Tag: religion

  • Lebih 3,000 Penduduk Ke Pelbagai Rumah Ibadat, Saling Belajar Tentang Agama lain

    Lebih 3,000 Penduduk Ke Pelbagai Rumah Ibadat, Saling Belajar Tentang Agama lain

    Lebih 3,000 penduduk dari sembilan kawasan undi berjalan bersama dalam satu semangat perpaduan.

    Bermula dari kawasan undi masing-masing, mereka membuat persinggahan di rumah-rumah ibadah sepanjang jalan.

    Para penduduk Bukit Batok misalnya menyaksikan upacara sembahyang di sebuah gereja.

    Penduduk Bukit Gombak pula ke Masjid AlKhair berpeluang mempelajari rukun Islam dengan lebih mendalam manakala beberapa penduduk lainnya melawat sebuah kuil Taoist.

    Acara ini sebahagian daripada daya usaha Kumpulan Bina Keyakinan Antara Kaum atau IRCC untuk menggalak keharmonian kaum dan agama di Singapura.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Anak 2 Tahun Maut Dilanggar: “Saya Dengar Bunyi Tulang Anak Saya (Patah)”

    Anak 2 Tahun Maut Dilanggar: “Saya Dengar Bunyi Tulang Anak Saya (Patah)”

    Hancur luluhnya hati seorang ibu apabila orang yang menyebabkan kematian anaknya dilepaskan daripada hukuman penjara.

    Fahima Hassan yang berusia dua tahun, sedang berjalan dipimpin ibunya apabila dilanggar oleh sebuah kereta yang dipandu oleh Hoden Aden, 44 tahun, seorang ibu kepada tujuh orang anak, menurut Daily Mail.

    Mahkamah mendengar bahawa Hoden sedang bercakap di telefon sambil mencari tempat meletak kereta, memandu pada kelajuan lapan kilometer sejam.

    Namun, penglihatannya terhadang oleh sekotak tisu di bahagian depan keretanya dan tidak menyedari dia sudah melanggar seorang kanak-kanak.

    Yang paling mengejutkan, menurut laman Daily Mail, Hoden mempercayai bahwa dia terlanggar troli dan terus menerus melanggar kanak-kanak berkenaan untuk beberapa ketika.

    Pada awalnya, Hoden tidak mengaku bersalah menyebabkan kematian dengan memandu secara cuai namun didapati bersalah pada bulan lalu menyusuli perbicaraan selama empat hari.

    Kini, Hoden dijatuhi hukuman penjara 14 bulan, namun ia digantung selama dua tahun setelah mahkamah mendengar bahawa dia tidak sihat dan perlu menjaga ibunya yang sedang sakit.

    Ibu Fahima, Narmin Nur yang tidak dapat menahan perasaan semasa hukuman itu dijatuhkan berlari keluar dari mahkamah, lapor Daily Mail.

    Beliau yang berusia 31 tahun itu berkata: “Kami tidak gembira dengan hukuman itu.

    Bagaimana ini yang dipanggil keadilan? Kami amat bersedih.

    “Bagaimana seseorang boleh membunuh seorang kanak-kanak namun masih boleh keluar seperti biasa? Saya tidak boleh mempercayainya. Saya tahu tiada hukuman yang boleh membawa kembali Yaya (nama timangan Fahima), namun kami ingatkan dia mungkin dipenjara untuk beberapa tahun.

    “Semasa dia memandu saya boleh mendengar bunyi tulang-belulang anak saya. Saya tahu dia tidak sengaja membunuh anak saya, namun dia tidak pernah berkata apa-apa kepada saya,” tambah Cik Narmin.

    Sebelum kemalangan itu, Fahima bersama ibunya baru sahaja meninggalkan pusat beli-belah Asda pada bulan September 2014 apabila Hoden melanggar Fahima dengan kereta Volkswagen Tguan sekitar pukul 8.20 malam (waktu London).

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • More Diversity In Voices Need To Be Heard On Racism In Singapore

    More Diversity In Voices Need To Be Heard On Racism In Singapore

    This article, “Racism in Singapore: Stop telling us minorities how to react to it“. has been shared widely, and I definitely think it is an important voice. I see a growing number of articles/conversations about racism, and a wider range of people speaking up, which I think are encouraging signs that there is more awareness and willingness to talk about race in Singapore.

    I hope the conversation doesn’t fixate on or stagnate at individualised, interpersonal instances of microaggressions, exclusion or privilege. Of course, these experiences aren’t separate from systemic racism, and are in fact deeply linked to them, but the connection often isn’t made as strongly as it could be.

    People switching to Chinese in conversations, friends telling racist jokes, etc are definitely significant and we should keep talking about these things and how they affect us, as well as how we can respond to them. We’ve all had these experiences and can feel solidarity around them.

    But I’m also interested in conversations that I don’t hear as much – about how Malay and Tamil people are overrepresented in prisons, whether they’re more likely to be profiled/picked up for certain crimes than Chinese people are, how Malay students are grossly underrepresented in universities, and what the barriers racial minorities face in accessing education, housing and jobs are.

    I’m interested in critiquing more closely, how our cultures and people are portrayed as backward, lazy, violent, uncivilised and parasitic in national narratives, and whether we can organise to push for anti-discrimination laws, for greater political representation and more in-depth analysis on how the media perpetuates harmful stereotypes about race.

    How many of the 1 in 10 families that live in poverty in Singapore are Malay or Tamil, and how much harder is it for racial minorities to experience intergenerational social mobility? The narrative continues to be that minorities need to work harder to catch up, and some minority groups are held up as “model minorities” and pitted against others. The recent study on Singaporeans’ receptivity to a president of a different race showed that both Indian and Malay respondents would prefer a Chinese candidate over each other. Is this what the success of a divide and rule approach looks like? Solidarity amongst racial minorities is low, and there’s plenty of racism to be explored there too.

    Social problems like unplanned teenage pregnancy, drug abuse and gang culture are ghettoised, stigmatised and pinned to the cultural deficit of minority communities rather than to structural discrimination, alienation and poverty. They’re also not given the same centrality in social policy as problems like gambling, that are more common in Chinese communities, are (as Alfian Sa’at’s play ‘GRC’ points out so well).

    Race needs to be a lens we apply to every social phenomenon we study, and we need more race disaggregated data about everything. The government, certain think tanks and the media are quick to look at race when it is to pin an issue as an “Indian problem” or “Malay problem”, but not to pinpoint racial discrimination.

    To take one example, there’s been a lot of discussion about bullying in Singapore schools – if studies on this also looked at whether racial minorities face more abuse/different types of abuse in school (I’m sure it’s true), anecdotes of interpersonal racism that appear in articles like this would have more context and meaning, and we would be able to offer deeper analysis and make stronger arguments for change. It doesn’t just stop at “my friends needs to be more sensitive” but allows us to demand that MOE, schools and educators take a proactive stance in addressing racial discrimination on a nationwide, school-wide or at least classroom-wide level.

    But maybe there is a different point to be made here too. While there is more interest in discussing race, while there are more voices addressing this now than before, are they diverse enough? Many of these voices, including mine, are middle-class voices. And I believe there are more important voices to listen to, when it comes to racism. The same way that middle-class feminism can silence working class women’s struggles, race consciousness that is not informed by class struggle can be a hazard. I am excited to explore possibilities for organising, for collective action, and to not allow individualised identity politics (or the “cult of individualism”) to become self-limiting or deteriorate into navel gazing.

     

    Source: www.theonlinecitizen.com

     

  • Kelakuan Guru-Guru Spiritual Indonesia Yang Menyimpang

    Kelakuan Guru-Guru Spiritual Indonesia Yang Menyimpang

    Berita penangkapan guru spiritual Indonesia, Gatot Brajamusti, atau lebih dikenali sebagai Aa Gatot, mengejutkan orang ramai di negara itu.

    Aa Gatot, yang terkenal sebagai guru spiritual para artis, termasuk penyanyi Indonesia, Reza Artamevia, diberkas ketika sedang menghisap dadah jenis syabu.

    Penangkapan itu berlaku tidak lama selepas berlangsungnya Kongres Persatuan Artis Filem Indonesia (Parfi), di mana Gatot dipilih sebagai ketua umum untuk kali kedua.

    Ketika bilik hotel tempat dia menginap disebu polis, Gatot sedang khayal menghisap dadah.

    Bukan hanya Gatot, beberapa orang yang berada di dalam bilik tersebut, termasuk Reza, ditangkap dan dibawa ke polis Nusa Tenggara Barat. Penangkapan itu menjejas teruk imejnya sebagai guru spiritual.

    Kesnya membuka kembali lembaran hitam yang melibatkan guru-guru spiritual di Indonesia sebelum ini.

    Perbuatan dan tingkah laku mereka bertentangan dengan status mereka sebagai guru spiritual, yang sepatutnya membimbing orang lain untuk berada di jalan yang lurus.

    KES LAIN: PEMILIK PESANTREN NIKAH GADIS 12 TAHUN

    Antara kelakuan menyimpang guru-guru spiritual ini ialah kes pernikahan pemilik Pondok Pesantren Miftahul Jannah dengan pelajar perempuan sekolah menengah yang baru berusia 12 tahun.

    Kes tersebut menggemparkan orang ramai, bahkan Lembaga Swadaya Masyarakat (LSM) melaporkan perkahwinan itu kepada polis.

    Setelah melalui proses undang-undang, pemilik pesantren itu, Pujiono Cahyo Widianto atau lebih dikenali sebagai Syekh Puji akhirnya disumbatkan ke dalam penjara.

    ‘USTAZ’ TIPU TENTANG BARANG ‘GHAIB’

    Kemudian berlaku pula kes penipuan yang dipercayai melibatkan Ustaz Guntur Bumi, yang terkenal dengan rancangan realiti ‘Pemburu Hantu’ dan mempunyai klinik perubatan alternatif.

    Pada 2014, dia dikatakan menaikkan namanya dengan menunjukkan barang-barang ‘ghaib’ yang diambil daripada tubuh para pesakitnya, namun barang berupa belatung, ulat dan sebagainya itu sebenarnya sudah disediakannya sebelum itu.

    Pelakon Adi Bing Slamet pula melaporkan guru spiritualnya kerana dianggap menyampaikan ajaran sesat.

    Guru spiritual itu, Eyang Subur, juga sudah bernikah hingga 25 kali, bahkan mempunyai lapan isteri.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Abdillah Zamzuri: S R Nathan Was President Who Understood Different Cultures

    Abdillah Zamzuri: S R Nathan Was President Who Understood Different Cultures

    CONDOLENCES TO THE FAMILY OF THE LATE PRESIDENT OF SINGAPORE, SR NATHAN

    I’ve had a brief encounter with the President, the year was 2006/7. I was performing for the Inter Religious Circle Harmony Nite concert and His Excellency was in attendance as the Guest-Of-Honour.

    On that day, I had forgotten to bring my Songkok (Malay headgear) and had worn my Baju Melayu to perform on stage without a songkok.

    After the event, His Excellency went around on stage to shake hands with each and every single performer and when he came to me, he asked, “Mana Songkok?” (Where’s your songkok?). I told him that I had forgotten and then he went on to say, “Kan tak cantik. Tak complete” (Now not nice. Not complete).

    He was a man who respected different cultures and understood very well how a Malay man dressed in proper Malay wear should be attired.

    I must have been an eyesore to him when he watched me on stage. Today, Singapore lost a dear son.

    To the soft spoken man who gave his life to Singapore, to building a better and worked towards uniting Singaporeans, thank you Sir.

    May You Rest In Peace.

    ‪#‎SRNathan‬ ‪#‎PresidentSingapore‬ ‪#‎Singapore‬ ‪#‎President‬

     

    Source: Abdillah Zamzuri