Tag: Muslim

  • Masjid Al Ansar Raih Anugerah Emas Dalam Usaha Terapkan Mesra Pengguna

    Masjid Al Ansar Raih Anugerah Emas Dalam Usaha Terapkan Mesra Pengguna

    Buat pertama kalinya, sebuah institusi masjid berjaya merangkul anugerah emas atas usahanya menerapkan unsur mesra pengguna.

    Masjid Al Ansar juga menerima pujian atas penggunaan ruang yang bijak dalam reka bentuk masjid.

    Anugerah tersebut diberikan kepada masjid Al Ansar bagi pensijilan Tanda Reka Bentuk Universal Penguasa Bangunan dan Binaan (BCA). Ia adalah satu-satunya tempat ibadah daripada 25 projek yang menerima pengiktirafan tahun ini.

    Apakah ciri-ciri masjid Al Ansar yang melayakkannya merangkul anugerah emas?

    KONSEP TERBUKA

    Apabila anda melangkah masuk ke masjid Al Ansar, apa yang akan anda rasakan ialah keluasan masjid yang terletak di Bedok North itu. Berbeza dengan masjid Al Ansar yang lama, masjid yang berwajah baru itu menerapkan konsep terbuka dari segi rekaannya.

    Pengerusi Masjid Al Ansar, Zahid Ahmad, berkata: “Salah satu keunikan Al Ansar ialah mungkin dari seni bina, rekaannya, agak terbuka. Yang tidak ada fungsi dinding luar atau pagar. Ia konsep terbuka. Kerana saya dan jawatankuasa, semasa kami membuat reka bentuk itu, dari peringkat rekaan lagi, kami rasakan Islam itu agama terbuka, jadi ia tidak semestinya tertutup.”

    PENGGUNAAN RUANG YANG INOVATIF

    Penggunaan ruang yang inovatif dan bijak juga turut diserap dalam rekaan masjid Al Ansar.

    Encik Zahid menambah: “Kita juga ada kawasan legar atau The Plaza di depan, agak terbuka. Saya kira ini adalah salah satu kawasan legar yang terbesar di masjid.

    “Ia mempunyai pelbagai guna, ia bukan sahaja untuk dewan solat pada hari Jumaat tetapi digunakan bagi aktiviti-aktiviti lain seperti untuk kelas-kelas agama kita, kanak-kanak berkumpul, sebagai tempat mereka beriadah dan bermain dan juga aktiviti-aktiviti masjid yang lain. Kalau masjid lama, kurang kita ada aktiviti sedemikian.”

    Bagi memaksimakan ruang yang diberi, menara masjid, iaitu satu-satunya bahagian yang kekal dari bangunan masjid yang lama, kini dijadikan terowong lif.

    MESRA KELUARGA, WARGA TUA

    Bukan itu sahaja, ciri-ciri Masjid Al Ansar yang mesra keluarga dan warga tua turut mendapat perhatian.

    Memandangkan kebanyakan jemaah warga emas datang dari kawasan Chai Chee Street, sebuah pintu masuk khas sudahpun disediakan bagi mereka.

    Mereka yang berkerusi roda pula boleh mengggunakan tanjakan yang disediakan. Tempat mengambil wudhu dan ruang solat utama juga berada berhampiran dengan pintu masuk khas itu.

    Ciri-ciri mesra warga tua itulah antara faktor yang membuat Masjid Al Ansar mendapat emas bagi Tanda Reka Bentuk Universal BCA.

    Sebelum ini, masjid Al Mawaddah dan Kampung Siglap menerima gangsa dalam kategori yang sama. Masjid Al Ansar merupakan antara sembilan projek yang menerima emas.

    Secara keseluruhannya, 25 projek mendapat Tanda Reka Bentuk Universal BCA tahun ini, berbanding 37 projek pada tahun lalu.

    Selain Masjid Al Ansar, masjid baru, Al Islah, baru-baru ini turut mendapat sorotan apabila reka bentuk bangunannya diulas dalam majalah seni bina antarabangsa The Architectural Review yang berpangkalan di London.

    Antara lai, majalah tersebut menyebut tentang reka bentuk Al Islah yang mengikut arus kemodenan namun masih lagi mengekalkan ciri-ciri keislaman dalam sebuah masjid.

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Almakhazin: The Myth Of Decolonisation And Liberal Malay Impotence

    Almakhazin: The Myth Of Decolonisation And Liberal Malay Impotence

    One of the most defining moments in recent Malay history is Tunku Abdul Rahman’s proclamation of Merdeka in 1957.

    With his arm stretched upwards, the Tunku’s declaration was echoed by thousands others in a roar of pride, freedom and dignity. After years of European colonisation, Tanah Melayu was once again Merdeka.

    We are free.

    Or so we believe.

    While the British no longer rule Singapura and Malaysia directly and their Residents and the British crown no longer impose their violent authority, to believe we are actually free and decolonised is to live in an illusion.

    Previous colonisation model

    Colonisation was an expensive exercise. Even though the colonisers were able to extract our natural resources and labour for their benefit, the colonising state was directly involved in our administration.

    They needed to send administrative officers, maintain their lifestyle, a regimental force, establish and exercise the judiciary, manage local politics and commit to the defence of lands that are not militarily strategic to their own.

    Their inability to defend Singapura, the Gibraltar of the East, and the use of resources that could have been redeployed to their own land was strong indication of the folly of the direct colonial venture.

    This recognition led to British withdrawal form territories east of the Suez in 1971.

    However, it does not mean the British, and more generally the west, are no longer colonising us.

    Neocolonialism- Ideational and Systemic Colonialism

    Even though the western colonial states have withdrew from Singapura, Malaysia and the region, it does not mean they have given up colonisation.

    Colonisation is beneficial to the coloniser.

    It privileges their system, promotes our identification with their values, advances the sense of western superiority and ensure we only act and think the way they want us to.

    There are 2 main ways the west are still colonising us:

    1. Our countries exist within an international system created by the Western powers. This system define the rules, procedures, norms and how each state interact with each other.

    The system, whether it is the United Nations, WTO, IMF/ World Bank or the reference to secular, territorial states are created by the West, based on Western experience and preferences.

    We are required to operate within the system they established.

    And the rules they created. Our own socio-political system is removed and destroyed.

    All that we know of now, all that we seek to secure and strengthen, are Western political models.

    And approval of the west.

    2. The west is actively and continuously promoting their philosophies, based on liberalism to us.

    Some of the defeated, colonised Malays have adopted these philosophies.

    Like the eunuch, they are intellectually impotent. They throw themselves at the feet of the West and remain their faithful, unthreatening servants.

    And speak as though Western thought, ideas, practices are theirs too.

    The Liberal Malays do not need to be forced to be subjugated. Their admiration for the west and intellectual castration has led to their own colonisation.

    We have not truly been decolonised.

    Although while for some of us, our colonisation remains only as members of states colonised through an international system,

    for some Malays, their love for their colonial masters means that they want to remain and promote

    Their own colonization.

    And intellectual impotence.

     

    Source: Almakhazin SG

  • Ibu 51 Tahun Jadi Graduan Tertua Ngee Ann Politeknik

    Ibu 51 Tahun Jadi Graduan Tertua Ngee Ann Politeknik

    Usia bukan penghalang bagi seorang ibu memburu cita-cita dalam bidang sains kesihatan.

    Pada usia 51 tahun, Cik Serimaryati Abdullah, seorang jururawat berdaftar, menjadi graduan Politeknik Ngee Ann yang tertua.

    Selama tiga tahun, kampus politeknik itu menjadi sekolah bagi pelajar sepanjang hayat itu.

    Malah, usaha belajar sepanjang hayat itu turut membakar semangat anaknya yang meraih diploma dalam kejuruteraan komputer.

    Berkat kesedaran tentang pentingnya meningkatkan kemahiran dan kelayakan, Cik Serimaryati hari ini (11 Mei) menjadi lulusan tertua daripada kohort lebih 5,000 graduan Politeknik Ngee Ann.

    Cik Serimaryati, yang menerima diploma dalam Sains Kesihatan (Kejururawatan) dari politeknik itu, berkata: “Saya ingin mencabar diri saya sejauh mana saya boleh mencapai cita-cita saya.

    “Apa-apa pun, kita harus duduk berbincang kerana kita tidak hendak separuh jalan dan cita-cita kita tergendala. Dan Alhamdulillah saya diterima bekerja di dalam unit jagaan rapi, sebuah bidang yang begitu intensif sekali.”

    Bahkan, setiap kali menghadapi masalah merungkai esei, Cik Seri merujuk kepada anaknya yang ketiga, Muhd Nur Aniqq Ab Rahim, pelajar di politeknik yang sama, yang merangkul diploma dalam Kejuruteraan Elektrikal & Komputer semalam.

    Aniqq berkata: “Saya rasa bangga kerana dapat sama-sama belajar dengan ibu saya. Selepas saya menjalani Perkhidmatan Negara (NS), saya akan meneruskan pembelajaran saya dalam bidang ijazah kejuruteraan komputer.

    “Ibu saya banyak memberi saya inspirasi dan mendorong saya, beliau kekalkan langkah pembelajaran sepanjang hayat dan saya ingin jadi macam beliau.

    LAGI PASANGAN IBU DAN ANAK TAMAT PENGAJIAN DIPLOMA SERENTAK

    Cik Seri serta Aniqq ternyata bukan satu-satunya pasangan ibu dan anak yang berjaya menamatkan pengajian diploma mereka serentak.

    Ibu tunggal berusia 44 tahun, Cik Norizan Azin dan anak sulungnya Nurulhayati Saimen, 21 tahun, juga tamat kursus politeknik selang sehari.

    Pelajaran Cik Norizan dulu tertangguh kerana tidak mahu membebani ibunya yang juga ibu tunggal.

    Maka, bak impian jadi nyata apabila Kastam Singapura menaja 100 peratus pembelajaran Cik Norizan selama 2.5 tahun.

    Ketua Pegawai Kastam itu kini pemegang diploma Amalan Perniagaan daripada Politeknik Temasek, sementara anaknya meraih diploma Aplikasi Bisnes daripada Politeknik Republic.

    Kisah inspirasi ini diharap akan mendorong lebih ramai ibu bapa mengikut jejak langkah Cik Seri dan Cik Norizan yang terus memburu pengetahuan sepanjang hayat – usaha yang kini dibantu inisiatif Pemerintah, Kredit SkillsFuture.

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Terrorism Is Political Problem, Not A Religious One

    Terrorism Is Political Problem, Not A Religious One

    Recently, in the aftermath of attacks by the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) in Europe, Singaporean leaders warned against the danger of Islamophobia.

    Mr K. Shanmugam, Home Affairs and Law Minister, expressed his fears that non-Muslims in Singapore could start developing a set of attitudes internally towards Muslims as a reaction to terror attacks elsewhere in the world, and noted that there were signs that this was already happening. He urged non-Muslims to reach out and engage Muslims here so as to maintain the nation’s social cohesion.

    In a similar vein, Dr Yaacob Ibrahim, Minister for Communications and Information, recently stressed the role of religious leaders in promoting understanding about “how Muslims and non-Muslims can live together side by side in peace and harmony”.

    This interfaith approach is not limited to the ministerial level. Teachers in secondary schools and junior colleges that I visit often ask me to include something about the importance of interfaith dialogue in my lectures about the Middle East.

    Interfaith dialogue is aimed at keeping the peace in the wake of all the attacks and should be encouraged, but it is equally important that we help the young to understand and historicise the emergence of terrorism.

    Singaporean students who I visit often ask me to explain the phenomenon of ISIS, or even of Al-Qaeda, which are in essence not a religious problem and cannot be understood using a religious approach. It is a political problem closely associated with the transformations of the role of the United States, as well as the global political landscape, from the Cold War to a post-Cold War era. Hence, we have to move beyond interfaith dialogue, and adopt a political lens to help young Singaporeans understand this political problem.

    An analogy may help illuminate the situation. When, for example, the presumptive Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump quotes from the Bible and portrays himself as an ideal Christian candidate for American evangelical voters, we do not try to understand the problematic phenomenon of Mr Trump only through the lens of Christianity. Rather, the economic problems faced by many working-class Americans and their disillusionment with establishment candidates, Republican or Democrat, are more relevant. Similarly, approaching Al-Qaeda or ISIS only through the lens of Islam misunderstands the nature of the problem completely.

    POLITICAL ALLIANCES MATTER

    Thus, apart from promoting interfaith dialogue, we need to teach students about how US Cold War-era policies and alliances took on new significance in a post-Cold War world.

    For example, US interventions in the Middle East and Central Asia in the Cold War era empowered some parties who consequently turned against US interests in a changed global political context after the fall of the Soviet Union. While these interventions may have made strategic sense during the Cold War, they set in motion other elements that gradually came to acquire a different logic in the post-Cold War world.

    A salient example to illustrate this point is Osama bin Laden, who once fought with US and Saudi aid against the Soviet Union in Afghanistan in the 1980s, only to “turn against” his former patron on Sept 11, 2001.

    In a similar vein, some of the US’ Cold War-era alliances that previously held strategic value against the Soviet Union have transmogrified into strategic liabilities.

    For example, Mr Lawrence Wilkerson, a retired US Army colonel and the former chief of staff to then US Secretary of State Colin Powell, has candidly shared his views in multiple interviews that the close alliance between the US and Israel, which made strategic sense during the Cold War era, was now a strategic burden for the US.

    In his open letter to the US in 2002, Osama stated that Al-Qaeda’s undertaking of the Sept 11 attacks was motivated by the Israeli occupation of Palestine – this was the first reason given in his letter, among a list of others.

    However, Osama previously had few qualms fighting on the side of the US against the Soviet Union during the Cold War in the 1980s. Why, then, was the Israeli- Palestinian issue not a priority for him at that time?

    This shows that the resistance to the US that consciously promotes itself as, and claims to be, “Islamic” is not an eternal fact, but is of a very recent vintage that emerged in a changed post-Cold War world that reinterpreted US Cold War strategy antagonistically.

    TERROR ATTACKS: POLITICAL, NOT RELIGIOUS, AT THEIR CORE

    To understand the emergence of ISIS – an issue experts and specialists are fervently debating over – requires a prior understanding of the background of these developments.

    Ultimately, there is no simple cause or reason for the post-Cold War transformations because every event emerged from a context that itself was constituted by a previous context. Nevertheless, the historical vantage point offered by the political framework sketched out above is needed if one wants to recognise that this new pattern of terrorist attacks – all of which should be condemned, whoever the perpetrator – is not religious at its core, but political.

    What is missing in many pre-tertiary education systems around the world is this political and historical approach in teaching about the post-Cold War world. Such a curriculum should be implemented at a national level.

    European countries and the US have long been models for Singapore, but the recent attacks in Paris and Brussels, not to mention the rise of racism and intolerance in the US, reflect most potently the failure of these societies to integrate their minorities.

    This makes it clear that Singapore has to strike its own path, and take a proactive approach to maintaining racial and religious harmony domestically. Singapore is a small and open society; while we cannot avoid the fact that Western media, with its predominance, overwhelms us with its own Islamophobic biases, we can – we must – train our citizens to be savvy in managing the daily influx of such information.

    Since 2013, I have been making volunteer visits to secondary schools, junior colleges and the National University of Singapore to give lectures precisely on this topic. Over the years, I have collected hundreds of little feedback slips from the students I have lectured to and exchanged e-mails with their teachers, thereby refining my pedagogical approach and presentation content.

    Based on my personal experience lecturing at over a dozen schools in Singapore over the past three years. I would say it is possible to implement this curriculum and for the Ministry of Education to design “just-in-time” resource packages to provide a timely response to this pressing topical issue.

    If we are serious about maintaining racial and religious harmony in Singapore, as Mr Shanmugam and Dr Yaacob have exhorted us to do recently, then we have to start with our young, and proactively shift the paradigm for understanding the terrorist threats to the US-dominated world order from a religious one to a geopolitical one.

    • Koh Choon Hwee is a PhD student in Middle East history at Yale University. Prior to this, she spent two years in the American University of Beirut in Lebanon working on her master’s.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Almakhazin: Chee Soon Juan As An Intellectual Statesman

    Almakhazin: Chee Soon Juan As An Intellectual Statesman

    There are very few politicians that I believe have impeccable integrity.

    Faisal Abdul Manap is one.

    Chee Soon Juan is another. Chee Soon Juan’s integrity I believe, come from his deep commitment to his Christian beliefs.

    It is this commitment and integrity that I am sure, helped him to weather the challenges of opposition politics in Singapura.

    Soon Juan has done a lot for Singapura’s political space. He has sacrificed and suffered. He gave all that he had to the cause.

    Like JBJ, he has fought the good fight.

    But fighters do not necessarily become leaders. And while the system remain, they may not necessarily be fully appreciated.

    Singapurans may not generally recognise his sacrifices. The system and instruments of the state have been successful in painting him as a rabble-rouser who may not be able to manage the state or a town council.

    And while there is optimism that Singapurans may be better informed and more receptive of his message, we should recognise that accepting his ideas do not necessarily mean they are willing to have him as their representative.

    The Bukit Batok By-Election

    The election was a watershed moment. After the optimism from opposition gains in 2011, there was a strong sense that the PAP may lose a few more wards in 2016. SG50 and Lee Kuan Yew’s deification clearly swung support to the PAP.

    While there is evidence of some remnants of the SG50/ Lee Kuan Yew effect, the by-election provided a strong yardstick, not only of where the PAP is with regard to the public, but whether Soon Juan is able to dismiss the public perception that has been created.

    There are indications that he has changed some minds. However, once again, the perception change relates to his ideals and person. Not necessarily as a statesman or political administrator.

    Soon Juan has helped to elevate how Singapurans view the political process. He has helped to expand political understanding.

    His ideas are making its way among Singapurans not because he was elected into office but because he transmits it outside of the defined political arenas.

    Redefine role

    He did not need to be in parliament to transmit his ideas and ideals.

    He has done a lot without needing political office.

    I truly hope that Soon Juan will consider a shift. And we can help him to achieve that shift.

    Not as a politician.

    Not as a future MP.

    But as a moral and public intellectual.

    The fighter in him will want to keep fighting for parliamentary access.

    But rather than focus on winning a seat, I hope he will redefine his role.

    Help civil society develop.

    And be an intellectual statesman.

     

    Source: Almakhazin SG

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