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You are currently browsing the Roskiman's Blog blog archives for January, 2010.

Jan

5

Kalimah Allah: Celarunya Pemimpin Agama Kita

By roskiman

Kadangkala saya merasa lucu membaca komen-komen yang diutarakan oleh sesetengah pemimpin kita, yang bergelar “pejuang Islam” atau ahli politik Islam, bahkan ustaz-ustaz kita sekalipun berhubung dengan penggunaan kalimah Allah.

Memang benar tiada nas qat’ie yang melarang penggunaannya oleh bukan Islam, tetapi itu tidak bermakna hukum tidak boleh dirumuskan dari nas-nas yang bersifat zanni. Jika diteliti dari segi sejarah, bahasa, dan seumpamanya maka sudah pasti boleh dibuat keputusan atau hukum yang agak nyata.

Yang mendakwa orang bukan Islam boleh menggunakannya melihat bahawa itulah tanda umat Islam ‘open minded’. (Lihat YB Khalid Samad). Ada juga berdalilkan Surah al-Zukhruf 87-87 yang difahami, pada pandangan saya diluar kontek sebenar.

Ada juga ustaz yang menghukumkan HARUS penggunaan kalimah Allah oleh bukan Islam, tetapi tidak bersetuju penggunaan kalimah lain seperti kalimah solat, kaabah, masjid oleh bukan Islam. (Lihat Zaharuddin.net)

Tidakkah pelik pendapat sebegitu?

Di sini jelas menunjukkan betapa celarunya pemikiran umat Islam hari ini bahkan betapa celarunya orang-orang yang menjadi harapan umat di kalangan para asatizah dan ulama untuk melihat perkara ini dari perspektif yang sebenar bersumberkan hujah-hujah yang kukuh, walaupun tanpa di sana ada nas yang qat’ie yang jelas.

Rujuk tulisan-tulisan di laman Islam Iman Ihsan yang pada saya jelas memusnahkan pandangan-pandangan lain yang menyokong penggunaannya. Wallahu’alam.

Jan

3

Kamu Seumpama Buih

By roskiman

Benarlah Sabda Baginda S.A.W yang sering kita dengar bahawa di akhir zaman nanti, umat Islam ramai tetapi seumpama buih – tiada kualiti. Kenapa jadi begitu? Kerana kamu cintakan dunia dan takutkan mati.

Ya, kita cintakan dunia. Pemimpin-pemimpin kita pula beratus kali ganda cintakan dunia. Ada yang ingin jadi Perdana Menteri, Menteri Besar dan memerintah Malaysia. Kerana kecintaan itulah kita gadaikan semuanya, prinsip perjuangan untuk menegakkan Islam, bertegas dengan orang kafir dalam hal agama walau dibenci mereka. Kita terpaksa berbaik-baik dengan mereka bukan kerana ‘dakwah’ tetapi perlukan ‘pangkah’ mereka dalam pilihanraya kelak. Lalu kita bertolak ansur dalam serba serbi kononnya Islam itu ‘mudah’, Islam itu sesuai untuk semua orang bla…bla..

Persoalannya, benarkah apa yang diperjuangkan selama ini demi kerana Islam seperti yang dicanang-canangkan? Amat meragukan. Lihat gelagat “pejuang-pejuang Islam” apabila diberi peluang memerintah. Apakah Islam yang ditegakkan atau menambah kekayaan dan kemewahan, menambah isteri dan kenderaan? Begitukah perjuangan pejuang-pejuang Islam di zaman Salafussoleh? Rumah Gabenor Abu Ubaidah al-Jarrah begitu dhoif sehingga jika diangkat tangan nescaya akan mencecah bumbungnya. Nah lihatlah pula rumah-rumah “pejuang Islam” hari ini? dan “Unta-unta” mereka, 5 series atau 7 series.

Lalu kita mengharapkan mereka memperjuangkan Islam?. Lupakan sahaja, kita perjuangkanlah menegakkan Islam dengan sekadar kemampuan diri kita sendiri. Jangan diharapkan manusia-manusia yang berkepentingan yang berjuang atas nama Islam atau bangsa Melayu.  Semuannya tidak boleh diharapkan belaka.

NB: Maaf jika tulisan ini agak kasar kerana agak sedih hari ini setelah lebih 50 tahun merdeka dengan Islam sebagai agama persekutuan, Allah sudah “diduakan”: Allah Islam dan allah Kristian. Astaghfirullah.

Jan

2

Sheikh Muhammad al-Yaqoubi

By roskiman

Petang esok Ahad 3 Januari 2010  jam 2.00, Insya ALlah Radio IKIM akan menyiarkan temuramah dengan Sheikh Muhammad al-Yaqoubi Bhg. 2.

Jan

1

Gereja dibenar Guna Kalimah “ALLAH”

By salik

Keputusan Mahkamah Tinggi membenarkan pihak gereja menggunakan kalimah “Allah” jelas sekali merupakan penghinaan terhadap umat Islam di negara ini. Ia jelas sekali membelakangi sejarah terbentuknya Malaysia dan sensitiviti umat Islam. Kononnya atas alasan hak kebebasan bersuara sepertimana Perkara 10 dalam Perlembagaan Persekutuan. Ianya amat tidak  wajar digunakan sebagai alasan membenarkannya. Atas dasar “human rights” lah pelukis kartun Belanda melukis hina wajah Rasulullah SAW.

Kebebasan bersuara ada had batasnya. Apakah motif  sebenar kalimah itu ingin digunakan jika bukan untuk mengelirukan umat Islam dan mendakyah mereka memasuki agama Kristian, khususnya di kalangan umat Islam di Malaysia Timur yang masih ramai jahil? Kalimah itu tidak pernah pun digunakan oleh mana-mana gereja di Tanahair ini sejak sekian lama.

Sahabatku Dr.Khalif Muammar menulis cantik bab ini apabila ianya heboh diperkatakan. Klik di sini untuk bacaan lanjut.

Jan

1

Instilling Noble Values

By roskiman

By NIK ROSKIMAN ABDUL SAMAD

(as appeared in The Star 29 December 2009)

To achieve good governance in the country, the government must begin by instilling iman in the heart of every single civil servant, more than 90% of whom are Muslims.

RECENTLY, at one of the conventions on good governance I attended in Kuching, there was a clarion call for the development of human capital and character building. Most presenters and participants agreed that the human factor is the prime element in achieving good governance; a government which is efficient, transparent and accountable.

How do we develop human beings? We develop human beings by instilling in them good and noble values. Adam Smith was right to a certain extent when he said in the The Wealth of Nations that whatever people endeavour to do in this world is done solely in pursuit of his/her self interest and not out of his/her benevolence. But, Smith forgot that this is only true when the person is an atheist or perhaps a “capitalist” like him.

While self interest is undeniably one of the most powerful motivating factors, it is not necessarily the sole and only factor. There are many other factors as well. One of them is strong conviction or belief which in Islam is known as “iman” or faith which surpasses self-interest. Faith or iman in Islam is a form of belief or conviction, which is abstract and intangible. It has both the elements of emotional and spiritual intertwined together in a very complex and inseparable manner. This power of iman led the first generations of Muslims to defend Islam at all cost even to the extent of sacrificing their own lives and becoming martyrs.

In Islam, the stress on human capital development begun since the advent of the religion itself in the Arabian Peninsula. The Prophet had managed, by the grace of God, to instill in the hearts of the pagan Arab Bedouins the belief in something which is spiritually profound and noble. The Prophet never began preaching Islam by telling them to aspire to become civilised like the Romans or the Persians. They were told to believe in realities, invisible to the naked eyes first, i.e. to believe in God, in the rewards and punishments in the Hereafter, in Paradise and Hell, and all of those abstract and intangible concepts and realities.

By the same token, in developing human capital in order to achieve good governance in the country, the government inevitably must then begin by instilling iman in the heart of every single civil servant, more than ninety percent of whom are Muslims.

The strengthening of faith (taqwiyatul iman) should be the top most agenda of our road map if we are serious in achieving good governance. Noble values must be coupled with spiritual commitment only then will they work in changing the heart and soul and eventually be manifested in the noble character of a person. These values are not intellectual values per se, but more importantly practical values that need to be realised in our daily lives.

This is how the Prophet SAW managed to change the nomadic and uncivilised cultures of the Arab Jahilliyyah people to the culture of a community (khayra ummah) that later conquered two thirds of the world and resulted in the longest period of civilization ever achieved by mankind. His companions like Umar al-Khattab and Khalid al-Walid were known for their notoriety prior to becoming Muslims, but were later transformed by the light of Islam and emerged as the best among the best.

Still, the question is why are Muslims today still lagging behind? The answer is yes truly we are Muslims. But our Islam is by virtue of being born of Muslim parents. We do not really see the beauty of Islam as the companions saw it in the noble character of the Prophet. The noble values embodied in the great personality of the Prophet is nowhere to be seen in the materialistic world today, especially not in Muslim countries. In other words, the Muslims of today do not really practise Islam as they are supposed to. On the contrary, the Japanese and the West seem to follow most of the values that Islam has been propagating all this while. I recall the saying of a scholar that today “Islam” is found in Europe but not in Muslim countries.

As a result, the noble and Islamic values and realities bifurcated into two separate worlds. Values are found in the world of philosophical concept and the abstract, while realities or practicalities are in the secular and temporal world void of any connection with those values. There is a distinct dichotomy between religious values and worldly life. The Islamic values in particular do not ‘sink’ deep in the heart and soul of Muslims. The process of instilling these values has not been done properly apart from merely “knowing” and “understanding’” these values as noble and virtuous ones. Knowing alone is not enough. Almost everyone who commits corruption or is involved in bribery knew what they did was unethical and wrong, and was against the law or religion, but yet they still did it.

They did not have the “internal power” as it were, within themselves to resist the temptation of committing these crimes. Why? Because the noble values have not yet sunk deep inside their heart and soul to become part of their belief (iman) and conviction which later manifests in their daily actions and shields them from any wrongdoings or crimes.

It reminds us of the Prophet’s saying to the Arab Bedouins when they claimed that they have iman. The Prophet said to them: “You believe not, but you only say, ‘we have surrendered (in Islam)’ for Faith has not yet entered your hearts.” (al-Hujurat 49:14). Testification of Islam (shahadah) is only the pre-requisite of becoming a true believer (mu’min), but true belief can only be achieved after all the values and spirit of Islam enters the heart.

The heart and soul needs to be purified through the remembrance (dhikr) of Allah, only then will these values start to sink and stick in the heart.

Generally, looking at the state of the Ummah today, we must sincerely confess that we are only Muslims (those who surrender) at the superficial level, but not yet Mu’min (true believer) for iman or faith and conviction has not yet entered into our hearts. Otherwise, all the noble values of Islam would have been embodied in ourselves and we would have been the best nation that Allah has ever raised and would have surpassed everyone else. But the reality is the opposite.