Tag: Islam

  • Mohd Khair: Hidup Berlandaskan Pegangan Agama Boleh Bantu Membanteras Gejala LGBT

    Mohd Khair: Hidup Berlandaskan Pegangan Agama Boleh Bantu Membanteras Gejala LGBT

    Berdasarkan KISAH SEBENAR…buat renungan bersama

    Ayah: Kau duduk sini diam-diam. Kau ingat apa kau buat tu betul? Mana aku nak letak muka. Buat malu keluarga jer…tak pernah ada keturunan aku buat kerja terkutuk tu…
    Anak: Apa ni ayah? Senang-senang nak tuduh macam-macam..
    Ayah: Ustaz, saya mintak Ustaz nasihatkan anak saya ni…
    Ustaz: Nasihat apa Pakcik?
    Ayah: Dia ada kekasih…
    Ustaz: Anak awak tu ada kekasih?
    Ayah: Ya Ustaz
    Ustaz: Betul ke kata ayah awak tu yang awak ni ada girlfriend?
    Ayah: Bukan girlfriend Ustaz…!!!
    Ustaz: Habis, awak jugak yang kata anak awak ni ada kekasih?
    Ayah: Bukan cewek Ustaz….anak jantan saya ada cowok…dia ada boyfriend…!!!
    Ustaz: Kawan lelaki?
    Ayah: Betul tu Ustaz…
    Ustaz: Apasal pulak awak kata dia ada kekasih? Padahal yang dia ada tu kawan lelaki?
    Ayah: Sama lah tu Ustaz….kawan lelaki dia tu lah kekasih anak saya!
    Ustaz: Apa awak cakap ni?
    Ayah: Saya malu Ustaz…
    Ustaz: Cakap terus terang dengan saya….
    Ayah: Anak saya ni gay…
    Ustaz: Astaghfirullahal azim…awak ni cakap baik-baik sikit. Jangan tuduh sebarangan. Ini anak awak sendiri…
    Ayah: Betul Ustaz. Dia sendiri yang mengaku. Saya malu….
    Ustaz: Betul cakap ayah awak tu…?
    Anak: (Tak jawab. Pandang arah lain…)
    Ayah: Ustaz, nasihatkan dia, biar dia tinggalkan kekasih dia tu…
    Ustaz: Betul…? (dialog kena potong dengan anak)
    Anak: Ustaz, sebelum Ustaz cakap apa-apa pada saya, Ustaz cakap dulu dengan ayah saya ni. Cakap dengan dia…kenapa dari dulu lagi dia tidak cakap dengan saya yang jadi gay tu salah, haram, masuk neraka! Kenapa? Kalau dari dulu dia hantar saya belajar agama dengan Ustaz, tentu hari ini saya tidak duduk depan Ustaz! Kalau dari dulu dia siang-siang dah cakap, saya tentu tak jadi macam ni! Sebelum Ustaz nasihatkan saya, Ustaz nasihatkan bapak saya ni dulu…!!!
    Ayah: Kurang ajar punya anak…!!!

     

    Source: Mohd Khair

  • Diana Abdul Rahim: Not A Case Of Secular Fundamentalism

    Diana Abdul Rahim: Not A Case Of Secular Fundamentalism

    I refer to Mr Walid Jumblatt’s letter, “Don’t let secular fundamentalism be the norm” (May 15), which was a reply to Mr Hairol Salim’s letter, “Efforts of Pink Dot ambassadors should be lauded, not condemned” (May 13).

    Secular fundamentalism connotes scorn of religion and its adherents, and is usually accompanied by attempts to exclude and limit religious expressions in public. The burqa ban in France is an example.

    Secular fundamentalism seeks to trivialise the persecution faced by adherents of a certain religion who are confronted by structural disempowerment. This is, however, not the case in this debate.

    Mr Hairol’s point about “religious-driven emotions” was addressed to a particular group of “activists and individuals from certain religious communities”. It was not a sweeping statement against the legitimacy of religious voices.

    Indeed, he stated that “views of all faiths and belief systems should be given fair consideration”, which echoes Mr Walid’s sentiments.

    It is illogical to construe this willingness to provide fair consideration for all perspectives, religious or otherwise, as an expression of secular fundamentalism.

    If we are serious about being inclusive, then Mr Hairol’s appraisal of those who voice the concerns of the LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender) community should hold no controversy.

    Claims of respecting the democracy of dialogue have no legitimacy if we are unwilling to allow the people we disagree with the space to speak on their own terms.

    To me, there is much common ground between both writers. For dialogue to work in a reasonable, respectful and empathetic manner, however, interlocutors should be charitable and avoid misrepresenting the positions of their counterpart.

     

    *Article written by Diana Abdul Rahim was published in Voices, Today, on 22 May 2015

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Why Aung San Suu Kyi Has Stayed Silent On The Plight Of Rohingya

    Why Aung San Suu Kyi Has Stayed Silent On The Plight Of Rohingya

    When thousands of Rohingya people from Myanmar were discovered floating in boats on the Southeast Asian seas much of the world was understandably gripped by this unfolding human tragedy.

    Voices of anger were raised; something had to be done to end the suffering, to help those men, women and children in need.

    But what has surprised some is the silence of the Nobel peace prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi.

    After all, these are the poverty-stricken and disenfranchised refugees from her own country who are now the focus of greater attention than ever before.

    The contrast could not be more striking: how could such an iconic figure of human rights be so reticent when it comes to defending an ethnic minority from her own country?

    It was only at the urging of reporters last week that a spokesman for her opposition party, the National League for Democracy (NLD), addressed the issue, urging a solution that acknowledged their right to citizenship status in Myanmar.

    “If they are not accepted [as citizens], they cannot just be sent onto rivers. Can’t be pushed out to sea. They are humans. I just see them as humans who are entitled to human rights,” Nyan Win, spokesman for the National League for Democracy, said.

    But nothing has come directly from the party’s leader.

    Suu Kyi herself has previously justified her reluctance to speak out on the issue of the Rohingya, even when pressed to do so during Buddhist-Muslim clashes that swept through the country in 2013. She feared that any statement she made would only fuel tensions between the Buddhist majority and the Rohingya, who make up about a third of the population of Rakhine state, which borders Bangladesh.

    Now, a surge of Buddhist nationalism and the complex ethnic political ramifications for a country that has just started a transition to democracy are taking their toll on her international image.

    In the courtyard of a Buddhist monastery in the ancient Rakhine capital of Mrauk-U, the difficulties faced by the opposition leader known as “the Lady” are illustrated by a senior monk.

    He repeats the warnings of Ashin Wirathu, an influential monk based in Mandalay who calls himself the “Burmese Bin Laden” and has become a leading voice of a new generation of nationalists espousing the cause of the Bamar, the dominant ethnic group in Myanmar.

    “They will come with swords, they will kill us,” the senior monk says of the Muslim “hordes” he sees encroaching on Myanmar.

    “Muslims reproduce like rabbits; they want to kill us with swords; they want to conquer us – we have to defend ourselves and our religion,” he insists, explicitly identifying the Rohingya with Islamist terrorism around the world.

    Extremist movements such as 969 , which is driven by Ashin Wirathu, and Ma Ba Tha – the Organisation for the Protection of Race and Religion – present themselves as defenders of the country’s interests and its Bamar soul against foreign influence in post-sanctions Myanmar.

    While insisting that he is against violence, Ashin Wirathu and those like him have fuelled and exploited tensions between Buddhists and Muslims in Rakhine state, promoting the belief that Islam is penetrating the country to install sharia law and leave Buddhists as a minority.

    The nationalists are also trying to smear Suu Kyi by depicting her as “the Muslim lover”.

    In a country that is 90 per cent Buddhist there is little sympathy to be found for the Rohingya cause, and expressing support could be political suicide for both the NLD and the military-backed ruling party less than six months before the parliamentary elections.

    A party source close to Suu Kyi, who asked not to be named, said the party leader was deeply upset over what was happening.

    But the source said she also understood the penalty for being seen as favouring Muslims and believed she needed to be in government to deal with the backlash. There is a strong belief that powerful people with close links to radical monks are deliberately stirring up tensions between communities in an attempt to disrupt ongoing political reforms.

    According to some observers, Suu Kyi and her strategists have decided that speaking up for the Rohingya may not be in their electoral interests.

    “Aung San Suu Kyi and her strategists are looking at the electoral maths,” says Nicholas Farrelly, director of the Australian National University’s Myanmar Research Centre.

    “They have long imagined that any perception the NLD is too cosy with the country’s Muslims could lose them millions of votes. That, at least, is the fear.

    “They are anxious that the Rohingya could serve as a wedge between Aung San Suu Kyi and tens of millions of Buddhists that she is counting on for votes. It doesn’t help that many NLD members probably support harsh treatment for the Rohingya and feel no special compassion for them.”

    Myanmar’s quasi-civilian government, which is headed by former generals, is in a similar situation.

    President Thein Sein’s success in bringing the country back into the international fold after decades of isolation is threatened by foreign coverage of the Rohingya boat crisis.

    The United Nations recently described the Rohingya as one of the world’s “most persecuted minorities”.

    A report this month from the US Holocaust Memorial Museum warned that rising Buddhist nationalism and anti-Muslim sentiment in Myanmar made the Rohingya a “population at grave risk for additional mass atrocities and even genocide”.

    It is estimated that a tenth of the community’s population has attempted to leave their homeland in the past few years.

    The United States, Philippines and even Gambia in Africa have offered assistance or possible resettlement of Rohingya, evoking the coordinated response to the exodus of hundreds of thousands of boatpeople from Vietnam in the late 1970s.

    For days the government line was to resist diplomatic pressure and insist the root cause of the crisis was trafficking of migrants, not the persecution of a stateless people whose name, Rohingya, is not even officially recognised.

    But on Tuesday the official newspaper, Global New Light of Myanmar, reported on the crisis for the first time, in a further sign that the government is moderating its rejectionist position.

    The daily quoted the information minister, Ye Htut, as telling foreign ambassadors that Myanmar would cooperate with regional and international counterparts “to tackle the ongoing boatpeople crisis, which is a consequence of human trafficking of people from Rakhine state and Bangladesh to Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia.

    “The Myanmar government will scrutinise the boatpeople and bring back those who can show evidence of citizenship,” the minister said. A day later, a foreign ministry statement said Myanmar “shares concerns” of the international community and was “ready to provide humanitarian assistance to anyone who suffered in the sea”.

    The government’s move to at least acknowledge the problem in public could make it easier for the NLD to follow suit and promote a united response.

    On the other hand, Suu Kyi may decide to maintain her silence, calculating it is in her interests to leave the government on its own to deal with any backlash across the country but especially in Rakhine as the elections draw near.

    Additional reporting by Agence France-Presse

  • Here’s How You Can Help Our Fellow Muslim Rohingyas – Through Pergas

    Here’s How You Can Help Our Fellow Muslim Rohingyas – Through Pergas

    Assalamu’alaikum Wr Wbt,
    Brothers and Sisters,

    Referring to the plight of the Muslim Rohingya community, insyaAllah Pergas will be conducting Hajat Prayers this Sunday 9am at Masjid Alkaff Kampung Melayu. All are welcome to join us.

    Donations can also be made via bank transfer or cheque to :
    Pergas (OCBC Current: 629-704537-001)
    Please indicate “ROHINGYA”.

    Cut off date for bank transfer:
    05 June 2015

    Kindly email Ustaz Izzam at [email protected] with your transaction reference number (found on the receipt), bank account number and amount of donation for our verification.
    All proceeds will go directly to BAPA.

    Thank you for your kind contributions. May Allah be with the victims, lift their affliction and adversity, reward them for their patience and perseverance. Ameen.

     

    Source: Singapore Islamic Scholars & Religious Teachers Association – Pergas

  • Zara Faris: Why Are Malaysia’s Secular Liberal Groups So Afraid Of Debate?

    Zara Faris: Why Are Malaysia’s Secular Liberal Groups So Afraid Of Debate?

    A week ago I was in Malaysia, having been invited to deliver a series of lectures on Islam, women’s rights, and a critique of liberalism and feminism. The organisers, Wanita ISMA (an Islamic NGO), had hoped to supplement my tour by organising a panel discussion between me, ISMA, and two members of a small (but disproportionately vocal) secular liberal group deceptively calling themselves “Sisters in Islam” (SIS).

    SIS attempts to campaign for secular liberalism and feminism under the guise that these ideas are ‘compatible with Islam’, and claim to be open for debate, discussion and dialogue about ‘Islam’. However, to my knowledge, SIS have never actually invited people who hold different opinions (i.e. mainstream Islamic opinions, like ISMA) to discuss and debate with them on their platforms. Rather, SIS have been content purely to float their views – unopposed – from the safe distance of the internet and the media platforms they are given.

    Furthermore, ISMA informed me that previous attempts to hold a debate or discussion with SIS have ended up invariably with SIS pulling out at the last minute. As I have always thought that the best way to test the integrity of ideas is to subject them to scrutiny and debate, I nevertheless asked ISMA to setup a dedicated discussion event while I was in Malaysia, where ISMA and MDI could engage with SIS, on the topic, “Is the shari’ah male-biased, and do we need a feminist interpretation?”.

    Preparations for the Debate

    As SIS have been known to pull out of events in the past, ISMA wanted to do everything possible to prevent this from happening again: SIS were offered to bring a portion of the event attendees from their own supporters, and after SIS accepted a panel of three speakers (one from MDI, ISMA and SIS), I urged ISMA that it would be fairer to invite two speakers representing SIS (lest they claim after the event that the panel was unbalanced). To prevent SIS from claiming in the lead up to the event, that the event had become too sensationalised in the public, it was also decided hold the discussion as a “closed” event (i.e. not open to the public).

    SIS accepted the invitation with these conditions, saying that they would be sending Ratna Osman (Executive Director, SIS) andMohammad Afiq Noor (Assistant Manager for Legal Advocacy and Public Education, SIS). ISMA then went to work making costly and time-consuming arrangements for a suitable venue and video recording (to be uploaded afterwards for all to see and share in the discussion).

    Whilst I was in Malaysia, I asked ISMA if perhaps a panel of four people may be too cumbersome, and that it may be a better idea to facilitate even deeper investigation of the question at hand, by having a 1-on-1 event (between Ratna Osman (SIS) and myself (MDI)). The more speakers that there are on a panel, the more shallow a discussion ends up being; a 1-on-1 would allow each side more time to develop and discuss their views and ensure a deeper discussion of the issues at hand.

    ISMA emailed SIS to ask if they were happy to make this change. However, Ratna Osman (SIS) explained that she was not interested in engaging with a “foreign” speaker, and DECLINED to debate if it was not possible to keep to the agreed format

    Unfortunately the latest email from you that we got today of another change, does not have any ISMA speaker, but a foreign speaker from Muslim Debate Initiative, Ms Zara Huda. As much as we look forward to engage in a dialogue with Ms Zara Huda, I was under the impression that you initiated the forum so that SIS and ISMA would know more of each other’s work and views on Shariah.

    If it’s not possible for us to have direct engagement with a speaker from ISMA on 8th May as planned, then lets choose another date for us to meet up.

    – Ratna Osman (email dated 6 May 2015)

    ISMA, in a sincere wish for the event to go ahead, reverted to the original plan – a 2 on 2, to directly accommodate SIS’ demand to include ISMA. It is strange that SIS seemed to be so keen to discuss with ISMA when, prior to my arrival in Malaysia, they had never, to my knowledge, invited ISMA to any of their public events – nor ever followed through with any forums/debates that ISMA had agreed to attend.

    On a personal note, I also find it strange that SIS were so reluctant to debate me, a “foreigner” when they are totally happy to believe in and advocate foreign ideas – as well being founded by foreigners (i.e. the American arch-secular feminist Amina Wadud, no less)!

    Now that the racist demand of not wanting to deal with a “foreigner” had been resolved, and ISMA kept the originally agreed format, one would expect SIS to have no good reason to turn this opportunity down – wrong! Lo and behold, SIS, on the day of the event sent an email CANCELLING, causing ISMA not only financial loss, but sincere disappointment in watching SIS yet again turn away from discussing and subjecting their views to open debate, scrutiny and discussion.

    “Professionalism”

    Understandably, in response to the cancelling of the event, ISMA made a Press Release exposing SIS’ failure to turn up. Bizarrely, SIS responded that they pulled out due to ISMA’s supposed lack of “professionalism”.

    Screen Shot 2015-05-13 at 09.49.49

    When they were confronted on Twitter as to why they ran away from debating me, they petulantly and rather childishly responded:

    Screen Shot 2015-05-13 at 09.43.56 copyScreen Shot 2015-05-14 at 22.43.45That’s strange, because they definitely seemed to know who I was in the lead up to the debate referring to me (three days before the above tweets) as ‘a foreign speaker from Muslim Debate Initiative, Ms Zara Huda’ and even whining in the same email to be included in a conference I had been invited to speak at:

    We also learned that Ms Zara Huda will be speaking at IMEC2015 International Muslimah Empowerment Conference on 9th May. It would have been good if a speaker from SIS was also included in such a dynamic Conference

    – Ratna Osman (email dated 6 May 2015)

    Indeed, “professionalism” does go a long way – for example, not dismissing candidates from discussion because they are “foreign”, keeping one’s word and promises, or even refraining from pettiness and childishness from one of the intended SIS panellists no less, Assistant Manager for Legal Advocacy and Public Education, Mohammad Afiq Noor, who ably demonstrates his ‘professionalism’ by piling on derogatory, and sexist remarks about this “foreign” speaker, referring to me as a “Clothing brand”, and a “fool” for whom the best response is silence (which they still failed to do! [unless they were perhaps advising me not to respond to them?]).

    Screen Shot 2015-05-13 at 09.43.56 copy 2

    If this is the “professionalism” and calibre of intellect one can expect from SIS, it is no surprise that they are reluctant to have their arguments challenged in a live event, away from the safety of their computer screens. One can only wonder if they were reluctant to debate someone who usually debates, in the West, the non-Muslim Secular Liberal and Feminist role models of SIS, and who SIS look up to and are just a pale imitation of. Or perhaps they were reluctant to debate someone who comes from the West and would disabuse the Malaysians of the false conception of the West being the “utopia” that SIS would portray it as.

    If SIS truly possessed the courage of their convictions, why are they so timid? Are they afraid that their own followers would hear of a new explanation which transcends their secular liberal dogmas (that they have blindly borrowed from the West), and encourage them to truly think outside of the box?

    A curious fact about SIS’ foreign founder

    IMG_5766 (1)

    The day after the debate was supposed to take place was the International Muslimah Empowerment Conference (IMEC) 2015, where I presented my lecture entitled, “Feminism: Heroin(e) of the Masses” (now available to view here). Within this lecture, I discussed feminism and secular liberalism and propounded rational critiques of these philosophies, including whether or not they had truly produced success and happiness in the West. I exposed the so-called “Islamic Feminism” espoused by secular groups plaguing the Muslim world (usually set up with foreign Western support), for what it really is: the ‘reconciling’ of liberal values with Islam, by substituting it in place of the Qur’an’s values, under the guise of “interpretation”.

    Secular Feminist reformists in the Muslim world have realised that their feminist claims cannot be satisfied through the reinterpretation of texts alone – rather, they now go so far as to claim that the problem is with the sources themselves – i.e. the Qur’an itself, and the Prophet himself . And to this end, SIS are a case in point.

    I mentioned during my speech, the American Amina Wadud, one of the original founders of the feminist organisation, SIS, claims that forexplicit verses of the Qur’an that feminists are unable to ‘reinterpret’ (i.e. twist), the possibility of rejecting these verses should be considered.

    Wadud states that she has “come to places where how the [Quranic] text says what it says is just plain inadequate or unacceptable, however much interpretation is enacted upon it”[1]. She continues to propose that because particular articulations in the Qur’an as a textare problematic, there exists the “possibility of refuting the text, to talk back, to even say “no”” [2] to the Qur’an! Wadud is proposing that rejecting the text of the Qur’an itself is a possible solution when the text of the Qur’an does not live up to feminist ideals. I mentioned in my speech that this founder of “Sisters in Islam” seems by her claim to want to be out of Islam. 

    Just in case anyone was in any doubt, Wadud further explains what she meant. She was not questioning whether the verse was from Allah (swt), but rather asserting some self-appointed right to disobey the verse – she would hear but disobey:

    As for “no” to the Qur’an, let me summarize the work I have been doing to overcome some of the apologia of Qur’an and Woman. Yes the Qur’an, I believe and love is considered a form of Allah’s self disclosure, but I do not believe God is locked into the 7th century Arabian context. […] When I say “no” it is not the integrity of the literal text, it is to the implementation of some practices which is a 14 centuries long debate.” [3]

    And just in case we’re still misreading Wadud, let us see what her fellow “feminist interpreters” make of Wadud’s words. Omaima Abou-Bakr (whose work is also featured on SIS’ website), Wadud’s own fellow contributor to the recent publication by the Musawah Knowledge Building Initiative, “Men in Charge”, more recently cites and explains:

    Wadud’s recent work, represents a fourth interpretive philosophy […] to transcend ‘textual’ interpretation altogether […]. This development is clearly articulated by Amina Wadud in her second book, Inside the Gender Jihad (2006), which records the change in her interpretive orientation. […] The inspiration of the Qur’anic worldview remains, but because particular articulations in the Qur’an as a text are problematic, there exists the ‘possibility of refuting the text, to talk back, to even say “no”‘ (Wadud, 2006, p.191). Wadud here tries to find a solution to the persisting problematic faced by Islamic feminist interpreters in dealing with difficult, explicit texts.” [4]

    Omaima Abou-Bakr continues, explaining Wadud’s approach to the Quran:

    Whereas previously such researchers have tried to resolve this difficulty by drawing attention to the general ‘principles’ of the Qur’an as a frame of reference, in light of which specific texts and injunctions should be understood and interpreted, Wadud takes the issue to another level. The ‘letter’ of the divine text remains a problem, and it is time to stop grappling with it […]. This new perspective would be a means to avoid literal application or implementation of a text when it opposes our current, more progressive human development and understandings […] in this sense the Qur’an is a text ‘in process’.” [5]

    Considering that this is the position of SIS’ foreign founder, who SIS describe as being one of seven founders who ‘formed the core of what was to become Sisters in Islam’, it is hard to imagine why they would not be reluctant for someone to point this out in public, and make them answer to scrutiny over just how faithful to Islam and its texts they truly are. Of course, any pretence of basing their ideas on Islam, is merely a smokescreen to facilitate the acceptance by Malaysians of what are, in essence, foreign and un-Islamic ideas that have no basis in the Quran, or rationality.

    So, why are Malaysia’s secular liberal groups so afraid of debate? Malaysia’s secular liberals are all for “debate” it seems – as long as their side are the only ones speaking.


    Notes:

    [1] Amina Wadud, Inside the Gender Jihad, 2006, p.192

    [2] Ibid., p.191

    [3] Amina Wadud’s Response to Tarek Fatah, 23/2/2005 

    [4] Omaima Abou-Bakr, The Interpretive Legacy of Qiwamah as an Exegetical Construct, Men in Charge, Ed. Ziba Mir Hosseini, 2015, p.60-61

    [5] Ibid.

    Source: http://zarafaris.com

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