Tag: MUIS

  • Mufti: Jangan Ragu-Ragu Minta Bantuan Pihak Berwibawa

    Mufti: Jangan Ragu-Ragu Minta Bantuan Pihak Berwibawa

    MASYARAKAT Melayu/Islam tidak harus teragak-agak dalam usaha mendapatkan bantuan pihak tertentu yang lebih arif menangani ajaran radikal dan ideologi pelampau, kata Mufti Dr Mohamed Fatris Bakaram.

    “Walaupun susah, kita tidak harus berasa berat untuk bekerjasama dengan pihak berkuasa dan bersama Kumpulan Pemulihan Keagamaan (RRG) untuk menyelamatkan orang tersayang,” ujar beliau.

    Dalam satu kenyataan semalam, Dr Fatris berkata beliau amat terganggu dengan berita penangkapan terkini, bahawa “seorang yang begitu muda boleh terpengaruh dengan kepercayaan yang keji, dan sedia mensia-siakan hidupnya”.

    “Saya ingin menggesa masyarakat agar benar-benar mengambil serius isu radikal sendiri ini,” ujarnya.

    Masyarakat perlu menghayati pengajaran daripada kes ini, lebihlebih lagi dalam bulan Ramadan yang mulia ini.

    Masyarakat telah sentiasa digesa agar mengamalkan amal maaruf dan nahi mungkar – mengajak kepada kebaikan dan mencegah kejahatan.

    Ini bermakna memupuk dan melakukan semua perkara baik dan menolak perbuatan dan kepercayaan sangat keji yang dipupuk ISIS kerana ia tidak mempunyai asas dalam ajaran Islam.

    Hal ini harus dilakukan semua dalam masyarakat, sama ada sebagai saudara, bapa dan ibu, kawan dan rakan sekerja.

    Namun, masyarakat juga perlu tahu bahawa ia tidak boleh berdiri sendiri dalam usaha untuk menolak kejahatan dan mencapai rahmah dan belas kasihan.

    “Kita berdiri bersama-sama sebagai sebuah masyarakat, bersedia untuk membantu antara satu sama lain, dan memanfaatkan kekuatan masing-masing,” ujar Dr Fatris.

    Masyarakat tidak mampu kehilangan satu nyawa pun kepada ajaran pelampau dan eksklusif, katanya.


    Orang ramai yang memerlukan bantuan boleh menghubungi Muis di talian 6359-1199, Kumpulan Pemulihan Keagamaan (RRG) di talian 1800-774-7747 atau menerusi aplikasi mudah alih RRG.

     

    Source: www.beritaharian.sg

     

     

  • A Call To Lead – Qualified Malay Candidates Must Show Courage, Step Up And Give Singaporeans True Choice

    A Call To Lead – Qualified Malay Candidates Must Show Courage, Step Up And Give Singaporeans True Choice

    As we get closer to Syawal, Malays in Singapore are also getting closer and closer to the day of reckoning – come election day in September, Singapore will have its first Malay President since the late Encik Yusof Ishak, albeit in a reserved election. People like Dr Tan Cheng Bock and human rights lawyer M Ravi are challenging the constitutionality of the elections but chances are, the elections will go through. Up till now, we still don’t know which candidate PAP will support but everyone thinks it’ll be current Speaker of Parliament, Halimah Yacob. What about alternative candidates who are independent from PAP? Besides Mr Salleh Marican, no one has stood up to be counted. The silence is deafening but unsurprising.

    Poor Mr Salleh Marican has faced a lot criticism the moment he announced his candidacy. A lot of people have, rightly so, questioned his candidacy as he is not purely of Malay ethnicity. His lepak interview with BeritaMediacorp outside the elections department where he basically mangled the Malay language, did nothing to convince Singaporeans that he is adequately Malay. Some more critical ones have even taken to disparaging his wife’s appearance. All this is nothing but damaging to his confidence in running for Presidency.

    What Singaporeans must appreciate is that it takes a lot of courage for a successful businessman like Mr Salleh Marican to take up public office. He does not need to do this because he needs the money. He doesn’t. He is already rich. He is doing this because he wants to. He wants to serve because heeded the call of Lee Hsien Loong for capable and qualified Malay Singaporeans to step up to contest the elections.

    He may have been a mess but it could just be nerves, One doesn’t create a multi-million dollar empire overnight. Mr Salleh Marican has the mettle and the political savvy to succeed.

    He also has his heart in the right places. Besides his business, Mr Salleh Marican is actively involved in philanthropic activities. Since 2009, Mr Salleh Marican was appointed a founding member of the Board of Temasek Cares, a philanthropic organisation established by GIC Temasek Holdings. Halimah Yacob was also a founding board member.

    Temasek Cares had help fund the setting up of the Family Therapy Institute in Eunos, run by PPIS.

    He is now also a Treasurer of the Temasek Cares Board, ‘who now includes former PAP MP, Zainul Abidin Rasheed.

    There are not many candidates with Mr Salleh Marican’s background. There are also not many candidates like him who are brave enough to step up. However, is he truly the candidate for the Malay community?

    We call on other Malay leaders to follow in the footsteps of Mr Salleh Marican to offer themselves as a candidate for Presidency. Some may say that too many candidates will dilute the votes for non-establishment candidates but an election is about the exercise of power by the individual through the ballot box. Singaporeans are smart enough to choose the right candidates with the right credentials. One who is independent from the influences of the incumbent.

     

    Said

    Reader Contribution

  • Ridjal Noor: Why Malay/Muslim Community Largely Apathetic Over Ramadan Bazaar Issue?

    Ridjal Noor: Why Malay/Muslim Community Largely Apathetic Over Ramadan Bazaar Issue?

    The first question:
    Why are some quarters in the community so busy defending the issue of the bazaar Ramadan? Every day campaigning and raising questions, and brainstorming for solutions.

    Because they are trying to preserve the quality and feel and integrity of this yearly bazaar that’s special and unique to the community.

    The second question:
    But if the community feels so strongly against what’s happening today, then just vote with your spending dollar lah, right? Don’t spend there and the organisers will learn their lesson and learn to respect the laws of the land, correct? People power and all that, right?

    Unfortunately, no. This is the hardest of change to bring about.

    This is why only some quarters are campaigning. The rest are still happily, blissfully ignorantly heading down and voting with their dollars that they don’t care. The herds and their mentality. Sometimes it seems, you just can’t save the community from itself.

    They accept the erosion of values over time without batting an eyelid. They only stop to make viral make viral certain issues. Other than that they steamroll over every bump in the road and move on undeterred, uncaring for the issues dear at heart to the community at large.

    So I agree with Sadali Ami. The community gets the leaders it deserves. And you can’t save the community from itself.

    “The greatest threat to the future is ignorance and apathy.” – Jane Goodall

     

    Source: Ridjal Noor

  • Mohd Khair: Singaporeans Are Capable Of Living Together Respectfully, Beyond Mere Tolerance

    Mohd Khair: Singaporeans Are Capable Of Living Together Respectfully, Beyond Mere Tolerance

    it is very HEARTENING indeed when Non-Muslim Singaporeans demonstrate deep understanding and empathy on the issues surrounding the ambiguous halal status of bazaar at Geylang Serai organised in the month of Ramadhan.

    Read the screenshots shared here in this album. They show genuine concern of Non-Muslim Singaporeans on the issue of non-halal status of some foodstalls at Geylang Serai Bazaar, organised in the month of Ramadhan.

    Such demonstration of care and concern is a fine example of how diversity is celebrated in the multiracial and multireligious society of Singapore.

    Underlying such expression of understanding and empathy is the value of RESPECT, going beyond tolerance. Such thinking also reflects maturity living harmoniously together. Together, regardless of race, language or religion, the multiracial and multireligious society of Singapore should move more in this direction in living harmoniously with one another.

    This album is saved here on this HCRS group as it reflects deep halal discernment among Non-Muslim Singaporeans towards the basic dietery needs of the Muslim consumer. Such discernment is very highly appreciated by Muslims who care so deeply on matters pertaining to halal foods.

     

    Source: Mohd Khair

  • The Curious Case Of Geylang’s Ramadan Bazaar

    The Curious Case Of Geylang’s Ramadan Bazaar

    Ramadan has barely began and yet there’s been a couple of controversies surrounding the food items on sale at Geylang’s annual Ramadan Bazaar. From vendors selling non-halal dendeng meat to the rise of hipster stalls whose halal status can’t be verified, this has caused the general Muslim population in Singapore scratching their heads in confusion.

    Geylang Serai has its roots as a Malay village, while its surrounding areas were well known for commercial activities targeted to the needs of the Malay community. The Ramadan Bazaar in Geylang Serai originated decades ago, even before Singapore’s independence, where vendors would lay their goods and items on groundsheets by the roads. These annual bazaars last for the entire month of Ramadan, serving as not only a place for Muslims to break their fast, but also to shop for their Hari Raya preparations.

    However, the Ramadan Food Bazaar in Geylang this year has been tainted with news of stalls having questionable halal status, a huge irony since the bazaar should be targeting a largely Muslim population. The last few years have seen a rise in hipster stalls selling modern food items, a welcoming change enabling us to celebrate the diversity. On the other hand, there has been no effort by any relevant bodies to ensure the halal status of the food items being sold.

    A couple of years ago I was serving the nation as a Police Officer patrolling the bustling Ramadan Bazaar. On one of the occasions, a Member of Parliament from Marine Parade GRC came down to visit the said Bazaar. It has always crossed my mind whether or not there are any efforts from the organizing committee to ensure the halal status of the food items being sold, for 5 years ago, I started seeing non-Muslims taking up food stalls in Geylang’s Ramadan Bazaar. However, upon asking the said MP, she simply said that the bazaar is open to all individuals.

    The fact that the bazaar is still standing on the grounds of Geylang Serai pays tribute to the rich historical significance and the cultural life of the Malays in Singapore. While I am all for a multiracial, multi-religious and a cosmopolitan Singapore, I strongly feel that the traditions and origins of the Ramadan Bazaar has to be safeguarded. While the Islamic Religious Council of Singapore (MUIS) may view the individual stall’s halal status as being out of their jurisdiction, couldn’t this problem be alleviated by giving priority to Malay Muslim vendors?

    Take a stroll along Geylang’s Bazaar Ramadan a few days before its opening, you’ll see rows of stalls snapped up by non-Muslims and subsequently leased out to the makcik-makcik bazaar you see today. Certain stalls are still manned by non-Muslims who hire ‘Malay-looking workers’ from around Southeast Asia to sell their questionable food items. More often than not, these workers don’t even have a clue as to what they are selling, and the origins of the food that they are told to sell. In a bid to attract and appease the Muslim population, some of these stalls put up ‘fake’ halal signs not issued by MUIS, while others proudly display signages which reads “No Pork, No Lard”. Who are we kidding, these efforts are clearly done to deceive the Muslim population, unless you are telling me that there is another group or community in Singapore who does not consume pork/lard?

    MUIS’s response to the queries in the article attached above seems to be an easy way out for them, absolving themselves of all responsibilities and stating that the onus is on us to verify the halal status of the individual shops. If this is the case, I urge the organizing committee to no longer call it a Ramadan Bazaar, but call it as what it is: a glorified pasar malam. Geylang’s Ramadan Bazaar should be safeguarded but if this were to continue, the bazaar would have lost all meanings and purpose.

    You have those extravagant lights welcoming the Muslim festival of Eid. You have shops selling dates for Muslims to break fast. You have TAA donation boxes for needy Muslims. You have vendors selling garments and carpets for Hari Raya preparation. You can find cookies and goodies which are served in each and every Muslim household. And yet, today, in Geylang’s so called Ramadan Bazaar, you have more than half of the vendors selling food items whose halal status cannot be verified. Tell me this isn’t a problem?

    *EDIT*
    The team at Halalfoodhunt.com and The Halal Food Blog has done an excellent job, excruciatingly going through each and every individual stall to come up with a list of what’s halal and what’s not. May Allah reward their efforts in helping the community.

     

    Source: Ahmad Bin Osman