Tag: Malays

  • Hisyam Hamid Pulang Ke Singapura Setiap Bulan Kerana Rindu Anak

    Hisyam Hamid Pulang Ke Singapura Setiap Bulan Kerana Rindu Anak

    Pelakon drama bersiri Abang Bomba I Love You, Hisyam Hamid membelanjakan RM1,000 (S$335) setiap bulan untuk membeli tiket pulang ke Singapura bagi melepaskan rindu pada anak-anaknya.

    Astro Gempak melaporkan beliau tinggal di Kuala Lumpur bersama isteri, Melrose Hanafi yang berusia 35 tahun yang juga pengurus beliau, kerana memenuhi tunutan kerjaya sebagai seorang pelakon.

    Anak-anak Hisyam, Nurish Syameliah 9 tahun dan Hayden 7 tahun tinggal bersama keluarga Hisyam di Singapura kerana masih bersekolah.

    “Saya jarang bertemu anak kerana mereka tinggal di Singapura. Namun begitu, setiap kali ada kelapangan saya dan isteri akan pulang ke sana.

    “Apabila kami menempah tiket ‘last minute’, harga selalunya mahal. Saya menghabiskan RM1,000 (S$335) sebulan untuk membayar harga tiket penerbangan,” katanya kepada Astro Gempak.

    Menyambut hari lahirnya pada 20 Oktober lalu, Hisyam mahu membawa anak-anaknya tinggal di Kuala Lumpur sebagai ‘hadiah’ ulang tahun.

    “Antara sebab mereka tinggal di sana adalah kerana sistem pendidikan yang berbeza. Saya tidak mahu mengganggu pelajaran mereka. Namun begitu, saya dan isteri telah mengenal pasti beberapa sekolah di Kuala Lumpur.

    “Insyaallah, jika segalanya dipermudahkan, anak-anak akan tinggal bersama kami di Kuala Lumpur pada awal tahun depan. Walaupun berjauhan, saya sangat merindukan anak-anak dan kami saling berhubungan setiap hari,” katanya ketika ditemui wartawan Astro Gempak.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Ustaz Abd Al-Halim: Is ARS Just A Mechanism For Asatizahs To Be Controlled By The State?

    Ustaz Abd Al-Halim: Is ARS Just A Mechanism For Asatizahs To Be Controlled By The State?

    AsSalaam’alaikum!

    I recently attended a seminar on making the Asatizah Recognition Scheme mandatory. It is clear that asatizahs are worried that if they resist the ARS scheme i.e. teach even if they are without ARS, they could be arrested and put to jail. One person actually asked that question during the Q & A. Of course, there is as yet no passing of any laws. There is no police force to watch over the asatizahs for now. But the indications that the speakers gave is that there will be law enforcement. One speaker spoke of levying fines upon asatizahs who do not comply. It is one thing to come up with a questionable policy but entirely another to implement it. I wonder if such enforcement is to be done by the government which is, by the way, secular. If so, will we have a secular non-Muslim government sending police officers out to arrest asatizahs who do not have ARS but are nonetheless qualified to teach given that they have been teaching for years and years and that they have been appointed to teach by ulama before ARS came along?

    I spoke to a senior person who is knowledgeable in Islam afterwards. He is not convinced that making ARS mandatory is about stemming “ajaran sesat” (deviant teachings). Instead he, like many others know that this is becoming a draconian mechanism to control the asatizahs. He further quipped that if they are concerned with ajaran sesat, there are many ideas that the religious authorities themselves seem to propagate that can be classified as “ajaran sesat” such as the idea that all religions are the same and that it is ok to praise Lee Kuan Yew who is a non-Muslim (Kafir) in the mosque during Jumaat sermon even though the Jumaat sermon is part and parcel of our ibadah and that the Masjid should not be politicised.

    It is glaring that the President of Pergas had to assure the audience that those behind making ARS mandatory are not agents of the government – pointing to the panelists and making the audience repeat after him several times that they are not agents of the government but instead they are Warathatul Anbiyaa’ (Inheritors of the legacy of the Prophets).

    I was there and those who were there and reading this can verify or debunk what I say here.

    May Allah swt save this ummah from internal and external enemies. Amiin!

     

    Source: Ustaz Abd Al-Halim

  • Mufti Pulau Pinang: Solat Jumaat Pada Hari Sabtu Tidak Seharusnya Dibenarkan

    Mufti Pulau Pinang: Solat Jumaat Pada Hari Sabtu Tidak Seharusnya Dibenarkan

    Kelab Suara Anak Muda 1Malaysia (SAM1M) membuat aduan polis berhubung cadangan seorang aktivis untuk mengadakan solat Jumaat pada hari Sabtu bagi memudahkan umat Islam melaksanakannya.

    Badan bukan kerajaan itu membuat aduan tersebut di Balai Polis Damansara semalam (17 Okt) dan menggesa polis dan Suruhanjaya Komunikasi dan Multimedia Malaysia menyiasat cadangan yang kini menjadi viral yang dianggap biadab dan menghina kesucian agama Islam.

    Sementara itu, Mufti Pulau Pinang, Datuk Wan Salim Wan Mohd Noor berkata isu solat Jumaat pada hari Sabtu tidak seharusnya wujud kerana ia sudah termaktub dalam hukum agama.

    Katanya, solat Jumaat adalah hukum yang sudah ditetapkan dan tidak boleh diubah sewenang-wenangnya.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Lelaki Maut Ditikam Bakal Adik Ipar Setelah Semak Status Kahwin

    Lelaki Maut Ditikam Bakal Adik Ipar Setelah Semak Status Kahwin

    Seorang lelaki berusia 34 tahun ditemui mati oleh orang ramai bersama enam tikaman di tempat letak kereta pejabat Majlis Agama Islam dan Adat Istiadat Melayu Terengganu (Maidam), pagi tadi (16 Okt).

    Ketua Jabatan Siasatan Jenayah Negeri, Wan Abdul Aziz Wan Hamzah berkata siasatan awal mendapati mangsa, Mohd Sukri Hussin ditikam oleh suspek yang juga bakal adik iparnya menggunakan pisau dalam kejadian kira-kira pukul 11.30 pagi.

    SUSPEK DIDAPATI SUDAH BERKAHWIN, BERGELUT BERSAMA MANGSA

    “Kita mendapat maklumat orang awam mengenai kejadian itu pada pukul 11.36 pagi. Melalui siasatan awal, suspek yang berumur 29 tahun hadir ke pejabat Maidam bersama keluarganya untuk menyemak status perkahwinannya yang berasal dari Kuala Terengganu.

    “Setelah disemak, suspek didapati telah berkahwin. Bagaimanapun suspek mendakwa dia masih bujang kepada keluarga mangsa dan berlakulah pertengkaran dan pergelutan antara suspek dan mangsa yang merupakan abang kepada bakal isteri suspek,” katanya kepada pemberita di tempat kejadian.

    Wan Abdul Aziz berkata dalam pertengkaran itu suspek dipercayai mengeluarkan pisau sepanjang enam inci lalu menikam sebanyak enam kali terhadap mangsa, termasuk di leher dan dada kiri, sehingga membawa kematian kepada mangsa.

    “Suspek kemudian melarikan diri dengan sebuah kereta dengan bantuan seorang rakannya. Suspek turut mengacu kepada pengawal keselamatan yang menjaga pagar utama pejabat Maidam dengan menggunakan pisau yang sama.

    “Polis kini sedang melancarkan gerakan memburu suspek dan rakannya dengan melakukan Ops Tutup dan kita percaya suspek dan rakan subahatnya masih berada dalam negeri ini,” katanya.

    “SAYA TAK NAK KACAU ORANG”

    Katanya pihaknya turut meneliti rakaman kamera litar tertutup (CCTV) bagi mengenal pasti suspek dan rakan-rakannya. Kes disiasat mengikut Seksyen 302 Kanun Keseksaan kerana membunuh.

    Sementara itu pengawal keselamatan, Mohd Suffian Yusof, 23, berkata beluau sedang menutup palang pagar utama apabila suspek tiba-tiba datang sambil mengacukan pisau dan berkata: “Saya tak nak kacau orang.

    “Suspek kemudian membuka sendiri palang dan terus memecut keretanya. Saya sebelum itu tidak tahu telah berlaku kes bunuh. Saya ingatkan ada kes curi kereta,” katanya.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Singapore Comes Under Pressure For Female Genital Cutting Of Babies

    Singapore Comes Under Pressure For Female Genital Cutting Of Babies

     

    LONDON (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – Medical clinics in Singapore are carrying out female genital cutting on babies, according to people with first-hand experience of the procedure, despite growing global condemnation of the practice which world leaders have pledged to eradicate.

    The ancient ritual – more commonly associated with rural communities in a swathe of African countries – is observed by most Muslim Malays in Singapore where it is legal but largely hidden, said Filzah Sumartono of women’s rights group AWARE.

    Worldwide, more than 200 million girls and women are believed to have undergone female genital cutting or mutilation (FGM), according to United Nations figures.

    But its existence in Singapore, a wealthy island state which prides itself on being a modern, cosmopolitan city with high levels of education, shows the challenge of tackling a practice rooted in culture, tradition and a desire to belong.

    Sumartono said it was too early to press for a ban in Singapore although many countries have outlawed FGM. She said they first needed to create more awareness and debate around the practice and galvanize public support for ending it.

    “In my own circle of friends who are Malay and Muslim, 100 percent have been cut,” said Sumartono, who was cut herself at one month old.

    “But it is very hidden. Whenever I bring up the subject with non-Malay they’re shocked and can’t believe it happens in Singapore.”

    The health ministry did not comment despite several requests.

    Sumartono said the practice – known locally as sunat perempuan – was usually done before the age of two and may involve cutting the tip of the clitoris or making a small nick.

    “Even within the community we don’t discuss this much,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone from Singapore.

    “If a male baby gets circumcised there is this big celebration and prayer ritual, but if it is a female baby it’s quite quiet. It’s usually only the mother or grandmother making the decision. Sometimes the father doesn’t even know.”

    She said cutting was usually done by medical professionals.

    “We know five or six clinics offer the procedure – at around 20-35 Singapore dollars ($15-$26),” she added. “There’s no legislation. It’s done openly. You can just call up to make an appointment.”

    RELIGION AND CULTURE

    FGM takes many forms and in some communities in Africa all the external genitalia are removed and the opening sewn closed.

    Sumartono said although the type practised in Singapore was milder it was still a violation of a woman’s rights and underpinned the view that female sexuality must be controlled.

    “What I get from talking to my community is, ‘Oh, it’s just a small cut so why are you complaining?’

    “But at its foundation, it is really an act of violence against women. At infancy already, the child is taught that your body is not your own.”

    Singapore, home to more than 525,000 Malays making up over 13 percent of the population, is not included in the latest U.N. global report on FGM and there are no studies on its prevalence.

    Although FGM is not mentioned in the Koran and predates Islam, some Muslims believe the ritual was endorsed by the prophet.

    “Female circumcision, if done in the proper manner as prescribed by our Prophet Mohammad, ought to be continued,” one Malay woman from Singapore, who has recently had her granddaughter cut, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

    The retired civil servant, who asked not to be named, said this improved hygiene and had no adverse affect on a woman’s sex life.

    She said the amount removed was “very tiny” and should not be classed as FGM because it was different to the more extreme types of cutting which can cause serious health problems.

    The World Health Organization, however, says FGM includes any injury to the female genitals.

    GLOBAL ACTION

    Sumartono said even if women did not want to cut their daughters they often came under family pressure to do so.

    “My mum didn’t want to do it – it was my grandmother who really pressured her. My grandmother said it’s our culture. Community pressure is really quite strong,” added Sumartono, who only started speaking out this year.

    She said the Islamic Religious Council of Singapore had advocated the practice on its website but this had been removed.

    The council did not respond to a request for clarification.

    In 2012 the United Nations called for a global ban on FGM, increasing pressure on countries to take action. Last year world leaders agreed a target of eliminating FGM by 2030.

    A U.N. report this year lists 30 countries where cutting is practised, almost all in Africa. Indonesia is the only Asian country cited.

    However, the Orchid Project, a charity which campaigns against FGM, says it believes cutting occurs in at least 45 countries and is more widespread in Asia and the Middle East than commonly perceived.

    Research suggests sunat perempuan is common among Muslim Malays in Malaysia, which neighbors Singapore, and is also practised in Brunei and part of southern Thailand.

    “Often we think about it being a very rural practice linked to lack of education so it’s surprising when we find it in countries like Singapore and it shows there is still a lot more we have to understand about why this is being held in place,” said Orchid CEO Julia Lalla-Maharajh.

    (Editing by Katie Nguyen and Belinda Goldsmith; Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, which covers humanitarian news, women’s rights, trafficking, corruption and climate change. Visit news.trust.org to see more stories.)

     

    Source: www.businessinsider.com