Tag: MUIS

  • A Story On The First Day Of Syawal

    A Story On The First Day Of Syawal

    A CONVERSATION ON THE FIRST OF SHAWWAL

    ISYAK: They came for me at the Masjid every night in Ramadhan… every night! I really thought they came for me. And I only realised I was wrong when our guest Mr Tarawih told me that they came for him and not me. I mean.. come on.. Im wajib and he’s sunnat..

    MAGHRIB: Me too bro… they were anxiously waiting for me to come every evening! They actually memorised my arrival time man! I was so happy until Mr Iftar told me they were waiting for him and not me.

    SUBUH: You guys should be thankful… They only came for me in the Masjid in the last 10 nights of Ramadhan. I thought they came for me but realised I was wrong when Mr Laylatul Qadr told me they came for him. And the saddest part was yesterday on 1st Shawwal. So many came although they were late. So many of them came. It was more than the numbers who came for Mr Jumaat. And then I realised they came for Mr Eid. Not me.

    LAYLATUL QADR: And those who knew my story, they only came on 5 of the odd nights, not 10. Imagine if Allah had revealed to them my actual date!

    ZUHUR & ASAR: [Silent, not understanding a single thing]

     

    Source: Aydarus Alhabshi

  • Mufti Negara: Umat Islam Singapura Sambut Aidilfitri Rabu, 6 Julai

    Mufti Negara: Umat Islam Singapura Sambut Aidilfitri Rabu, 6 Julai

    Umat Islam di Singapura akan menyambut Aidilfitri lusa, Rabu 6 Julai ini.

    Demikian diisytiharkan oleh Mufti Negara, Dr Mohd Fatris Bakaram, selepas terbenam matahari malam ini tadi (4 Jul).

    Menurut beliau: “Mengikut kiraan hisab, anak bulan Syawal tidak mungkin dapat dilihat di atas ufuk Singapura setelah matahari terbenam petang tadi (4 Jul) kerana bulan terbenam lebih awal.

    Ini bererti, esok adalah hari pencukup bulan Ramadan 30 hari dan awal bulan Syawal bagi tahun 1437H jatuh pada lusa, Rabu bersamaan 6 Julai 2016.

    Ustaz Dr Fatris juga mengucapkan Selamat Hari Raya Eidul Fitri kepada sekalian Muslimin dan Muslimat Singapura.

    Semoga Allah menerima segala amal ibadah yang sudah kita lakukan sepanjang Ramadan ini dan semoga Allah melanjutkan umur kita sehingga bertemu Ramadan tahun hadapan,” ucap beliau lagi.

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Mohd Khair: Learn About Islam From The Correct And Credible Sources

    Mohd Khair: Learn About Islam From The Correct And Credible Sources

    My Dear Non-Muslim Friends,

    For any non-Muslim interested to know more about Islam, the Quran and its text, please seek assistance from the Islamic Religious Council of Singapore (MUIS) or any nearby mosque or the Singapore Muslim Converts Association or the Singapore Islamic Teachers and Scholars Association (PERGAS).

    Do not rely on online sources, especially those sites used by extremist or terrorist groups which subvert Islam by claiming to be Islamic or an authority in Islam whereas they are NOT.

    Those online sites do not represent Islam nor the Muslim World.

    And please remember that ISIS and its predecessor Al Qaeda are unIslamic groups. The entire Muslim World and entire Islamic Scholars have condemned all the terrorist acts by such groups.

    And as far as suicide bombers and their actions are concerned, they are neither Islamic nor sanctioned in Islam and by its Scholars.

    So, please do yourselves a favour. If you need more information about Islam. Muslims and interpretations of the Quranic texts, seek help from MUIS, Mosques or PERGAS or other Recognised Muslim Organisations like the Singapore Muslim Converts Association.

    Do not ask Google Sheikh for it will only lead you astray and make you an extremist in your views about Islam and Muslims

     

    Source: Mohd Khair

  • MUIS Agih Bantuan Ramadan Hampir S$2 Juta Tahun Ini, Naik 16%

    MUIS Agih Bantuan Ramadan Hampir S$2 Juta Tahun Ini, Naik 16%

    Majlis Ugama Islam Singapura (MUIS) membelanjakan S$1.94 juta tahun ini bagi membantu golongan memerlukan dalam bulan Ramadan.

    Ia kenaikan sekitar 16 peratus berbanding tahun lalu dan memberi manfaat kepada lebih 12,900 penerima.

    Selain itu, jumlah Bonus Ramadan yang diagihkan kepada setiap penerima juga bertambah dan dimanfaatkan lebih ramai penghuni di rumah-rumah kebajikan. Demikian didedahkan di Majlis Pengagihan Bonus Ramadan MUIS petang tadi (24 Jun).

    Tahun lalu, MUIS menerima sumbangan zakat sebanyak S$35.3 juta. Daripada jumlah itu, hampir separuh atau S$17.2 juta diagihkan kepada beberapa golongan memerlukan.

    Ini termasuk golongan fakir miskin menerusi bantuan kewangan bulanan dan Program Pengupayaan Bersepadu (EPS) serta para pelajar madrasah yang memerlukan, menerusi Skim Bantuan Kewangan Madrasah di bawah Dana Kemajuan (PROMAS).

    Seperti tahun-tahun sebelumnya, sebahagian daripada wang zakat juga diagihkan semasa bulan Ramadan bagi membantu golongan memerlukan.

    Menteri Bertanggungjawab bagi Ehwal Masyarakat Islam, Dr Yaacob Ibrahim, berkata: “Untuk Ramadan kali ini, MUIS akan membelanjakan hampir S$2 juta untuk sekitar 12,900 penerima bantuan kewangan MUIS serta keluarga mereka, penerima bantuan jangka panjang Comcare dan penghuni Islam di rumah-rumah kebajikan.

    “Perbelanjaan ini merupakan kenaikan sekitar 16 peratus jika dibandingkan dengan tahun lalu. Jumlah ini juga merangkumi pembiayaan program-program sokongan yang dijalankan di merata kelompok masjid sepanjang Ramadan.”

    Daripada jumlah itu, S$235,000 akan digunakan bagi membiayai program-program Ramadan serta pemberian hamper raya kepada para penerima zakat.

    Baki S$1.66 juta pula diagihkan dalam bentuk Bonus Ramadan kepada para penerima bantuan, termasuk para penghuni di 50 rumah tumpangan – hampir separuh daripada rumah-rumah itu, penerima kali pertama.

    Ketua Unit Pembangunan Sosial MUIS, Muzaiyanah Hamzah berkata: “Alhamdulillah, tahun ini, kami telah dapat menambah jumlah rumah kebajikan yang menerima Bonus Ramadan MUIS daripada 27 tahun lepas, naik hampir dua kali ganda tahun ini kepada 50.

    “Dan hampir 2,000 penghuni dari rumah kebajikan warga emas dan kanak-kanak menerima Bonus Ramadan. Kami harap sumbangan kecil ini akan memberikan sedikit keceriaan untuk mereka dalam menyambut Ramadan dan juga Syawal yang akan tiba.”

    JUMLAH WANG BONUS TAHUN INI LEBIH TINGGI

    Setelah disemak semula, jumlah wang bonus yang diterima setiap orang tahun ini juga lebih tinggi.

    Para penerima yang tinggal sendirian serta penghuni di rumah-rumah kebajikan menerima S$150 setiap orang, tambahan S$30 daripada sebelumnya.

    Golongan berkeluarga pula menerima S$120 bagi setiap anggotanya, S$20 lebih tinggi berbanding tahun lepas.

    Dengan kenaikan itu, keluarga Cik Faridah Abdullah seramai lapan orang menerima Bonus Ramadan berjumlah S$960 – tambahan S$160 daripada tahun sebelumnya.

    “Selain saya menggunakan (wang itu) untuk persiapan raya, saya menggunakan untuk keperluan anak-anak untuk membawa mereka membuat pemeriksaan kesihatan seperti terapi dan berjumpa doktor,” kata Cik Faridah.

    Selain Bonus Ramadan, MUIS juga memberikan bantuan zakat kepada golongan yang memerlukan sokongan jangka panjang, seperti warga emas, orang kurang upaya serta mereka yang menghidap penyakit kronik.

    Bantuan jangka pendek juga dihulurkan seperti melunaskan bil api air serta pembiayaan untuk keperluan pembelajaran.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Rising Trend Of Halal Labelling Generates Concern

    Rising Trend Of Halal Labelling Generates Concern

    The paint tin has a silhouette of a mosque on the label, while the paint company’s brochure has the face of a pig crossed out.

    Indonesian company Bernahal uses these images to show its wall paint is halal, or permissible for Muslims, part of a growing range of goods aimed at winning over pious Islamic consumers in a global market estimated to be worth US$2 trillion (S$2.7 trillion) a year.

    To emphasise its appeal, Bernahal says the chemicals in its paints are free from lard, which is considered unclean in Islam.

    In Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim nation, there are many other items touted as halal, such as a computer mouse, headscarves and even shirt buttons.

    In Malaysia, it is the government’s Islamic Development Department, or Jakim.

    In Singapore, it is the Islamic Religious Council (Muis), while in Indonesia, it is the Indonesian Ulema Council’s Food and Drugs Supervisory Agency.

    Makers of products such as canned food or those selling meat such as chicken must first apply to the local Islamic authority to carry the halal logo.

    Applicants need to ensure their supply chain uses ingredients and processes permitted under Islamic law.

    Beyond the requirements of having no pork, no lard, no alcohol and a clean processing environment, a supplier of chicken or sheep, for example, must have the animals slaughtered by Muslim workers reciting the name of Allah in abbatoirs certified by Jakim.

    Biscuits and mineral water are examples of food that do not generally have to carry the halal logo. But manufacturers seek certification to attract more Muslim customers.

    A company or seller will be allowed to carry the official halal stamp once the Islamic body is satisfied the conditions are met, and occasional spot checks are carried out to ensure compliance.

    Muis says it conducts “unannounced post-certification audits”. Once approved, the validity of halal certification lasts for one to two years, depending on the firm’s past track record, among other things.

    In Malaysia, there are discussions whether to introduce halal supermarket trolleys that cannot be used by buyers of pork. There is also a recently launched halal Internet browser and halal household detergents.

    Some think the frenzy over “halal” products has gone too far and accuse businesses of exploiting pious Muslims who fear touching or eating items deemed unclean, or haram, meaning forbidden.

    But others say it is the Muslims who insist on the halal label.

    A director at Malaysia’s Islamic Development Department (Jakim), Mr Sirajuddin Suhaimee, told The Straits Times that “the push power of consumers has nudged the industry to get halal certification”.

    “People ask for a halal toilet bowl because it comes into contact with humans. Same for plastic bags and packaging that have contact with food,” said Mr Sirajuddin.

    Datuk Hooi Lai Lin, chief executive of Ken Rich Corporation, which produces halal personal care products and household detergents, said: “We just want to cater across the board and give comfort to all Muslims.

    “Even though our cleaning products are not consumed, a lot are touched by people.”

    Lumin Spring International Group produces mineral water that has the Jakim halal logo. “If we tell buyers that our water is Malaysian halal-certified, it sells better,” said company director Philip Ting.

    The drive to make more products and services halal has grown in the past three decades as Muslims have become more observant of Islam, as shown by the growing number of Muslim women who wear the tudung or headscarf around the world.

    “It’s not a choice. We must use halal goods,” Perak state’s mufti, Tan Sri Harussani Zakaria, told The Straits Times.

    But a worry is that Muslims are buying these products simply because of the halal stamp, without asking whether a can of paint, a computer mouse, a bottle of water or that colourful headscarf needs the label in the first place.

    “Muslims are required to eat halal, but the problem is when people practise religion beyond the nature of Islam itself,” Mr Mohd Asri Zainul Abidin, Perlis state’s mufti, told The Straits Times.

    “Traders are commercialising religion and halal by promoting what Muslims should use and consume,” he added.

    Such commercial uses of the label have spurred a group of auditors, including Muslim Singaporeans, to form a new association to help governments certify manufacturers using halal guidelines and standard practices.

    The International Association of Halal Auditors, which will be registered in Indonesia by the end of this year, will possibly be the first halal body in the world to be led by professionals, said Mr Imran Musa, 51, one of the main initiators.

    The Singaporean is the chief executive of Ark Incorporation, a Singapore company that has audited 40 companies worldwide for halal compliance since 2011.

    Among the group’s aims is to quash “halal extremism” and set the record straight on what is “genuinely halal and good”, Mr Imran told The Straits Times.

    “Having unnecessarily stricter rules towards halal will lead to halal extremism. Who would have thought of halal paint, halal tudung and halal condoms?” he said.

    “Halal extremism is slowly creeping in as some clerics impart their own judgment, hence making halal more stringent.”

    Mr Imran has so far gathered 50 auditors from Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Australia, South Korea, Japan, Thailand, New Zealand, Germany, Italy and Britain to join the association.

    He said the proposed group has received the backing of Indonesia’s top Islamic authority, the Indonesian Ulema Council (MUI), which is also the halal certification body in the country.

    Halal certification currently has no universally accepted standard, with different countries imposing varying interpretations of the Islamic rules for what is permissible.

    Some go beyond what the religion requires, in what is described by Mr Asri as being “halal crazy”.

    To add to the headache, halal approvals issued previously for products can be reversed depending on circumstances, MUI’s deputy secretary-general, Tengku Zulkarnain Rafiuddin, told The Straits Times.

    For instance, kopi luwak, made from coffee beans which are ingested and excreted by civets, is halal in Indonesia as the waste matter can be washed away. But if the coffee beans break up in the animals’ bodies before they are expelled, the beans become haram, he said.

    Kopi luwak is halal in Singapore. But it is haram – not permissible for Muslim consumption – in Malaysia.

    Manufacturers say stricter requirements translate into more time, money and paperwork which, in turn, drive up costs of goods.

    Typically, a company can take anything from two to five months and spend US$4,000 to US$67,000 to get their products halal-certified in Singapore, Malaysia and Indonesia, officials say.

    Mr Martin Wissler, sales international manager for Germany-based Martin Braun group, which exports pastry and baking ingredients, said he hopes to deal with a single body with clear guidelines.

    He told The Straits Times: “This is actually what we are looking for as a manufacturer… We wouldn’t mind paying for such good services provided we can save a lot of time.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com