan terorisme.

    Saya pilih yang ketiga ini.

    Bagaimana?
    Ada teman-teman asatizah yang mahu bersama saya?

    Cuma perlu saya ingatkan, pilihan ketiga ini:
    -tidak mudah
    -memenatkan
    -mengambil masa yang lama
    -tiada jaminan berhasil sebelum kita tutup mata
    -sering mengundang kata-kata yang mengguris hati
    -tidak glamour

    Teman-teman asatizah, sanggup?

     

    Source: Fatris Bakaram