Tag: Muslim

  • Pelakon Putri Mardiana Dan Pasangan, Sharizan Abdullah, Mengaku Tidak Bersalah Atas Tuduhan Berkhalwat

    Pelakon Putri Mardiana Dan Pasangan, Sharizan Abdullah, Mengaku Tidak Bersalah Atas Tuduhan Berkhalwat

    Petaling Jaya – Pelakon Putri Mardiana dan pasangannya, Shahrizan Abdullah mengaku tidak bersalah atas tuduhan berkhalwat yang dikenakan terhadap mereka.

    Kedua-dua pasangan itu masing-masing dikenakan bon jaminan sebanyak RM1,500 oleh Mahkamah Rendah Syariah Gombak Timur di sini pada Selasa.

    Hakim Syarie, Shaiful Azli Jamaluddin menetapkan 25 Ogos depan sebagai sebutan semula kes bagi membolehkan pasangan itu melantik peguam untuk mewakili mereka.

    Menurut laporan media sebelum ini, Putri Mardiana, 34, dan Shahrizan, 31, telah ditahan di sebuah premis kediaman di Ukay Perdana, Hulu Klang berdasarkan aduan awam kepada Bahagian Penguatkuasaan Jabatan Agama Islam Selangor (Jais) pada 14 Disember tahun lalu.

    Mereka ditahan mengikut seksyen 29 (1) A dan B Enakmen Jenayah Syariah Selangor 1995 dan jika disabitkan kesalahan pasangan berkenaan boleh dikenakan denda tidak melebihi RM3,000 atau dipenjarakan selama tempoh tidak melebihi dua tahun atau kedua-duanya sekali.

    Bagaimanapun Putri Mardiana atau lebih mesra dengan sapaan Nina dalam satu kenyataan kepada mStar Online bertarikh 17 Disember 2014 memberitahu kes berkenaan tidak akan dibawa ke mahkamah atas sebab-sebab tidak dijelaskan selain mendakwa mereka tidak bersalah.

    Pelakon itu mendakwa serbuan tersebut sengaja dirancang oleh bekas teman lelakinya dan bekas isteri Shahrizan dengan tujuan untuk memalukannya.

     

    Source: http://www.kualalumpurpost.net

  • Why A Devout Catholic Is Fasting During Ramadan

    Why A Devout Catholic Is Fasting During Ramadan

    As the executive director of Interfaith Worker Justice, a national organization that builds power with workers through faith-rooted organizing and advocacy, my faith and values are what ground me and call me to do this work. I’m Catholic and feel deeply connected to my faith, which has been a constant presence in my life, and is the core to who I am.

    I know that the joy, hope and love I feel within my faith is no different from the joy, hope and love others experience within their own faith tradition. I feel this way because we share a set of common core values, such as respect, dignity, dedication, sacrifice and love.

    It is because of these shared values that I’ve decided to join my Muslim friends as they fast from sunup to sundown during this holy month of Ramadan. I also join them in embracing the blessings one receives during such an important time of fasting, charity, prayer and introspection.

    Fasting during Ramadan is not just about fasting from food but also from the things that can take us away from being our best selves, such as gossip, insults, lies, negativity & disrespect for others. Ramadan helps us look inward by challenging and encouraging us to be better people, by being more conscious and aware of our place in the world and how we relate to those around us.

    In my Catholic tradition I have fasted many times and have seen the benefits of choosing to go without in order to focus on what’s inside. Fasting helps make space for other things to come into greater focus, such as a deeper connection with those less fortunate, a greater emphasis on my relationship with God and being more disciplined about the choices I make.

    Similarly, fasting during Ramadan is as much about filling ourselves with prayer, empathy and love as it is about fasting from the things that separate us from our true nature. It is through Ramadan’s intentional sacrifice of food that we are fed an abundant spiritual buffet.

    Ramadan also gives us an opportunity to be more charitable to others. But it’s more than just about giving alms to the poor — it’s about broadening our awareness and understanding of the systems that make and keep them poor. More importantly, it is about deepening our connection with those less fortunate.

    We practice real empathy and compassion by reaching out and seeking to understand why people struggle, and acting on it. “Why are they hungry?” “Why are they homeless?” By asking these questions we also challenge ourselves to think of what we can do: “How can I do the most good for the most people?” “How do I impact the real problem and make ongoing change happen?”

    Fasting and Prayer

    As someone once told me; “Fasting without prayer is just going hungry.” How true! Many Muslims pray fives times a day, and especially during Ramadan. Prayer feeds the soul and helps sustain the meaning behind the fast.

    Several years ago, I was walking through the Minneapolis airport and saw a young airport worker go into a corner and pull out a small rug to pray. He wasn’t trying to draw attention to himself, but he caught my eye anyway. I was moved by his act of devotion, discipline and love. I then asked myself, “Why don’t I do that?” “Is my faith enough of a priority that I go out of my way to pray to make room for it?” Inspired by the young Muslim man’s public display of faith and prayer, I began to pray the Chaplet of the Divine Mercy at 3 p.m everyday, regardless of where I was. Now I also include my morning prayers, Rosary and evening prayers each day. The young man’s powerful example has inspired and challenged me to deepen my own faith and be a better Catholic.

    It is through sharing experiences and practices that we discover we have more in common than we have differences. One of the many values that we have in common is a shared sense of respect for workers and the value of the work they produce. Across faith traditions, the teachings are clear: respect workers and treat them fairly, as we would want to be treated, or even better. Kind of sounds like a golden rule doesn’t it? For good reason, as we all do better when we all do better.

    So as I begin Ramadan in honor of the values that it represents, I am filled with humility and gratitude for this blessed opportunity to deepen my relationship with God and those around me. It will give me chance to turn down the noise and focus on what’s most important in my life and once again, help me to be a better Catholic.

     

    Source: www.huffingtonpost.com

  • Why Are Muslims So Happy In Ramadan?

    Why Are Muslims So Happy In Ramadan?

    If you have non-Muslim colleagues who are missing their lunch buddies this month, perhaps this will give them a better idea of what’s really going on with Muslims this Ramadan.

    Your Muslim classmates and colleagues may look pale, have chapped lips and look adoringly at the clock counting down to 713pm to break their fast, but despite the hunger and thirst, they’re kind of …. peaceful. Happy even! What sorcery is this, you wonder? Here are some reasons why:

    1) Rewards are multiplied.

    Ramadan is like the Great Singapore Sale of worship. In other months, we are told that our good deeds are rewarded in the ratio 1:10 (yeah, Allah is pretty great) up to 1:700 but for Ramadan, a narration by Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) informs us that God says “Fasting is for Me, and I reward it accordingly.” And that means infinitely (and more!) probably because one of the attributes of God is that He is the Most Generous. There is no logic or system in His Accounting WHICH IS GREAT because we are so in need of extra points.

    So that’s why we’re still smiling despite looking at you and your Big Mac during lunch time. Coz we’re hopeful of the rewards of remaining patient for that few hours.

    2) We see our potential.

    In Ramadan, we believe Satan gets locked up. No more bothersome whispers to do evil things! Although Muslims do believe that we all have innate bad characteristics (with or without Satan) that we have to remove, it does help that we get a free pass for a month from him and focus on cleaning our hearts!

    Screen Shot 2015-06-18 at 10.40.55 am

    This, coupled with the fact that its the GSS of worship, is why you may notice your Muslim friends who drink, stop drinking. Those who can rival a pirate with his swearing and cursing, bite his tongue in this month. And others turn down invitations for movies, parties and other general entertainment.

    It’s because we realise what we’re capable of. We spend 11 months of the year trying so hard to be better people and it’s usually a great struggle. Yet in Ramadan, things get easier and we focus more on our spirituality and realise what we’re capable of. And that makes us mighty pleased and hopeful.

    3) Great sense of community

    Living in a fast-paced city like Singapore and with an increasingly individualistic system of living, it gets difficult to feel a sense of community sometimes. Ramadan reverses that. Makciks all over insist that their children come home to break their fast together, if not everyday, at least once a week.

    This sense of community is most beautifully manifested during the special night prayer that’s only done in Ramadan. It is called the Tarawih prayer (tarawih literally comes from the word rest, or refers to the period of rest in between 4 cycles of the prayer). Mosques all over Singapore which are usually only packed for Friday prayers, are generally packed every single night in Ramadan for these prayers and not just men too. Women, children and the elderly all make their way to the mosques to perform this voluntary prayer together. And it’s an amazingly happy sight.

    Fasting also teaches and reminds us of those less fortunate. When we’re hungry, we are able to empathise with those who are hungry not out of choice. Since Ramadan is basically our happy hour for extra good deeds, you will see many charity initiatives in this month too. SimplyIslam’s Ramadan Charity Basket has been ongoing for 8 years now and we help to provide financial aid and also food provisions to over 150 needy families. You can click on the link above to find out more, donate and also volunteer during the drive!

    4) Salvation from Hell

    Do I really need to explain? Ok. So Muslims believe in a Heaven and a Hell. If your good deeds outweigh your bad deeds, to Heaven you go! (With God’s Mercy of course!) If it’s the opposite, …. you know where this is going.

    BUT! Ramadan is great because Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) says: “Fasting serves as a shield from Hellfire.”

    And in another narration, “Whoever observes fasts during the month of Ramadan out of sincere faith, and hoping to attain Allah’s rewards, then all his past sins will be forgiven.”

    ALL his past sins guys, ALL. So of course we’re happy in this month!

    5) Ramadan Food

    I know I was going for the spirituality angle in this piece but I’ll be a hypocrite if I say we don’t get excited about the special Ramadan food. These are things that even the non-Muslims enjoy too I’m sure!

    There’s this milky, nutty, cold and yummy drink that magically appears in Ramadan and it’s called Katira. Katira is to Singaporean Muslims what the Butterbeer is to Harry Potter. (If you don’t get that reference, seriously why have you not read Harry Potter?!)

    Katira Goodness

    There’s also Dendeng which is basically our awesome, halal version of your Bee Cheng Hiang’s Bakkwa. ‘Nuff said.

    Then there’s the simple, understated Bubur Masjid (literally Mosque Porridge) that we actually send our kids to collect at the mosque once they’re done with school because if we go after our office hours, it might run out. Seriously, we take our Bubur Masjid very seriously. Seriously.

    So now you know what’s up with your Muslim friends this month. We’ll catch up with you on Hari Raya when we’ll all celebrate over pineapple tarts and fizzy drinks! But till then, please don’t post your lunch on Instagram, thanks.

     

    Source: http://muzlimbuzz.sg

  • Preparing For Ramadan – Advice From Habib Umar Bin Hafiz

    Preparing For Ramadan – Advice From Habib Umar Bin Hafiz

    “Make sure you end Sha’ban in the best of states, for Allah records the rewards that we will receive and the supererogatory actions that we will perform before Ramadan enters. He also records the bad deeds and the wretchedness of those that will be deprived the blessings of Ramadan.  What will be your state on the last Friday of Sha’ban and the night before it? Attend the gatherings at the end of this month with a heart focused on the All-Merciful.

    Prepare for the first night of Ramadan, for on this night Allah gazes at His creation, a special gaze which is unique to this Ummah. Allah will never punish the one upon whom He gazes.[2] Look at how many gifts have been given to this Ummah – when Ramadan enters the gates of the Garden are opened and the gates of the Fire are closed.[3]

    If someone who is destined for the Fire dies during Ramadan he will see that the gates of the Fire are closed!

    The odour that comes forth from the mouth of the fasting person is sweeter in the sight of Allah than the scent of musk!

    Every night Allah decrees the safety of 600,000 people from the Fire (in some narrations one million). Then on the last night he decrees the safety of the same number of people that he decreed on every night of the month. He also decrees the safety of others during the day – particularly at sunrise and sunset.

    This is not to mention what happens on Laylat al-Qadr! Allah make us amongst those who reach that night and attain all that it contains. Ask from Allah in the best of ways because Allah does not accept a du`a from a heart which is heedless. Likewise a du`a from a sound heart is more likely to be accepted than a du`a from a tongue which is fluent.

    Al-Sayyida `A’isha asked the Messenger of Allah (Allah bless him and grant him peace) what she should ask for if she knew that it was Laylat al-Qadr.

    He replied: “O Allah, truly You are all-Pardoning, You love to pardon so pardon us.”[4]

    He also said (Allah bless him and grant him peace): “Do four things in abundance: two things with which you please your Lord, and two things which you cannot do without. As for the two things with which you please your Lord: your testifying that there is nothing worthy of worship other than Allah and your seeking His forgiveness. As for the two things which you cannot do without: your asking Allah for Paradise and seeking refuge in Him from the Fire.”[5]

    So say these things in abundance, for they are the best things for which you can use your tongue. Say them in your homes, in the streets, in the mosques not just at Iftar or after Tarawih.

    [On the basis of these two hadiths the scholars and people of Tarim repeat the following du`a throughout the month of Ramadan:

    أشْهَدُ أن لا إلهَ إلا الله نَسْتَغْفِرُ الله نسأَلُكَ الجنَّةَ ونَعُوذُ بِكَ مِنْ النَّار (3)
    ‪ ‬
    Ashadu alla ilaha illallah, nastaghfirullah, nas’aluk’l-jannata wa na`audhu bika min an-nar

    “I testify that there is nothing worthy of worship other than Allah and we seek the forgiveness of Allah. We ask You for Paradise and take refuge in You from the Fire.” (3 times)

    اللهمَّ إنَّكَ عَفُوٌ تُحِبُّ العَفْوَ فَاعْفُ عَنَّا (3) يا كَرِيم

    Allahumma innaka `afuwun tuhibbu-l’`afwa f`afwa `anna

    “O Allah, truly You are all-Pardoning, You love to pardon so pardon us” (3 times). On the third time say “O Most Generous” (Ya Karim).]

    Allah give us the biggest portion of all goodness. Make Ramadan a cause of rectification and the removal of tribulations.

    [1] Jalsat al-Ithnayn, Dar al-Mustafa the night of 25th Sha`ban 1432/25th July 2011
    [2] Narrated by al-Bayhaqi
    [3] Narrated by al-Bukhari and Muslim
    [4] Narrated by Ahmad, Ibn Majah and Tirmidhi with a sahih chain of transmission
    [5] Narrated by Ibn Khuzayma

     

    Source: http://seekershub.org

  • Islamic Justice Only Works If All Agree To It, Claims Top Shariah Judge

    Islamic Justice Only Works If All Agree To It, Claims Top Shariah Judge

    KUALA LUMPUR, June 18 — If anyone were to ask Dr Na’im Mokhtar, he would state in no uncertain terms that he has absolute faith in Islamic law to deliver justice.

    And one would expect no less in the conviction of a man who just took over as Selangor’s Chief Judge of the Shariah courts last November.

    A fellow of the Harvard Law School, Na’im insists that Shariah — or the principles of justice laid out in the Quran and the sunnah — are immutable.

    “Judging with justice is Shariah,” he said in a recent interview with Malay Mail Online.

    But for someone trained as both a civil and Shariah lawyer, Na’im admits that getting everyone to agree with his position, and that of other practitioners of Islamic jurisprudence, is easier said than done.

    Na’im lamented that many who are in a position to explain the merits of Shariah and how it would benefit society as a whole, and not just Muslims, choose to lock themselves away in their ivory towers, content in their own belief that they are right.

    “I look for more engagement with non-Muslims.

    “Shariah law and the courts have been misunderstood, but this (engagement) cannot be done unless the judges and (Shariah court) officers engage the non-Muslims on the functions of the Shariah courts and how it would better suit justice for Muslims and non-Muslims alike,” he said.

    Using divorce proceedings as an example, Na’im stressed that Shariah court judges are not limited to only one Fiqh or school of thought to come to a decision, despite Malaysia’s brand of Islam largely adopting the Shafie interpretation of the faith.

    He noted that practically every piece of Shariah legislation in the country stipulates that judges can look to any of the four schools of Islamic jurisprudence — Shafie, Hanafi, Hambali or Maliki — for guidance.

    “It’s good, in that I can choose the best opinion… if I am confronted by a certain issue, if I can find a ruling in Hanafi that suits justice, then I have that option.

    “Under the Shafie school, a marriage ends by pronouncement of talak (a form of divorce under Islamic law), regardless of whether the wife was beaten up or not provided financial support.

    “But to the Maliki and Hanafi (schools), if a wife is beaten up or her property had been misappropriated, those are valid grounds for the wife to seek divorce,” he said.

    Na’im, who speaks with quiet confidence and a steady gaze, stressed that the lack of engagement is, however, not limited to non-Muslims.

    He said it is an issue even among Muslims as to how they should conduct themselves — especially among those living on the fringes of society — a situation that is not helped by the lack of effort by officials to reach out and help the faithful understand their responsibilities.

    This was the reason behind Na’im’s mobile court, to bring their services straight to the Muslim Orang Asli communities of Selangor and help validate their marriages which were otherwise solemnised by native customs.

    He pointed out that the situation is complicated because marriage through local customs in the said communities — who in these cases are Muslim and have been for generations — is not recognised by the Shariah courts.

    And because the marriage is not valid in the eyes of the Shariah courts, their children are deemed illegitimate and a daughter of such a union is required to seek “permission” from the courts to get married as her parents are not considered legal guardians.

    “I don’t know the reason, but they (Orang Asli) just don’t want to leave their villages and go to the religious departments to solemnise their marriages. And if we were to insist that they come, they will not come.

    “But do they mind marrying without following Islamic requirements No, because they follow their own customs even though they call themselves Muslims.

    “The objective of this whole exercise is to preserve the sanctity of nikah(pronouncement of marriage),” Na’im said.

    For all his good intentions, Na’im stressed that there is little he can do alone without institutional support towards convincing the Malaysian public that Shariah law is the best choice for all.

    Though he declined to weigh in on the ongoing hudud debate, he said what is more important is for everyone in the institution of the Shariah courts to reach out to their critics and skeptics alike and disprove the notion that Shariah is regressive.

    “Once that is done or the negative perception is removed, then we can begin to build trust from there.

    “If we don’t engage (the public), (the perception) will remain negative forever and any effort to upgrade the status of the Shariah court will be futile,” Na’im said.

     

    Source: www.themalaymailonline.com

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