Tag: Muslim

  • Zulfikar Shariff: Lee Kuan Yew’s Legacy On Islam And Discrimination Of Malays Should Not Be allowed To Perpetuate

    Zulfikar Shariff: Lee Kuan Yew’s Legacy On Islam And Discrimination Of Malays Should Not Be allowed To Perpetuate

    Alhamdulillah, most of my friends are those who have not been indoctrinated.

    There are Muslims who have good intentions but lack political understanding. They assume that with his death, LKY does not have any further effect on Muslims. We should then move forward and not discuss him anymore.

    But that is the problem when someone lack appreciation of political narratives and try to make a claim on political effects. Let me make this simple to understand. An institution is made up of 3 primary components: routines, expected behaviour and shared goals. The government is an institution through the existence of the 3 characteristics.

    The shared goals (or shared reality) is a set of ideas, values, philosophies that are developed through the institution. In the PAP and government, how Muslims are engaged and treated owes a lot to Lee Kuan Yew’s views of reducing Islam to its bare minimum

    His demands for rejection of various aspects of Islam were not adopted through any objective measure. Rather, they were granted legitimacy simply through the force of his demands.

    Ideas do not die with the death of its advocates. They live on. The way Lee Kuan Yew discriminates the Muslims, lives beyond his natural life.

    Thus, the only way to challenge the ideas and halt its promotion is to challenge the narrative surrounding Lee Kuan Yew. Delegitimise his interaction and management of the community and his ideas of how the Muslims should be discriminated (while pretending to support) loses currency.

    So for those who want to keep quiet and accept his legacy, that is your right. Do that. Those who want to promote him as the spirit of Singapore’s development, you can do that too.

    The rest of us will tear down the fiction of Lee Kuan Yew’s history. Not because we want to discuss the man.

    But because his ideas on how the community should be discriminated and how Islam should be rejected cannot be allowed to live on.

     

    Source: Zulfikar Shariff

  • Singaporean Woman And Four Children Stuck In Aden, Yemen

    Singaporean Woman And Four Children Stuck In Aden, Yemen

    A Singaporean woman and her four children are stuck in Aden, Yemen, as rebel troops close in on the Middle Eastern port city.

    Madam Sherin Fathima Syed Abdul Ravoof, in her 30s, and her four children aged between four and 13, have no way out of the country, which is on the brink of civil war.

    Countries such as China and India have been evacuating their citizens on naval frigates.

    “My kids are terrified because nothing like this ever happens in Singapore,” Madam Sherin told The New Paper.

    A Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) spokesman said it is in close contact with Singaporeans in Yemen, especially those who want to leave the country.

    But since Singapore has no diplomatic representation in Yemen, MFA is working with the Malaysian and Indonesian embassies to help evacuate Singaporeans.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Dzar Ismail: Syukur Dilahir Seorang Muslim Di Singapura

    Dzar Ismail: Syukur Dilahir Seorang Muslim Di Singapura

    Kalau di China, orang Islam dilarang berpuasa, sampai ada yg sembunyi sembunyi bershaum. Disini, kita bebas berpuasa, itu pun ada orang tak puasa.

    Kalau di Perancis, keselamatan seseorang yg berhijab itu sering terancam. Siap ada undang-undang lagi melarang orang berhijab. Tidak disini. Sapa nak berhijab silakan, siapa tak nak, takder paksaan. Sendiri jawab.

    Kalau di England, sembahyang kat stadium, orang amek gambar, upload internet, label ‘disgrace’. Tidak disini, ada yg siap berjemaah satu sudut di stadium, sebelum game bermula. Sholat Hari Raya dalam stadium lagi ada.

    Kalau di Jerman, peh susah nak cari makanan halal. Ada bila melancong, siap tarpao biskut dengan Meggi, was was punya pasal. Tidak disini. Senang nak cari makanan halal. Bacon pun halal. Turkey baconlah.

    Kalau di Korea Selatan, peh susah nak cari masjid, Korea Utara jgn cakap lah. Disini, hampir satu masjid di setiap estet perumahan. Sampai belia masjid boleh buat acara touring naik basikal dari masjid ke masjid.

    Aku tinggal di Singapura. Pemerintah sekular, bukan pemerintah Islam. Tapi kadang kadang sifat mereka lebih Islam dari yg sekian ada di merata dunia.

    Penjualan arak diharamkan dibeberapa tempat dan waktu tertentu. Untuk menjaga keamanan dan keselamatan.

    Aktiviti menghisap rokok diharamkan dikebanyakkan tempat. Sampai bawah blok, corridor rumah pun tak boleh.

    Aktiviti hubungan sejenis diharamkan menurut undang-undang.

    Kita bebas berdakwah, nak buat ceramah, forum perdana, kelas agama, maulid, ibadah korban, silakan, asalkan dgn yg bertauliah dan mengikut garis panduan yg disarankan.

    Aku bersyukur dilahirkan seorang Muslim di Singapura. Bebas. Tiada halangan ketara. Hujan emas di negeri orang, hutan batu di negeri sendiri, lebih baik di negeri sini.

     

    Source: Dzar Ismail

  • Cherian George: Lee Kuan Yew Was Bulwark For Singapore Minorities

    Cherian George: Lee Kuan Yew Was Bulwark For Singapore Minorities

    Unlike-Lee admirers around the world may be missing significant details.

    In an amusing case of mistaken identity, a banner honouring Lee Kuan Yew has appeared in India, bearing a photo of another Singaporean elder statesman, President Tony Tan. Both are white-haired ethnic Chinese males, but Tan, as you have may noted from Channel NewsAsia’s coverage of Lee’s funeral today, is rather more alive.

    The picture has been making the rounds on social media in Singapore, bringing smiles to an otherwise sombre day. It serves as a useful reality check for Singaporeans, that although Lee has been lauded by world leaders as a 20th century giant, not everyone can recognise him from Tom, Dick or Tony.

    Some other cases of mistaken identity are less trivial. It’s nothing new. For at least a couple of decades, he has been all things to all men who aspire to a certain kind of leadership. They see in him a model, a kind of proof-of-concept that they can point to when defending their own missions and methods. Leader X is Country A’s Lee Kuan Yew. How often have you heard that line.

    As a Singaporean born in the year of the republic’s independence, I’ve benefited from Lee’s global brand, most tangibly in the fact that my red passport travels extremely well. But the way that brand is sometimes used is cringeworthy.

    Most of the parallels that foreign politicians and their acolytes draw with Lee Kuan Yew are selective and self-serving. His name is evoked by anyone who wants to apply less-than-democratic means in the name of strong, decisive leadership in order to achieve high economic growth. But there was a lot more to the man and his formula for success.

    My interview with Maria Ressa of Rappler.com.

    The most obvious was the zero tolerance of corruption that he embodied and instituted in the Singapore system. That is probably a chapter in his bestselling memoirs that admirers like former Thai prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra skipped. Similarly, fans of Indonesia’s late president Suharto who cite his friendship with Lee conveniently ignore the fact that Suharto topped the world league table of corrupt leaders, according to the same organisation that routinely names Singapore as the cleanest in Asia.

    Less noticed is the fact that Lee, while loudly dismissive of the liberal brand of democracy, never deviated from electoral authoritarianism – the belief that regular multi-party elections are ultimately the only way for a government to win legitimacy, and are not bad at keeping a dominant party on its toes. Of course, he did his best to insulate his government from distractions like short-term public opinion, an adversarial press and protest movements; he also treated the opposition unfairly, to put it mildly.

    But, to this day, elections in Singapore remain competitive enough and credible enough to make democracy “the only game in town”, as political scientists would put it. As a result, opponents of the regime plot election strategy, not extra-parliamentary struggle; and Singaporeans accept the government’s authority as legitimate, even if they disagree with its policies. The thousands of Chinese officials who pass through Singapore to learn the Lee model may think this lesson can’t apply to the People’s Republic, but shouldn’t overlook how important it has been to Singapore’s success.

    Back to India. When its government decided to fly the tricolour at half-mast today, I wonder which Lee they were honouring. I hope – but I doubt – that it was the leader who stood resolutely against sectarian politics and majority domination. Among all his core principles, this is the one least talked about abroad. Yet, to minorities like me – and, thankfully, most members of the majority race as well – this may be the single most precious aspect of the legacy.

    Not that he got everything right. Older Indian Singaporeans still bristle at the way he labelled us as “fractious and contentious”. The stereotype might not have been off the mark (note Amartya Sen’s Argumentative Indian thesis), but if only he had seen it as a positive contribution to Singapore’s national culture rather than a weakness. Similarly, his open suspicion of Muslim Singaporeans’ growing religiosity was hurtful. Some of such straight-talking about race and religion could come back to haunt Singapore, should future bigots exploit his words to justify their prejudices.

    But minorities never needed to doubt this: Lee was an unshakeable bulwark against majoritarian tendencies that could have easily overwhelmed Singapore. Malay/Muslims make up only 15% and Indians 7% of the population. For decades, the risk of a Chinese chauvinist party playing the race/language card posed the single biggest threat to PAP dominance. This fact is lost on most of the Western press, who self-aggrandisingly like to believe that they were Lee’s bête noire. They were more like sparring partners, compared with champions of the Chinese-speaking ground, who were the main victims of both detentions without trial as well as flagrant censorship.

    Lee went to the extent of amending the republic’s Constitution to stop any party from sweeping into power without minority support. For most Parliamentary seats, candidates are forced to contest as small teams that must include minorities. Thus, no Chinese party could do in Singapore what the BJP did in India last year – come to power without a single MP from the country’s largest minority group.

    Thankfully, Lee and his comrades were influenced by an older Indian tradition, the Nehruvian secular ideal that accommodated minorities – the same tradition that the BJP and the larger Hindutva movement is bent on dismantling.

    Singapore should not presume that it can serve as a model for any other country, least of all India. The world’s largest democracy is 200 times larger than the city state that Lee ran, and its challenges are profoundly more complex.

    But if foreigners do choose to honour Lee Kuan Yew, they shouldn’t fall into the mistaken-identity trap. Yes, he was a firm leader who stretched the limits of democratic government to breaking point in order to get things done.

    But a leader who makes minorities feel unwanted, insecure and fearful?

    That’s not a face that Singaporeans recognise.

     

    Source: www.airconditionednation.com

  • Zulfikar Shariff: Rethingking Lee Kuan Yew’s Legacy – Islam Beyond Rituals

    Zulfikar Shariff: Rethingking Lee Kuan Yew’s Legacy – Islam Beyond Rituals

    Quite a few Tipah and Tiped (tak tahu nama Tipah lelaki) tried to justify discrimination with “Aku boleh pergi masjid sembahyang…aku boleh puasa”….mana ada diskriminasi.

    As if that is all that is in Islam. Dapat sembahyang dapat puasa…dah cukup. Baik LKY…tengok kita boleh puasa…dia tak paksa kita makan.

    Another group of Tipah pula argue when discussing Kuan Yew… “Our mission is to cleanse our heart”…

    tu pasal lah nothing changes….bukan Kuan Yew je yang tipu Tipah…Tipah tipukan diri sendiri.

    Rasulullah bawa risalah selama 23 tahun….just untuk ajar solat dan puasa? Tu je? Punya lama nak ajar solat dan puasa?

    And our mission in life is just cleanse our heart? Tak kisah lah Kuan Yew buat apa..tak kisah he discriminate our brothers and sisters….tak kisah lah dia kutuk Islam..

    Kita bersihkan hati je cukup…

    Tu pasal lah Rasulullah hari hari cuma duduk….bersihkan hati…puasa dan solat..tu je? He didnt do anything else for Islam?

    A Muslim is not simply someone who prays, fasts and cleanse his heart. The three are parts of the behaviour of the Muslim. But does not encapsulate what being a Muslim means.

    A Muslim is someone who submits fully, totally…with no reservations to Allah’s wills and commands.

    He not only prays, fast and cleanse his heart…he lives in full accordance with what Allah has decreed. And if there are any commands that he is prohibited from applying..he strives to remove the prohibition.

    He speaks and stands against oppression. He applies Islam totally in his life or he strives within himself to apply it.

    Islam is a full, comprehensive way of life, worldview, understanding.

    Let us not reduce Islam to just a couple of rituals.

     

    Source: Zulfikar Shariff

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