Tag: Islam

  • Compassionate GrabCar Driver Rushed My Sick Son To KKH Safely, Refused Fare

    Compassionate GrabCar Driver Rushed My Sick Son To KKH Safely, Refused Fare

    Today we had to rush our boy to KK due to high fever, and came this kind soul from Grab whom patiently brought us to our destination safely.

    We were so touched by his care and concern about our son throughout the journey. Were really grateful for his high sense of morality. Reached KK and he quickly opened the door for my son and wife, and what really surprised us that he don’t want to accept the fare. We then insist so much as he is making a living and we can afford it, but he just declined even more. He left with saying “Treat this as an angbao for your baby, and may he get well soon with great health.”

    At this point, We were speechless and couldn’t thank him more. (Okay we felt like crying… seriously)

    In todays world we do still see good people around us and we are blessed to have him in this small part of our life. The amount may not be much but His little action is far greater in our hearts. This is something which we ourselves are lacking and we should learn from in the act of giving.

    ‪#‎grab‬
    ‪#‎grabcar‬
    ‪#‎actofgiving‬

     

    Source: Mohamed Shahreza

  • Ummi Abdullah: Jangan Putus Usaha Untuk Dunia Dan Akhirat

    Ummi Abdullah: Jangan Putus Usaha Untuk Dunia Dan Akhirat

    Selamat Pagi….
    Sejak dua menjak ni, nampak beberapa posting my mengatakan rumah bungalow pun nanti masuk kubur. Baju berapa cantik pun nanti kain kafan yg di pakai.

    Adakah ini alasan supaya kita jgn berusaha?
    Adakah ini rasa kekurangan pada diri sebab itu kita focus dgn kesudahan diri.
    Sebagai seorang manusia, tak salah kalau kita berjaya dari segi keewangan.

    Dlm agama kita pun ada doa2 dan amalan untuk memurahkan rezeki, seperti solat dhuha.
    Jadi tak salah kalau kita mampu. Kita diberi kan nyawa, tenaga dan akal untuk hidup. Berusahalah dan gunakanlah waktu yg diberi dgn sebaik mungkin.
    Di dunia ini, wang tak jatuh dari langit. Disebalik setiap rumah yg mewah ada cerita disebaliknya. Usaha dan pengorbanan. Setiap usaha dan pergorbanan ada pahala nya.

    Yg suka sebut mati semua pun sama, ini realiti chk untuk kita hayati bersama
    Walaupun semua mayat nampak tenang, kain kafan sama warna putih, liang lahad size yg sama antara satu sama lain, hakikat nya nasib kita tak serupa di alam kubur nanti.

    Lihat lah dgn hati…fhm kan erti mati.

    Ummi Abdullah.

     

    Source: Dapur Ummi Abdullah

  • High Court: Courts Have No Jurisdiction Over Muslim Matters, MUIS Appropriate Authority To Seek Judicial Assistance

    High Court: Courts Have No Jurisdiction Over Muslim Matters, MUIS Appropriate Authority To Seek Judicial Assistance

    The Islamic Religious Council of Singapore (MUIS) is the only body that oversees all Muslim matters, including the administration of Muslim charitable trusts, and the courts are in no position to interfere unless MUIS deems it appropriate to seek judicial assistance, the High Court has found.

    In striking out an application by trustees of the Valibhoy Charitable Trust to replace a fellow trustee who had allegedly “deliberately refused to discharge his duty”, Judicial Commissioner (JC) Kannan Ramesh found that the courts have no jurisdiction over such trusts, also known as “wakafs”, under the Administration of Muslim Law Act (AMLA).

    LEGAL AUTHORITY OF MUIS COMES FROM ‘SPECIAL POSITION OF MALAYS’

    First enacted in November 1960 and most recently amended in April 1999, the AMLA is meant to protect the Islamic religion by establishing a Muslim body to deal with the administration of Muslim law and the regulation of Muslim religious affairs in Singapore. MUIS was established as a statutory board in 1968.

    The legislative intent, said JC Kannan in a written judgment dated Jan 29, corresponds with the Republic’s Constitution, which sets out that the Government is to “recognise the special position of the Malays” and protect, support and promote their religious, political, economic and cultural interests, among others.

    Under the AMLA, MUIS is charged with the responsibility of dealing with the affairs of all Muslim religious trusts, including wakafs.

    In particular, the Act gives MUIS the authority to appoint and remove trustees. Should MUIS decide to remove a trustee, it must simultaneously appoint another one.

    According to the wakaf.sg website managed by MUIS, the religious body has regulatory oversight of wakafs, while other trustees play managerial roles, but will still have to seek approval for decisions such as the selling and buying of assets.

    The AMLA confers the courts’ power in relation to wakafs only when MUIS invokes the courts’ assistance. Even then, the courts can only deliberate on the meaning and effect of the declaration creating the wakaf.

    “Importantly, matters concerning the administration of the wakaf have been carefully removed from the equation,” said JC Kannan, adding that MUIS must be the only forum where trustees of a wakaf can direct their disputes.

    GRANTING COURTS POWER COULD CAUSE ‘INCONSISTENT DECISIONS’

    With the enactment of the AMLA, Parliament could not have intended for trustees of the wakaf, apart from MUIS, to have recourse to the courts, said JC Kannan, as that might lead to inconsistent decisions and different standards applied by MUIS and the courts.

    Giving the latter similar power would make “the recipe for an ideal cocktail for inconsistent decisions”, he said.

    “(MUIS’) power to remove trustees could effectively be bypassed, making the process a mockery of what Parliament clearly (intended) by enacting the provision,” he said, adding that it would also allow trustees to launch “backdoor challenges” to either MUIS’ or the courts’ decisions.

    “These situations would lead to a very uncomfortable paradigm where (MUIS) and the courts could render two conflicting decisions on the same issue, applying different statutory standards … It is amply clear to me that Parliament could not have intended such a paradigm,” he said.

    While the plaintiffs in the Valibhoy Charitable Trust’s case subsequently alleged that MUIS’ administration of the trust was unsatisfactory and that it had “stayed silent” when legal action was launched, JC Kannan noted that the plaintiffs had not raised these arguments in their initial affidavits.

    Instead, JC Kannan found that the plaintiffs had avoided going to MUIS, possibly with the view that they might obtain “a more favourable outcome” from the court.

    “As an aside, I must highlight that the court’s processes are not to be used to deliberately undermine the statutory authority afforded by Parliament to MUIS. That would be an abuse of process,” he said.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Sangeetha Thanapal: Understand Georgraphy And History – Malays Always Indigenous To Singapore

    Sangeetha Thanapal: Understand Georgraphy And History – Malays Always Indigenous To Singapore

    In my work on racism and racial dynamics in Singapore, I have spent some time resolutely attacking what I believe to be harmful stereotypes of Malay people, and pointing out the myriad ways they are discriminated against in their own land. Racist Chinese people generally dislike it when I do this, and they often reply by stating that if Malay people do not like it here, they can move, (or go back to), Malaysia. Many Chinese Singaporeans tend to behave as if they have right and ownership over this land, and subsequently that they are entitled to decide who gets to live in it.

    This is all very odd to me, because it is almost as if these people never went through a single history class at Lower Secondary level.

    So let us begin with a simple but vital assertion: This land does belong to Malay people. Malay people have been living in Singapore and the area for thousands of years. In the third century, Chinese records refer to us at Pu Luo Chung, which is a transliteration from the Malay Pulau Ujong, meaning ‘island at the end’. The names given to this area are Malay, but apparently the people who speak this language are not considered indigenous to it? Who exactly are your indigenous people, if that term doesn’t include Malay people?

    There is a reason why it is Malay lore and myth in which references to the land happens. It is because they have been here long enough to produce literature about it. When you focus on the gap between our knowledge of the land and theirs, especially traditional knowledge, you start to see their relationship to the land. There is no way they are not indigenous to this land.

    Land, language, memory & history. These are all linked, and the rest of have do not possess this connection to the land. Somebody was living here before the British came, and it sure was not Chinese people.

    Denying this is ahistorical, and it constitutes an erasure of people’s histories. Denying their existence and that history is a colonial act in itself, and every colonial act is violent. It is not only an act of erasure but one of displacement as well.

    Singapore was not terra nullius, meaning it was not ‘nobody’s land’. Singapore belonged to the Johor Riau Sultanate, which means by definition it is Malay land.

    Indigeneity is not always defined by geography, but by people as well. What we think of as Malay includes indigenous people, Bugis, Minangkabau, etc. The idea of Malay does not just mean people from Malaya, but the people of the Nusantara. This entire archipelago is the Malay world. As Singapore existed within this world, it is undoubtedly Malay land.

    The Singapore government’s mistreatment of Malay people includes a focus on Malay people as diasporic, which states that Malay people came here from elsewhere, and this is an act of historical erasure. They didn’t come here, they were already here. The Singapore you think of now was never a country before, it was part of Malay land and the Malay world.

    If you cannot accept or understand this, that means you cannot understand geography and history. Why do people have so much difficulty accepting facts? Non-Malay minorities are also here on stolen land, and we need to accept and understand this. Even the rest of us, including Indians, don’t have a claim on this land. We can never truly find solidarity if we insist on acting as if Indian people and Malay people have the same claim to Singapore.

    This does not erase our contributions or our generations that have grown up here, or our own attachment to the land. But it simply not equivalent to Malay people’s claim over it. No one is asking for reparations and no one is asking you to leave their land. So why do so many people find it difficult to accept facts and the truth?

    In Singapore, Malay people are targeted for legal and cultural extinction. The percentage of Malay people in Singapore is decreasing, despite the maintenance of total fertility rate for the community. Population policies seek to bring in Indian and PRC migrants, but not Malay. They are slowly being phased out as immigration policies are making Malay people extinct in their own land. This is Malay land, and they have become second class citizens on their own land. That is simply unacceptable.

    So, who gains from the denial of Malay indigineity to Singapore? Who gains from erasure of this past? What do they gain? At what point can we admit that this “debate” over how long Malay people have been here and where their ancestors came from is just a rhetorical exercise aimed specifically to cast aspersions on indigenous birthright?

    I have my theories but I’m going to leave this here for people to think about.

    In our anti-racism work in Singapore, aboriginality must be foundational. As minorities, we need to examine our own complicity in the ongoing project of colonisation, whether it be White or Chinese in nature. During the time I have been engaged in doing this work, I have come to believe that anti-racism for the Malay community has to begin with assertions of indigeneity and ownership of land. Regardless of where you are and where you come from, you have a responsibility to know the names of the territories you are on and the people who have called those places home.

    Update: My dear friend @POZboySG pointed out what he felt was the lack of attention to Orang Asli people in this piece. He is completely correct. I did not address it because I felt I knew very little about it and that means I am not the right person to do so. I cannot speak about Orang Asli forced assimilation into mainstream Malaysian culture as I am simply not qualified. I did talk about indigenous people AND Malay people as being indigenous to the land, because that is how I see it. For the purposes of talking specifically about Singapore, I feel speaking of Malay people as indigenous to the land is the best political way to approach it, especially when faced with Chinese hegemonic claims. This is of course my opinion, and up for debate.

    Source: https://medium.com

  • CNY Greetings At Mosques – Usual Practice Or New Initiative To Appease Political Masters?

    CNY Greetings At Mosques – Usual Practice Or New Initiative To Appease Political Masters?

    There are a couple of pictures of masajid in Singapura with red banners with the wishes “Happy Chinese New Year”.

    There seems to be quite a lot of Muslims who are upset with these banners.

    As a matter of principle, I do not have a problem with the banners or wishes.

    As to its permissibility in Islam, I leave that to the scholars to decide.

    If we believe that there is khilaf in this issue, then we have to respect the decision of those who believe it is haram and those who believe it is not.

    However, I have several questions for the two masajid involved:

    1. Did they similarly put up banners last year?

    If they did, then it is fine.

    2. If they did not put up banners last year, why put them up this year?

    Are these banners in response to K Shanmugam Sc‘s comments?

    It will be terribly disappointing if these banners were put up to appease a politician.

    If they were only put up this year because of a politician’s comments, then where is the dignity and firmness of the Muslims?

    Do we make decisions and fatawa to please others?

    I hope the committee members of these two masajid can assure us that the banners were similarly exhibited last year.

    And not only this year, to appease a politician who criticised Muslims.

     

    Source: Almakhazin SG

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