Tag: Islam

  • Ismail Kassim: Grading Your Leaders

    Ismail Kassim: Grading Your Leaders

    Lately I have been thinking about the nature of political leadership.
    What is the difference, I ask myself, between good leaders and great leaders and between the former and those regarded as average, ‘’Ok, can-do or so-so’’ leaders?
    I think we can all agree that good leaders are good managers. They are relatively hard-working, efficient, and to some extent, able to deliver the promised material goods to the people.
    Great leaders, on the other hand, need not necessarily be good at managing, but they have a grand vision and the ability to inspire their people towards a common goal.
    They are leaders who are ready to sacrifice their lives for a cause they believe in. They become great only after emerging victorious after a struggle against great odds.
    History is replete with such great leaders: Mao, Nehru, Uncle Ho, Thatcher, Reagan, Mandela, Deng Xiaoping and our very own LKY. I will also put Mahathir and Putin, despite their shortcomings, in the same category.
    In short, the underlying common factor is struggle. It is only through a tough battle that a leader can stamp his authority and forge group cohesion and solidarity around him.
    There is no other way. Camaraderie cannot arise in the absence of a battle against deadly opponents and certainly not through devious means to achieve victory without fighting.
    How about good leaders who lived in stable, post-revolutionary times? Is there any hope of them becoming great?
    Of course – lots of hopes. One way is to create your own challenges through manipulating the internal or external landscape.
    Abe, I think, is on the way to greatness if his efforts to remould the Japanese mind after the traumas of WW11 succeed.
    Duterte and Modi too have a chance if they could last the distance in their valiant goal to reshape their nations.
    So good leaders can become great, but if they are not careful they can also be downgraded one rung down to the level of the ‘’so-so’’ leaders.
    Badawi is a fine example of a leader considered good initially but later downgraded. He had great dreams and goals, but he could not control the greedy warlords and also the religious misogynists in and out of his party. Under their combined onslaught, his vision evaporated into thin air.
    Cameron, after winning a second term, was on the road to greatness, but then he stumbled badly over the Brexit issue. After his defeat in the referendum and subsequent resignation, history will put him under the ‘’so-so’’ category.
    Other leaders who are currently classified as good will also meet the same fate as Cameron if they mishandle or spurn the challenges facing them.
    Actually, leaders who have to face tough but winnable challenges during their rule should consider themselves lucky. They do not have to manufacture a crisis. All they need is to brace themselves and rally their good-minded people to battle.
    But if they take the soft or easy option, shifting the goalpost and disqualifying their opponents through dubious constitutional manoeuvres, then they risk slipping from good to the ‘’so-so’’ category.
    Such ‘’so-so’’ leaders, of course, can still console themselves. At least they are one rung above the bottom group of rotten leaders; the corrupt who steal their people’s money to feed their family frenzied overseas shopping sprees and bribe or buy political support from friends and foes alike.
    There are so many of these rotten apples, near and far, that I don’t think it is necessary for me to mention any by name.
    Readers should not have any problems in identifying at least some of them. What, if in the process of dodging a fight, a good leader makes a monumental blunder, an error of judgement, with grave consequences for his people in the coming years?
    Will he just be demoted to ‘’so-so’’ or kick down two rungs to join the rotten lot? I will let history make that call.
    spurns greatness
    falls from good to rotten
    ah! what a fate
  • Madrasah Irsyad Principal To Students: Leave The Madrasah As Good Human Beings Who Contribute To Society

    Madrasah Irsyad Principal To Students: Leave The Madrasah As Good Human Beings Who Contribute To Society

    Quoted from Mr. Noor Isham Sanif (Principal Of Madrasah Irsyad Zuhri):

    “I don’t want you to leave Madrasah Irsyad with just a piece of paper qualification but I want you to leave this place having contributed to the society and with good characteristics”

    Bye Muhd Danial Husaini. Lucky of you to get this opportunity to contribute back to the society no matter how big or small it is and even if it means having to travel elswhere to do good. Alhamdullillah.

    contributing-to-society

    Ps/- Mana nak cari principal species macam ni kalau tidak di Madrasah Irsyad? The best learning institution for OUR COMMUNITY’s primary school education.

     

    Source: Mariah Amri

  • Gang Rape, Torture Claims As Rohingyas Flee Myanmar

    Gang Rape, Torture Claims As Rohingyas Flee Myanmar

    TEKNAF, Bangladesh: Horrifying stories of gang rape, torture and murder are emerging from among the thousands of desperate Rohingya migrants who have pushed into Bangladesh in the past few days to escape unfolding chaos in Myanmar.

    Up to 30,000 of the impoverished ethnic group have fled their homes, the United Nations says, after troops poured into the narrow strip where they live earlier this month.

    Bangladesh has resisted urgent international appeals to open its border to avert a humanitarian crisis, instead telling Myanmar it must do more to prevent the stateless Muslim minority from entering.

    The scale of human suffering was becoming clear Thursday, as desperate people like Mohammad Ayaz told how troops attacked his village and killed his pregnant wife.

    Cradling his two-year-old son, he said military men killed at least 300 men in the village market and gang-raped dozens of women before setting fire to around 300 houses, Muslim-owned shops and the mosque where he served as imam.

    “They shot dead my wife, Jannatun Naim. She was 25 and seven months pregnant. I took refuge at a canal with my two-year-old son, who was hit by a rifle butt,” Ayaz told AFP, pointing to a cut on the boy’s forehead.

    Ayaz sold his watch and shoes to pay for the journey and has taken shelter along with at least 200 of his neighbours at a camp for unregistered Rohingya refugees.

    ‘DEEP CONCERN’

    Many of those seeking shelter in Bangladesh say they have walked for days and used rickety boats to cross into the neighbouring country, where hundreds of thousands of registered Rohingya refugees have been living for decades.

    The Rohingya are loathed by many in majority Buddhist Myanmar who see them as illegal immigrants and call them “Bengali”, even though many have lived in Myanmar for generations.

    Most live in impoverished western Rakhine state, but are denied citizenship and smothered by restrictions on movement and work.

    As the crisis deepened, Bangladesh said late Wednesday it had summoned the Myanmar ambassador to express “deep concern”.

    “Despite our border guards’ sincere effort to prevent the influx, thousands of distressed Myanmar citizens including women, children and elderly people continue to cross (the) border into Bangladesh,” it said. “Thousands more have been reported to be gathering at the border crossing.”

    TORTURE AND RAPE

    Since the latest violence flared up, Bangladesh’s secular government has been under intense pressure to open its border to prevent a humanitarian disaster.

    Instead, Bangladesh border guards have intensified patrols and coast guards have deployed extra ships. Officials say they have stopped around a thousand Rohingya at the border since Monday.

    Farmer Deen Mohammad was among the thousands who evaded the patrols, sneaking into the Bangladeshi border town of Teknaf four days ago with his wife, two of their children and three other families.

    “They (Myanmar’s military) took my two boys, aged nine and 12 when they entered my village. I don’t know what happened to them,” Mohammad, 50, told AFP. “They took women in rooms and then locked them from inside. Up to 50 women and girls of our village were tortured and raped.”

    Mohammad said houses in his village were burned, echoing similar testimony from other recent arrivals.

    Human Rights Watch said Monday it had identified more than 1,000 houses in Rohingya villages that had been razed in northwestern Myanmar using satellite images.

    The Myanmar military has denied burning villages and even blamed the Rohingya themselves.

    Jannat Ara said she fled with neighbours after her father was arrested and her 17-year-old sister disappeared, she believes raped and killed by the army.

    “We heard that they tortured her to death. I don’t know what happened to my mother,” said Ara, who entered Bangladesh on Tuesday.

    Rohingya community leaders said hundreds of families had taken shelter in camps in the Bangladeshi border towns of Teknaf and Ukhia, many hiding for fear they would be sent them back to Myanmar.

    Police on Wednesday detained 70 Rohingya, including women and children, who they say they will send back across the border.

    “They handcuffed even young girls and children and then took them away with a view to pushing them back to Myanmar,” said one community leader who asked not to be named, adding they faced “certain death” if made to return.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsaia.com

  • Protests All Over Asia Against Myanmar’s Genocidal Persecution Of Rohingya Muslims

    Protests All Over Asia Against Myanmar’s Genocidal Persecution Of Rohingya Muslims

    DHAKA, Bangladesh — Thousands of Bangladeshis marched in the capital’s streets Friday to protest the persecution of Rohingya Muslims in Burma, one of several similar rallies in the region.

    Chanting “Stop killing Rohingya Muslims,” they marched in Dhaka as violence in Burma’s Rakhine state escalated, forcing thousands to leave their homes.

    The protesters from several Islamic groups burned an effigy of Burma leader Aung San Suu Kyi and a flag of Burma. They carried banners reading “Open border to save the Rohingya.” Bangladesh’s southeast borders Burma.

    Organizers said some 10,000 protesters joined the rally in Dhaka. Smaller protests occurred in Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand.

    Also, rights group Amnesty International asked Bangladesh not to forcibly send fleeing Rohingya back to Burma.

    Up to 500,000 undocumented Rohingya have been living in Bangladesh after arriving from Burma in waves since the 1970s. Some 33,000 registered Rohingya refugees are lodged in two camps in southern Cox’s Bazar district.

    Local media reported that a few thousand Rohingya Muslims have entered Bangladesh this week with the help of smugglers, but authorities didn’t confirm that.

    Maj. Gen. Abul Hossain, director general of the Bangladesh Border Guard, said on Friday that “only some” arrived by boats.

    On Thursday, Bangladeshi border guards did not allow at least a dozen boats carrying Rohingya to enter Bangladesh, said Lt. Col. Abu Jar Al Jahid, a commanding officer of the border agency in Cox’s Bazar’s Teknaf area.

    Amnesty International condemned the persecution of Rohingya Muslims by Burma and Bangladesh’s unwillingness to accept them.

    “The Rohingya are being squeezed by the callous actions of both the [Burma] and Bangladesh authorities. Fleeing collective punishment in Burma, they are being pushed back by the Bangladeshi authorities. Trapped between these cruel fates, their desperate need for food, water and medical care is not being addressed,” said Champa Patel, Amnesty International’s South Asia director.

    Burma’s security forces are mounting indiscriminate reprisal attacks against Rohingya in response to an Oct. 9 assault on three border posts that killed nine border officers, the rights group said in a statement on Thursday.

    The group said it has heard accounts of Burma’s security forces, led by the military, firing at villagers from helicopter gunships, torching hundreds of homes, carrying out arbitrary arrests and raping women and girls.

     

    Source: www.usatoday.com

  • Pelajar Madrasah Irysad Zuhri, Madrasah Alsagoff Al Arabiah Muncul Tiga Pelajar Terbaik Dari Madrasah

    Pelajar Madrasah Irysad Zuhri, Madrasah Alsagoff Al Arabiah Muncul Tiga Pelajar Terbaik Dari Madrasah

    Pelajar dari Madrasah Irsyad Zuhri, Luqman Jun’En Mohd Sa’ad, meraih agregat tertinggi keseluruhan bagi pelajar madrasah sebanyak 267.

    Luqman mendapat 3A* dan 1A.

    Gred 3A* diperolehi bagi bahasa Inggeris, bahasa Melayu dan Matematik, manakala 1A untuk mata pelajaran Sains.

    Beliau juga merupakan pelajar terbaik Madrasah Irsyad bagi Peperiksaan Sekolah Rendah Pengajian Islam tahun ini.

    PELAJAR KEDUA TERBAIK – AHMAD AN-NAFEES

    Seorang lagi pelajar Madrash Irsyad, iaitu Ahmad An-Nafees Mohd Najib, muncul sebagai pelajar kedua terbaik dari sektor madrasah dalam PSLE kali ini, setelah dia mencatat agregat 265.

    Dia juga mendapat 3A* dan 1A.

    3A* dalah bagi bahasa Melayu, Matematik dan Sains. Gred A pula adalah bagi bahasa Inggeris.

    Madrasah Irsyad mengekalkan prestasinya dengan menghasilkan 13 pelajar yang menduduki 10 tangga teratas di kalangan pelajar madrasah dengan agregat terbaik.

    AGREGAT TERTINGGI MADRASAH ALSAGOFF DALAM MASA 8 TAHUN

    Pelajar Hanina Rehan menjadi pelajar madrasah ketiga terbaik dari kalangan pelajar madrasah, selain dinobatkan pelajar terbaik Madrasah Alsagoff Al Arabiah.

    Hanina berkongsi kedudukan dengan dua lagi pelajar madrasah Irsyad.

    Dia mendapat agregat 263, paling tinggi pernah dicapai madrasah tersebut sejak PSLE diwajibkan ke atas pelajar madrasah pada tahun 2008.

    Hanina, anak keempat dari enam adik beradik mendapat gred A* untuk bahasa Inggeris dan bahasa Melayu, gred A untuk Sains, dan B untuk Matematik.

    SEMUA 4 MADRASAH PENUHI UKUR TARA PSLE

    Kesemua madrasah melepasi ukur tara agregat PSLE yang ditetapkan MOE, iaitu 179 mata agregat, untuk membolehkan madrasah terus mengambil masuk pelajar darjah satu.

    Malah kesemua madrasah mencapai purata agregat lebih tinggi berbanding tahun lepas.

    97.6% pelajar madrasah layak ke sekolah menengah.

    Tahun ini seramai 255 pelajar madrasah menduduki PSLE.

     

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

deneme bonusu