Tag: Muslim

  • Damanhuri Abas: Dr Tan Cheng Bock Is The Only Choice For All Singaporeans

    Damanhuri Abas: Dr Tan Cheng Bock Is The Only Choice For All Singaporeans

    The President to be that the Malays want whom we know will speak up for us and all Singaporeans. The malay community do not want a Malay exclusive President with no powers.

    Stay strong Singapore, God sees what is happening and will one day answer the prayers of the oppressed as He promises and always do.

    We place our trust in Him!!!

    5000 briyani for the Poor.

    I just came back from a charity event.l was the Guest of Honour.
    This event to offer food to the needy of all races is organised by Free Food For All and they are driven by a mission which they believe in,that made them give their sacrifice to become non-profit.Such an act is noble and gracious.
    Many came to the event to pay a “meal for a meal.”Every packet you buy, another
    packet will go to feed a needy.Also many order online which will be delivered to them.
    I was impressed by the many volunteers helping out and the logistics involved.
    The photos show MP Tin Pei Ling participating also in the event

    dr-tan-cheng-bock-free-food-for-all

     

    Source: Damanhuri Abas

  • Prominent Names Thrown Up For Next Presidential Elections

    Prominent Names Thrown Up For Next Presidential Elections

    Since Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong announced last week that next year’s presidential election will be reserved for Malay candidates, several names of possible candidates have surfaced.

    Community leaders and observers cite two prominent figures from the community: Speaker of Parliament Halimah Yacob, and former Cabinet minister Abdullah Tarmugi, who was Speaker from 2002 to 2011.

    Observers said both possible candidates tick all the boxes of the eligibility criteria for those from the public sector, having spent at least three years in key public offices.

    PM Lee was speaking during the debate in Parliament on changes to the Constitution to ensure minorities are represented in the elected presidency from time to time, as the office is a symbol of the nation’s multiracialism.

    Singapore has not had a Malay president since its first president Yusof Ishak, who died in office in 1970.

    Madam Halimah, 62, an MP for Marsiling-Yew Tee GRC, entered politics in 2001, became minister of state in 2011 and then Speaker in 2013.

    She is widely seen as a front runner. But when asked if she has given the matter thought, Madam Halimah told The Straits Times: “My paramount consideration is service to Singapore which I am doing by wholeheartedly focusing on my current responsibilities.

    “Regardless of our position of service, it is more important to stay focused on the same core mission, which is to do our best for Singapore,” she added.

    Political observer Eugene Tan of the Singapore Management University said her background as a unionist – she spent 33 years at the National Trades Union Congress and left as deputy secretary-general – will endear her to the man in the street. The labour movement will have no problem backing her, he said.

    “That she is a ‘double minority’ sends a powerful message – that a Malay-Muslim and a woman can aspire to and be elected to the highest office in the land, as both groups are under-represented in the office of head of state,” said Associate Professor Tan, a former Nominated MP.

    Association of Muslim Professionals chairman Abdul Hamid Abdullah added that Madam Halimah connects well with people on the ground, who know her to be capable. “The fact that she wears a tudung is not a handicap,” he said. “She is very well accepted by both the Malay and non-Malay community.”

    Iseas – Yusof Ishak Institute fellow Norshahril Saat noted that Madam Halimah would need to resign as an MP and a Speaker if she were to run for the presidency.

    There is a precedent for this – former deputy prime minister Ong Teng Cheong resigned in 1993 to contest the first presidential election that year.

    But Dr Norshahril said some voters might think Madam Halimah is too closely affiliated to the ruling party if she steps down as an MP and runs for president shortly after.

    On the other hand, Mr Abdullah, 72, is a little more “detached”, having retired from politics in 2011.

    Asked if he would run, Mr Abdullah, who was part of the nine-man Constitutional Commission that reviewed the elected presidency, said he has not given it serious consideration. But several friends have encouraged him to do so, he added.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • More Halal Food Options In Japan

    More Halal Food Options In Japan

    In a humble 70-year-old restaurant in a city two hours north of Tokyo, owner Dainari Goka serves up piping hot bowls of ramen and plates of gyoza dumplings – with a twist.

    These dishes are made using halal meats, with chicken as the broth for the ramen, and tempeh (a soy product) and vegetables replacing the usual pork in the dumplings.

    Mr Goka, 40, is the third-generation owner of the Nikkoken eatery in Sano city, and has been serving a Muslim-friendly menu since 2000.

    “I met an African drummer from Guinea who was in town, and he asked me what was there for Muslims to eat,” he told The Straits Times in a recent interview. “That was what got me interested in what was, to me, a foreign culture and religion.”

    He now offers two menus – a regular Japanese menu as well as a Muslim-friendly one – and uses a different set of crockery and utensils to prepare and serve halal meals.

    He serves at least 1,000 Muslim customers a year from countries such as Indonesia, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia who in turn leave their mark by penning messages on the wall of Mr Goka’s restaurant.

    His eatery is one of many businesses – including hotels and karaoke outlets – across rural and cosmopolitan Japan that have increasingly catered to Muslims, as Japan sees an increasing number of Muslim residents and tourists alike.

    There are an estimated 100,000 Muslim residents living across Japan, while the number of Muslim visitors is expected to hit one million by the time Tokyo hosts the Olympic Games in 2020.

    The latest available data from the Japan National Tourism Organisation indicates an exponential growth in visitors from countries where Muslims form the majority.

    In the first nine months of the year, there were 249,800 tourists from Malaysia, a 33.4 per cent rise from the same period last year, while the number of Indonesian visitors grew by 27.7 per cent to 184,900 over the same period.

    A Muslim hotel, Syariah Hotel Fujisan, opened near Lake Kawaguchi at the foot of Mount Fuji in July, replete with a prayer room and halal menus for its guests.

    Since June, Japan Airlines has been providing halal-certified Muslim meals on its outbound international flights from Japan.

    Tertiary institutions such as Kobe University and Nagoya University, too, have stalls with Muslim-friendly menus in the cafeterias.

    Maps identifying Muslim-friendly businesses have been produced for cities such as Sapporo, Kyoto and Osaka, as well as areas in Tokyo such as Asakusa and Shinjuku.

    Sekai Cafe in Asakusa has catered to Muslim customers since 2014, and its store manager Noritaka Shibayama, 33, said he communicates closely with his customers to craft his menu.

    He has also added a prayer mat to a corner in his cafe.

    Likewise, karaoke chain Manekineko has prayer mats in eight of its more than 400 outlets in Japan, including the Yotsuya-sanchome outlet in Shinjuku ward.

    Mr Daiki Yamatani, 34, who does sales and promotions for Manekineko, said the firm had observed a gap in the market with an increasing number of Muslim tourists and exchange students in Japan.

    The Yotsuya outlet, which markets itself as the first karaoke shop to offer a “halal menu”, worked with a Bangladeshi chef to create a Muslim menu, and also organises monthly events catered to Muslims such as rice dumpling-making.

    He admits there was initial scepticism.

    “There used to be a lot of fear because of terrorism,” he said, referring to the killing of two Japanese hostages by the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria militant group.

    “But there is now growing awareness and curiosity (about) the religion, as the country receives more Muslim tourists,” said Mr Yamatani.

    This has led Mr Shinya Yokoyama to start Halal Media Japan as a one-stop portal for Muslim-related information in the country to erase a perception that it was difficult for Muslim visitors to get around Japan.

    Its food listings identify, among other things, eateries that are “halal certified”, those that have “halal meals” but still serve alcohol on the menu, and those with Muslim owners or chefs.

    “Japan’s halal movement is only just starting, and we want to welcome Muslim people,” he said.

     

    Source: www.straitstime.com

  • 4 Children Injured In Suspected Militant Attack On Indonesia Church

    4 Children Injured In Suspected Militant Attack On Indonesia Church

    Indonesian authorities on Sunday arrested a suspected militant who threw an explosive device at a church in the eastern island of Borneo and injured four children.

    Police in East Kalimantan province said the attacker had been imprisoned on terrorism charges in the past.

    “A suspected low-impact bomb was thrown…Four children were injured and four motorcycles were damaged,” East Kalimantan police spokesman Fajar Setiawan said, adding police were looking into links with radical networks.

    The attack took place at 10am in the parking lot of Oikumene church in the town of Samarinda.

    Indonesia has seen a string of Islamic State-linked attacks this year, the biggest of which was a gun and bomb assault in the capital Jakarta that killed four people.

    Authorities are concerned about a resurgence in radicalism and say there are hundreds of Islamic State sympathizers in the world’s biggest Muslim-majority nation.

    President Joko Widodo said he had ordered an investigation into the attack.

    “I have ordered the police chief to take firm action and thoroughly investigate the perpetrator,” Widodo said in a statement.

     

    Source:  www.reuters.com

  • Malay Boy Helps Old Chinese Stranger Buy Food From Non-Halal Stall

    Malay Boy Helps Old Chinese Stranger Buy Food From Non-Halal Stall

    We sometimes have a tendency to judge strangers for their actions without appreciating the full story behind them.

    Take for example Twitter user Shaidlyn’s, who tweeted a video showing her boyfriend purchasing food from a non-halal stall.

    While they were purchasing the food, it seems some people were judging them, chiefly because it happened to be a Chinese cai png stall.

    Screenshot from Twitter
    Screenshot from Twitter

    The meal they tapao-ed consisted of a variety of ingredients, including pork.

    Now, needless to say, it is wrong to judge any other person for buying food in the first place, whatever creed or religion you assume they might possess or practise.

    But, as it turns out, the judgemental hawker centre patrons didn’t even have that moral high ground to stand on — the two of them were actually helping an elderly man buy the meal.

    Screenshot from Twitter
    Screenshot from Twitter

    Books and covers.

     

    Source: http://mothership.sg

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