Saturday, May 26, 2007

DEEN INTENSIVE DUBLIN III

BACKGROUND OF THE TEACHER


Al-Fadhil Sheikh Mohammed Fauzi Ibn Abdul Aziz al-Hadrami is a teacher with classical Islamic educational background. He is qualified from Darul Mustafa, a renowned traditional Islamic madrasah in Hadramawt Valley in Yemen. After completing 5 years education in Darul Mustafa under various scholars, among them Habib Umar Bin Muhammad Bin Salim Bin Hafeez, Habib Ali Zainal Abidin Al-Jufri, and the Grand Mufti of Yemen, Habib Ahmad Mashur, he pursued his post-graduate study in Darul Ifta’ Al-Misriyyah, a premier institute of Islamic jurisprudence. He was also granted ‘ijazahs’ from various scholars apart from Yemeni scholars. Among them was the late Muhaddith of Hijaz, Sheikh Muhammad Alawi Al-Maliki.

Our teacher has ‘isnaad’ or unbroken chain of transmission that can be traced back to the original writers of each text. This is the methodology of our previous generations (Salaf as-Soleh) in preserving the purity of our sacred knowledge.

DETAILS OF THE PROGRAMME

Date : 26th May – 23rd June 2007

Venue : Dublin Mosque, South Circular Road, Dublin 8, Ireland.

TEXTS COVERED:

1) Safinatun Najah by Sheikh Abdullah bin Saad bin Sumair Al-Hadrami

§ A basic manual for Shafi’i fiqh but also covers 3 branches of most important aspect of deen, namely Aqidah, Fiqh and Tasawwuf. This is a basic text used for beginners in Shaf’i madrasahs’ around the globe. This will be a continuation of last year’s Deen Intensive Dublin.

§ In Arabic language, ‘Safinah’ means – ship, and ‘Najah’ would refer to success or safeness

2) Tafsir Munir (Juz 30) by Sheikh Dr Wahbah Zuhayli

§ A continuation of last year’s Deen Intensive Dublin. The tafsir of Dr Wahbah is highly regarded as the best contemporary Quranic exegesis that combines both traditional and modern interpretations.

3) Hadith Bukhari and Muslim by Habib Umar bin Muhammad bin Salim bin Hafeez

§ A compilation of 50 important prophetic traditions taken from the full version of Hadith Bukhari and Muslim. Commentary of the hadith will be delivered by Al-Fadhil Sheikh Muhammed Fauzi.

4) Wassiya of Imam Abdullah bin Alawi Al-Haddad II by Imam Habib Abdallah ‘Alawi al-Haddad

§ A collection of advices of the monumental scholar and spiritual master that lived at Tarim in the Hadramawt Valley between Yemen and Oman. He is widely held to have been the ‘renewer’ of the twelfth Islamic century. A direct descendent of the Prophet, his sanctity and direct experience of God are clearly reflected in his writings, which include several books, a collection of Sufi letters, and a volume of mystical poetry. He spent most of his life teaching Islamic jurisprudence and classical Sufism according to the order (tariqa) of the Ba’alawi sayyids.

5) Dakwah Fardhiyyah by Habib Muhammad bin Abdurrahman as-Saggof

§ A kitab relating to a person who is in possession of multiple or several occupation, and yet he/she still manage to confer goodness to the deen, without having any specific Islamic Sciences branch.

6) 500 Sunnah in Solat by Al-Fadhil Sheikh Muhammad Fauzi Ibn Abdul Aziz al-Hadrami. (Additional text for DID).

7) Fiqh an-Nisa’

§ Special classes for sisters concerning ruling for women. This class will depend on the demand of female participants.

There will be several lessons per day (for each text). Lessons are in Malay. Individuals from all over Ireland, UK, European countries and other countries as well are invited to join the programme even if it is not for the full 4 weeks of study. Non-Dubliners who wish to come will be placed in Dublin’s student houses (only by early notice to the contact person).

For any queries, please contact ;

Meor Fairuz Rizal,

Phone No : +35385-1481638

Email : lajnahtarbiyyahdakwah@…

Muhammad Zulfakar,

Phone No :+35385-1468781

Nurainee Binti Ibrahim,

Phone No : +35385-1490779

Email : ltd_helwa@…

Munirah Binti Alias,

Phone No : +35385-1498173.

Friday, May 25, 2007

Wordpress

Saya bercadang membina blog yang berwajah baru dan meninggalkan blog yang ada sekarang.Walau bagaimanapun, saya masih lagi liat untuk memulakan usaha ini.Ada rakan yang mencadangkan saya bertukar dari blogspot ke wordpress. Namun, saya masih selesa dengan blogspot.Buat masa sekarang, saya sudah memindahkan semua posting terdahulu saya ke blog baru di wordpress. Ini cuma proses sementara sebelum saya membina blog baru, insya Allah.
Ini blog sementara saya;

http://aymanrosland.wordpress.com/

Friday, May 18, 2007

Marifah

Dalam beberapa minggu yang lepas, saya diperkenalkan dengan satu website baru mengenai Islam, Marifah. Bagus sekali kandungan website tersebut. Kebanyakan karya yang dipaparkan dalam bentuk artikel adalah terjemahan bahasa Inggeris hasil tulisan ulama-ulama Ahl Sunnah wal Jamaah. Antara subjek yang dipersembahkan dalam website Marifah ialah hadith, fiqh, aqidah, tasawwuf dan biografi ulama-ulama Ahl Sunnah wal Jamaah. Biografi Shaykh al-Barzanji juga menghiasai sudut biografi website ini.Marifah sedang mencari mana-mana individu yang berminat untuk menterjemahkan karya-karya klasik untuk dipaparkan dalam website tersebut.Beberapa tokoh ulama seperti Dr Gibrail F. Haddad dan Sidi Muhammad Afifi al-Akiti menyatakan sokongan terhadap website Marifah.Jika anda berminat, layarilah Marifah di sini.

Saturday, May 12, 2007

Graduasi

Segala puji bagi Allah yang mengurniakan nikmat kepada para hamba-Nya!Setelah 5 tahun berhempas-pulas di bumi asing ini, akhirnya saya telah berjaya menamatkan pengajian dalam bidang perubatan di University College Dublin, Republic of Ireland.Majlis graduasi UCD akan diadakan pada 7 Jun ini.Jutaan terima kasih saya ucapkan buat semua teman seperjuangan yang banyak membantu saya sepanjang perjalanan lima tahun ini.Tidak lupa kepada kaum keluarga dan para sahabat yang jauh dan dekat yang tidak putus-putus mendoakan dan memberi dorongan.Jasa kalian takkan dilupakan!!!

Friday, March 23, 2007

Pakcik Muhammad Firinci




"Pakcik Mehmet, ceritakanlah kepada saya...
Ceritakan bagaimana perwatakan Badiuzzaman Said Nursi..."


Pakcik Mehmet tersenyum manis.Senyumannya yang menawan itu betul-betul menyembunyikan jalur-jalur usia yang penuh pada wajahnya.Orang tua ini sudah melepasi 8 dekad kehidupan. Tapi auranya masih muda remaja.

"Anakku, apa yang mahu kau tahu tentang Said Nursi?Kenapa begitu beriya-iya bertanyakan tentang Badiuzzaman daripada orang tua seperti aku?" soal Pakcik Mehmet.

"Bukankah Pakcik ini antara beberapa anak murid Said Nursi yang masih hidup dan pernah menerima tarbiah secara langsung daripada Badiuzzaman? Ada ramai yang mendakwa sebagai murid Badiuzzaman seumpama pengikut-pengikut Risala-an-Nur daripada gerakan Nurcholis.Tapi yang pernah bertemu dan belajar secara langsung dengan Badiuzzaman hanya boleh dibilang dengan jari!"

Pakcik Mehmet hanya ketawa.

"Itu kerana kebanyakan mereka telah dipanggil pulang oleh Allah SWT. Orang tua seperti aku juga hanya menanti masa sahaja. Orang muda seperti kamu akan membawa obor agama ini."

Pakcik Mehmet Firinci atau nama sebenarnya Mehmet Nuri Guleglier masih muda remaja ketika bertemu dengan Said Nursi pada awal 50an.Dia digelar Firinci atau 'Pembuat Roti' kerana dia mewarisi perniagaan bapanya yang membuka kedai roti di Istanbul.Said Nursi adalah sahabat baik kepada bapa Pakcik Mehmet.Atas dasar keakraban itu, Said Nursi pernah tinggal di rumah Pakcik Mehmet di Istanbul selama beberapa bulan pada awal tahun 50an.Tempoh itu merupakan dekad yang paling mencabar dan penuh tribulasi bagi Said Nursi.(Sejarahnya dibuang daerah, dibicara dan dipenjara boleh dibaca daripada banyak sumber.)

"Sukar sekali untuk melupakan manusia seperti Said Nursi. Hatinya penuh dengan kecintaan pada semua golongan.Bila bertemu dengan sesiapa sahaja, tidak kira pemerintah, penguasa, orang kaya, miskin, wanita, orang dewasa mahupun kanak-kanak, dia cukup bersemangat untuk menyampaikan mesej Allah SWT. Benih ajaran Said Nursi ialah makhluk ciptaan Khaliq, seperti manusia dan alam ini adalah bayang-bayang kepada sifat Allah SWT. Refleksi terhadap diri dan dunia ini adalah jalan menuju makrifat Allah Azza wa Jalla. "

"Said seorang yang cukup tajam akalnya. Dia mampu membaca dan menghadam puluhan kitab-kitab tasawwuf yang besar-besar dalam masa yang singkat. Setiap hari selama 18 tahun, dia mengajar intipati kitab-kitab ini sekurang-kurang 3 jam sehari! "

Menurut Pakcik Mehmet, ramai yang beranggapan bahawa Said Nursi merupakan mursyid tariqat tertentu, terutamanya dari jalur Naqshabandi.Namun, pada anggapan Pakcik Mehmet, Said Nursi sebenarnya tidak pernah secara formal menurut mana-mana tariqat.Ramai penulis dan cendiakawan yang bertanyakan Pakcik Mehmet tentang 'status' Said Nursi dalam mana-mana tariqat.Ramai yang beranggapan, Said adalah tokoh tariqat Naqshabandi seperti Prof Hamid Algar.Mungkin kerana pengaruh pemikiran dan manhaj tokoh-tokoh Naqshabandi seperti Imam Rabbani yang sangat kuat dan begitu membekas dalam pemikiran Said Nursi.Lihat sahaja sekian banyak ulasan-ulasan Said Nursi yang memetik kalam Maktubat Imam Rabbani.Namun menurut Pakcik Mehmet, Said bukanlah mursyid mahupun pengikut mana-mana tariqat.

"Manusia sepertinya tidak ghairah sedikitpun pada dunia. Malahan, ketika ajalnya hidup Said sangat sederhana dan tidak berharta.Hartanya cuma peninggalan ilmunya. Cintanya pada ilmu dan dakwah untuk menyedarkan masyarakat supaya kembali pada Allah SWT telah membunuh cintanya pada perkara-perkara duniawi, wanita, harta mahupun makanan! Tingginya lebih kurang 173cm tapi berat badannya cuma 38kg!"

Selepas puluhan tahun meninggalkan alam fana ini, keberkatan ilmu Said masih terasa.Di mana-mana kawasan di Turki baik di Istanbul, Bursa mahupun Izmir, pengikut-pengikut Risala-an-Nur bertebaran dan menghidupkan rumah-rumah mereka dengan majlis-majlis pembacaan Risala-an-Nur.Antara yang cukup aktif ialah Pakcik Mehmet sendiri yang memimpin halaqah Risala-an-Nur di kediaman beliau di perkarangan Masjid Fatih.Pakcik Mehmet, meskipun sudah lanjut usia, mewarisai akhlak mulia gurunya.Sentiasa ceria dan segar melayani karenah tetamu-tetamu yang dahagakan ilmu daripadanya.Kata-kata halus kesopanan serta karektornya umpama cerminan gurunya yang telah lama mendahuluinya.

Entah bila Tuhan akan menemukan kita kembali, Pakcik Firinci?

Saturday, March 03, 2007

Darul Hadith Ince Minare


Salah satu daripada kerajaan Islam yang masyhur satu masa dahulu di Turki ialah kerajaan Seljuk atau dlm bahasa Turki Selcuklular. Malahan tidak keterlaluan jika dikatakan bahawa kerajaan Seljuk merupakan 'bapa' kepada Turki Uthmaniyyah. Osman Ghazi, pengasas Dinasti Uthmaniyyah merupakan tokoh daripada puak Kayi yang dominan semasa pemerintahan kerajaan Seljuk.

Kerajaan Seljuk bermula sejak kurun ke 11 apabila mereka berjaya menumpaskan kerajaan Byzantine di Malazgirt pada tahun 1071M. Ini diikuti dengan penawanan satu demi satu wilayah-wilayah di Anatolia Tengah. Akhirnya, pada tahun 1150M bandar Konya dijadikan ibu negara kerajaan Seljuk. Pada periode ini, perkembangan Islam begitu meluas dan cukup membanggakan. Malahan sultan-sultan Dinasti Seljuk sendiri merupakan penaung kepada aktiviti-aktiviti spiritual, keilmuan, keseniaan dan kesusasteraan. Tempoh ini menyaksikan kelahiran ramai tokoh-tokoh ilmuan baik ahli agama, saintis mahupun sasterawan. Umar Khayyam dan Maulana Rumi adalah antara tokoh yang hidup semasa pemerintahan kerajaan Seljuk.

Gambar yang dipaparkan di atas ialah Madrasah Ince Minare di Konya. Madrasah ini sebenarnya digelar Darul Hadith semasa penubuhanya pada tahun 1264M atas perintah Sultan Izzettin II, salah seorang sultan kerajaan Seljuk.Di sinilah ilmuan-ilmuan hadith semasa empayar Seljuk menerima pendidikan secara formal daripada ulama-ulama hadith. Madrasah ini, selepas kejatuhan Turki Uthmaniyyah tidak lagi berfungsi kerana ditutup oleh kerajaan. Namun, bangunan madrasah ini sarat dengan senibina kerajaan Seljuk yang cukup unik.Antaranya ialah menara yang berhiaskan marmar biru dan pintu masuknya yang mempunyai motif ukiran dan inskripsi khat zaman dinasti Seljuk. Madrasah Ince Minare ini sekarang dijadikan muzium dan merupakan antara senibina Seljuk yang paling dikagumi.

Sunday, February 11, 2007

Kampung Ibnu Taimiyyah

Houses in Harran
Cute Bedouins children in Harran.So shy with my camera!!

Harran's Jami' Mosque and university built during Umayyad period.Used to be the oldest university built by the last Umayyad caliph Marwan II but no longer standing.Ravaged by Mongolian at the end of Abbasid period.

House of Bedouins of Harran.Made from the city's rubbles



Taqi al-Din abu al-`Abbas Abmad ibn 'Abd al-Haliim, commonly known as ibn Taimiyyah, was born in Harran, a city near Urfa, on Monday, the 10th of RabI' I 661/22nd January 1263.Urfa is the birthplace of Prophet Ibrahim a.s and now situated in the present day Turkey.Harran is a place famous for its Hanbalite school.Family of Ibn Taimiyyah were scholars of Harran

In Harran, lived the Sabeans and the philosophers who worship the heavenly bodies and images after their names.It is told that Prophet Moses was sent to these people for their guidance.Hoca Jumaat, father of Dr Abdullah Nurdag, my friend in Urfa told me that Prophet Ibrahim used to live and farm in Harran.

During the year of 667/1297 when Ibn Taimiyyah reached the age of seven, the Mongols ravaged the city. Ibn Taimiyyah's father 'Abd Halim came to Damascus with all of his family members and settled there. It was in Damascus that Ibn Taimiyyah received and excellent traditional learning from various Damascene scholars. He thus, became a rising star in intellectual arena and gain reputation amongst Muslim scholars at that time and after his demise.


Monday, February 05, 2007

Plovdiv: Granada of the East

New article by Sidi Abdal Hakim Murad


When the Turkish traveller Evliya Çelebi passed through the Balkan city of Plovdiv in 1650, he pulled out all the organ stops of Ottoman panegyric to describe this ‘mighty city.’ He counted fifty-three mosques, seventy Qur’anic schools, nine madrasas, seven colleges for advanced Qur’anic recitation, eight public baths, and eleven Sufi lodges. Of the city’s neighbourhoods, thirty-three were Muslim, five were Christian, and one was Jewish. Nine caravansarays serviced the abundant trade which Muslim rule had brought to the city; in fact, it offered a picture of Islamic prosperity, a formerly insignificant town which had flowered under the aegis of the Sultan and the Islamic economic system.

Today, it is hard to make out even the outlines of this magnificent Muslim past. Attacked by Russia in 1878, amputated from Turkey and awarded to the new state of Bulgaria, most of its Muslim and Jewish population fled to what remained of the Ottoman lands. Horrific massacres claimed the lives of thousands, while many refugees who arrived in Istanbul bore signs of torture and mutilation, or carried harrowing tales of the slaughter of their families. The population dropped from 125,000 to less than 30,000. Today, the story of Plovdiv, or, as the Ottomans once called it, Filibe, evokes a shake of the head even among the most secularised Turks.

Approaching the modern city does little to dispel this dismal image. For mile after mile, the empty shells of Communist-era factories which crumbled along with the ideology that created them, line the pot-holed surfaces of Leningrad Avenue and Industriyalna Road. Men squat in the shade, smoking, watching the traffic go by. Unemployment in parts of Bulgaria stands at well over fifty percent, even in places where many young men have left to work abroad. European Union scientists are struggling to deal with the soil and water pollution bequeathed by Communist neglect. Crime is rife, with mafia-style gangs operating with impunity, and a new elite of dubious entrepreneurs is building garish villas on the city’s northern side. Pockets of Western-style rebuilding have replaced the grey Stalin-era tenements around the new Novotel and a few other landmarks; elsewhere, however, grim poverty is the norm.

In few countries did the dead hand of Communism fall more heavily than it did on Bulgaria. Under the thirty-five year rule of Theodor Zhivkov, parents whose children refused pork at school faced imprisonment or worse. Belief in God was considered a form of mental illness. Only Communist Party members could hope for a professional career, and membership was restricted to atheists alone. Christians, of course, faced numerous handicaps, but an enduring Islamophobia deeper than Communism ensured that it was the Muslim minority which felt the secularist yoke most heavily. During the Zhivkov years, most of the country’s remaining mosques were closed or demolished. Speaking Turkish in public incurred an automatic fine. All Muslim names were forcibly exchanged for Christian ones, while the circumcision of boys was criminalised. Over a thousand Muslim protesters died trying to resist this erasure of their identity, many of them perishing in the terrible conditions of Zhivkov’s forced labour camps.

In the end, the Bulgarian regime proved no more sturdy than the other Warsaw Pact dominoes that toppled in the wake of Gorbachev’s perestroika. The prayers of the suffering believers were dramatically answered when Zhivkov was forced out of office in 1989. Yet the scars of the Bulgarian Inquisition are still everywhere to be seen.

An effective, if sobering, means of surveying the damage is to sit at the summit of Plovdiv’s Bunarchik Hill. Like Istanbul, the city is built on seven hills (Taksim, Nebet, Janbaz, Sahat, Jendem, Bunarchik, and Markovo). During Ottoman times several of these were places of public recreation, and Eid picnics on Bunarchik were particularly popular. From the summit, over the plane and chestnut trees, one enjoys a panoramic view of the city, which extends beyond the great Meritch River, whose Ottoman bridge did much to galvanise the city’s prosperity. Nineteenth-century buildings are prominent in the city centre, and all around stand gaunt Soviet-style apartment blocks. Yet it is impossible to discern the Muslim city. Of the former forest of minarets, not one seems to have survived.

To track down signs of Muslim life, it is necessary to walk down to the river. Here one finds no sign of the creaking Turkish water-mills which once lined the Meritch, nor of the picturesque shuttered houses, cantilevered over the waters, which Victorian travellers admired. The riverfront is derelict, its potential entirely ignored. Yet after a mile of walking beside the Meritch, on an overgrown and rat-infested path, one comes across a miracle. The Imaret Mosque, dating from 1444, has somehow managed to survive, together with the tomb of its founder, Shihabeddin Pasha. The building is a jewel-like example of the Bursa school of Ottoman building. Unlike so many mosques in Bulgaria, it retains its minaret, which is decorated with a fine spiral pattern set into the brickwork. The cemetery is now only a garden, but the broken pieces of the gravestones, smashed in 1985, may still be seen, stacked forlornly to one side. There is no trace of the charitable building which gave the structure its name (an imaret is a public soup kitchen, where the poor of all religions could come for a free meal at Muslim expense). It stood, apparently, between the mosque and the river. The pasha’s madrasa, the Kara Shahin, was also close at hand. Here the focus was on hadith: one of the college’s most illustrious directors was the great Muhaddith Çelik Yahya Efendi (d.1567), who later taught at the Darul Hadith in Edirne, before going on to become the chief qadi of Baghdad.

Nearby is the public bath (hammam) built by the same pasha. One of only two which seem to have survived in the city, it is now an art gallery, housing conceptual art installations of indifferent quality. The mouldering rooms are suffused with the spirit the Turks call hüzün, a sense of loss and melancholy. It is hard to picture the scene as it would have been a hundred and thirty years ago: soft bodies, masseurs, the scent of Balkan tobacco, hammam picnics for idle ladies, and Sephardic Jewish visitors. Now only dust and peeling paint remain; a vibrant life of the flesh has vanished, to be replaced by echoes and a sense of mortality. Muslim Plovdiv here feels as distant and unretrievable as ancient Egypt.

One might try to escape the hüzün by visiting Da Lino’s Italian restaurant for lunch. Here, however, another tragedy oppresses the Muslim visitor. Occupying a prime spot on 6 September Boulevard, Da Lino’s was until twenty-five years ago the city’s much-loved Tashkˆpr¸ Mosque. The Mufti of Plovdiv, Hasan Ali, recalls how it was seized by the Communists in 1983. The cemetery was smashed, and the minaret torn down. Little use was made of the building until the fall of Communism, when, amid the usual chaotic processes of rushed privatisation, it came into private ownership. Six years ago, Da Lino opened its doors, to the anguish of the Muslim population. And as if to add a very deliberate insult to the injury, the restaurant is decorated with frankly obscene frescoes, scenes, perhaps, from Boccaccio. Nude women ride donkeys across the mosque ceiling; drunken priapic men seem on the point of vomiting on the diners; a wild, Bacchanalian riot is in progress. Above the mihrab, a Roman god waves his trident. To the left, where the wa’z chair and a shelf for Qur’ans would have been, stand a glass case of Parma ham and a cabinet of wine.

Christians in Plovdiv seem not to be bothered by Da Lino’s. But the extremity of the provocation has not gone unnoticed internationally. On a recent visit to Bulgaria, the Turkish prime minister Tayyib Erdogan seemed to refer to it when he listed the historic Bulgarian churches in Turkey, such as St George’s in Edirne, which his government has paid to be restored. It would be a splendid gesture of mutuality, he added, were Bulgaria to consider supporting the return to Muslim worship of some well-known historic mosques. His comments were met with suspicion by the Bulgarian press, and as yet, the government and municipalities still seem to continue with ancient Islamophobic policies. Perhaps they fear opening the floodgates? If Da Lino’s reopens as a mosque, then what about the neighbouring Shukur Mosque, also a licensed restaurant? What about the buildings constructed on the sites of the Kadi Seyfullah Mosque, the Yesiloglu Mosque, the Anber Kadi Mosque, the Karagoz Pasha Madrasa? Fully aware that most of its cities were once primarily Muslim, the Bulgarian government is perhaps reluctant to set a precedent.

So one pays one’s bill at Da Lino’s, and thanks the perfectly amiable couple who run it, and sets off in search of something less depressing. It is best not to pause by the site of the Mevlevihane, the lodge of the Whirling Dervishes, built originally by Muslim refugees from Hungary at the end of the seventeenth century, and lovingly restored in 1849. It has vanished without trace, together with its tombs and its library. The street where, in the nineteenth century, some of Plovdiv’s forty Turkish newspapers and magazines were published, offers a no less desolate and anonymous prospect. Rather different is the old district near the Hisar Kapi, which turns out, in fact, to be an excellently-preserved ensemble of Ottoman houses. To stroll these narrow streets, strongly reminiscent of the Albaicin district in old Granada, is to be reminded of the comfort and prosperity which Bulgarian Christians could achieve under the sultans. Plovdiv Christians controlled a trading web that included merchant outposts in far-off Dhaka and Jakarta. Once the threat of an anti-Orthodox Crusade by the Pope was removed by Turkish rule, Orthodoxy flourished here; with new churches and monasteries outclassing in size and beauty those present before the Ottoman period. As the art historian Machiel Kiel comments: ‘If we remember the tragic fate of some of the most brilliant Islamic civilisations of medieval Europe, such as those of Spain and Sicily, wilfully destroyed by an aggressive Christianity, the existence of Christian art in Muslim controlled South-East Europe is incomprehensible.’ Yet he records the flourishing of Christian culture under Ottoman rule, made possible by the tolerance of the ulema. ‘In the Ottoman Empire,’ he concludes,’ it was the high Muslim ‘clergy’ that stopped overzealous rulers. In Spain it was the exact opposite.’

There are several substantial Ottoman churches in the Hisar Kapi district, and yet the gem of the neighbourhood is neither a church nor a mosque, but a house. This was built in 1848 for a Muslim family, the Kurumjioglus, and is truly splendid: dignified and aristocratic, yet charming in the vernacular Ottoman way. Typically, the official guides call it ‘A Fine Example of the Bulgarian Baroque Architecture’, despite its quintessentially Ottoman quality. It now houses the Ethnographic Museum, which, despite the demographic preponderance of rich Muslim cultures in the region, manages entirely to ignore the existence of non-Christian communities.

The house of the unfortunate Kurumjioglus thus provides yet another reason to be annoyed, and one is not sorry to walk outside, and head down towards the city centre. Here it is worth pausing at the site of the bedestan, the old covered bazaar pointlessly destroyed by the Bulgarians, to talk to Demir, owner of one of the city’s only two Halal cafes. Demir is a splendid man, a true believer and a lover of the city, who is a mine of information about the current situation of Muslims in the region. There are sixty thousand Turks here, plus thirty thousand Tziganes (Muslim gypsies), forming around ten percent of Plovdiv’s population. Discrimination is rife, it seems, but Demir is fond of reminding everyone of how much worse everything was under Zhivkov, when Ramadan was a closely-guarded family secret, and prayers could only be held in private homes.

A few paces beyond Demir’s shop, one beholds the great wonder of Plovdiv, the Hüdavendigar Mosque. Despite its forlorn surroundings, this is without question one of the most important of all early Ottoman buildings. Completed in the early fifteenth century, it has long since been stripped of its annexes, including its madrasa, cemetery, and wudu fountain (shadirvan). The outside walls are used as a urinal by Bulgarian drunks, and generally the exterior of the mosque is nothing much to look at. Within, however, it is a different story.

The mosque is approached by a steep flight of stairs, something not uncommon in this city of hills. Reaching the top, one sees an indoor fountain, recalling the marvellous marble cascade which tinkles away inside the Great Mosque of Bursa, some of whose architects may, in fact, have worked here. It is said that when Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent passed through the city, he ensured secrecy during discussions with his generals by sitting beside the fountain, whose sound would make eavesdropping impossible. The mosque has three great domes leading towards the mihrab, and apses provided by four immense central pilasters. As with the Bursa mosque, the walls are rich with calligraphy. Much of this is by the master-calligrapher Ulu Arif Mehmed Efendi, and dates from the restoration by Sultan Abdulhamit I in 1785. Following an earthquake, a further renovation in 1819 allowed the builders to add extravagant Baroque flourishes to the underside of the domes. Here and there may be seen fine calligraphy by the great Sayyid Naqshbandi Mustafa Çelebi of Edirne, mostly in the thuluth style. On the qibla wall, there is the famous prayer, ‘O Allah, Changer of Years and Conditions: Change our Condition to the Best of Conditions!’ A close inspection reveals that the strokes of the brush are in fact made up of tiny Qur’anic verses written in Jali Divani script. Another monumental piece to the right of the mihrab, in ta’liq script, is by the local calligrapher Ali Haydar, completed in the early nineteenth century.

In this mosque, great preachers once held forth to immense crowds. Here, for instance, Molla Khayali, the leading commentator on Khidr Bey’s Qasida Nuniyya would teach theology. Qadi Abdullah Efendi, the great Hanafi faqih taught here, when in the bitter winter weather great charcoal braziers would be carried in for the benefit of those students who could not afford to wear fur. It is said that Ibn Kemal, greatest of Ottoman theologians, repented here of his former military career and decided to dedicate himself to scholarship, a decision that would one day make him Shaykh al-Islam of the entire Ottoman world. Mehmet Izzati, the preacher who could make even slave-dealers cry, taught from the eastern preaching-platform of the mosque. So did Kör Hasan, the city’s much-loved qadi, who founded a madrasa in Istanbul before he died, blind but content, in 1580. The Plovdiv poets Rawnaq and Jefa’i declaimed their verse in the mosque, before going on to make names for themselves in the capital. The hadith scholar and Sufi Nureddin Muslihuddin (d.1573), the greatest student of Bali Efendi of Sofya, travelled from here to the Zeyrek Mosque in Istanbul, where he was greatly revered by Shaykh al-Islam Ebu-s-Suud. Late one night, he made his way to Topkapi Palace, where he insisted on waking the sultan. Suleiman the Magnificent duly appeared, and asked what had brought him. Nureddin told him that he had just seen the Blessed Prophet in a dream, who told him that the Sultan could not expect his intercession if he abandoned the Jihad. The Sultan wept, and took his army to Hungary to counter the Hapsburg threat. There he died, to be reckoned as a martyr.

The last great imam of the mosque, Filibeli Hajji Hafiz Tevfiq Efendi (d.1929), who led the prayers here for fifty years, emigrated to the still-Ottoman city of Mudurnu, where thousands repented at his hands; the mountain where he is buried bears the name Sheykhulimran Hill in his honour. The politician, playwright and theologian Filibeli Ahmed Hilmi worshipped here as a child. Ali Suavi, the turbulent defender of Islamic law, recruited students here in the mid-nineteenth century.

Sadly, the days when the Hüdavendigar was one of the great mosques of Islam are long gone. Today, only a thousand people attend Friday prayers here, despite the building’s immensity. There are two imams, one of whom, Nurettin, in his early twenties, has a superb voice, having trained in the maqam systems in Istanbul. He is working hard to bring life to this holy place, but he points out that not everyone is happy praying in a building where huge cracks are spreading over the ceiling. Some of these are several inches wide, and local engineers have been shaking their heads. Despite the end of the Communist inquisition, the future of this magnificent structure is not assured.

Nurettin is a native of Filibe, and intensely proud of his city. He recalls the desire of the Muslim minority to live in peace and respect with its Christian neighbours, despite all the difficulties which have damaged relationships in recent years. He is delighted that in the year 2002 permission was granted to open a madrasa again in the city. Located in the suburb of Ustina, this now has forty students, some of whom have formed a singing group which is famous throughout Muslim Bulgaria. Slowly, as he points out, the country is emerging from the Communist nightmare. An Islamic university staffed by Turkish scholars has opened in Sofia. Bulgarian ulema such as Ahmad Davudoglu, who was forced to work as a slave labourer under the Communists, are establishing cultural foundations that serve the Muslim communities. Scholars who have converted to Islam, most notably Professor Tsvetan Theophanov in Sofia, are helping the traditional ulema to reach out to the new generation. An older suspiciousness towards the Bulgarian language is now giving way to an acceptance of the idea that young Muslims can and should speak Bulgarian, and an increasing amount of material is being translated. Most effective has been the Sira book of Shaykh Osman Nuri Topbas, a work which has already had a very positive impact in Bulgarian, as it has in English and several other languages.

The Muslim community has one further asset, which is also a hazard. Bulgaria is experiencing a demographic crisis. Due to a negative birthrate, the national population halves every generation. Because of the poverty of the Muslim community, and its reluctance to send women to work, although only twelve percent of the population is Muslim, over sixty percent of babies are born to Muslim families. Both Muslim and non-Muslim communities recognise, now that Bulgaria is part of the European Union, that this reality will have to be accommodated through cast-iron constitutional guarantees, and a relationship based on mutual respect.

Sadly, many in Bulgarian society are frightened by the growing Muslim presence, reflecting insecurities over the identity of a Christian country created when most of its population was Muslim. A far-right party is increasingly popular. Last year, a Muslim cemetery was vandalised; only the tip of the iceberg, according to human rights activists. The Bulgarian Church, although weak on the ground, still harbours strongly anti-Muslim sentiments, and has sponsored the construction of churches in Muslim villages, even where these churches are locked and never used. It has even sponsored the construction of the world’s largest statue of the Virgin Mary, which stands on a hill overlooking Haskovo, the country’s main Muslim-majority town. The sites of destroyed mosques are often marked by large crucifixes, recalling the ‘blood shrines’ built by Croat radicals on former Muslim sites in Herzegovina.

A Serbian-style alliance of churchmen, ex-Communists and nationalists is, in the eyes of some Muslim observers, not impossible. Bulgaria’s peaceful Muslim minority points out that while monasteries and churches survived six centuries of Ottoman rule, and Christians lived as an often wealthy elite under the sultans, life has been less kind to Muslims in cities like Plovdiv following the carving-out of a Bulgarian national state from a former ethnic mosaic in 1878. Whether traditional Bulgarian Christian nationalism, or some more tolerant ideology, wins the day, is a matter which is likely to determine Plovdiv’s fate as either a flourishing centre of European Islam, or as the scene for yet another outbreak of Islamophobic violence and inquisition.

Tuesday, January 09, 2007

Perodua Kelisa in Top Gear



What I hate about Malaysian and Korean car is that we can sense that it was not built by men that have passion of making great cars but by a corporation that just wanted to make money!!

Friday, January 05, 2007

Wajah-Wajah

Bersama Dr Muhyettin (baca:Muhyiddin) dan Emre, minum-minum di pucak Pierrelotti dekat Golden Horn.Setelah lebih 2 tahun tidak berjumpa, sudah ramai sahabat-sahabat saya yang bergelar doktor.Gembira rasanya bertemu setelah berpisah sekian lama
Halic atau Golden Horn dari puncak Pierrelotti.Kawasan di mana bersemadinya Abu Ayyub al-Ansari tidak jauh dari kaki bukit ini.
Gambar ini diambil semasa saya bersiar-siar di tepi Selat Bosphorus bersama Emre.Emre Celic ialah sahabat saya yang menumpangkan saya di rumahnya sepanjang saya berada di Istanbul.Emre sangat peramah dan selalu membantu saya menterjemahkan perkataan-perkataan dalam bahasa Turki ke dalam bahasa Arab atau Inggeris. Biliknya penuh dengan kita-kitab agama dan buku-buku tulisan pujangga Turki yang terkenal Recip Fezil.Nama Emre sering mengingatkan saya kepada penyair sufi Anatolia yang masyhur bernama Yunus Emre.Yunus Emre hidup sezaman dengan Mawlana Rumi.Puisi-puisi beliau menonjolkan idea-idea humanis yang cukup tajam dengan sindiran terhadap korupsi dan penyelewengan pemerintah pada zamannya.
Sahabat-sahabat baik saya di Istanbul, Celaleddin Turgut(baca:Jalaluddin) dan Ahmet Ozdinc.Antara ramai-ramai kenalan, saya paling rapat dengan Celaleddin.Mungkin kerana bahasa Inggeris beliau paling fasih di kalangan mereka.Celaleddin pernah tinggal di United States untuk beberapa bulan.Ahmet pula, anak seorang Hoca (baca:Hodja) yang terkenal di Izmir.Bapa Ahmet merupakan seorang pakar tafsir yang pernah menuntut di Al-Azhar (Kaherah) dan di Iskandariah, Mesir.Ibu Ahmet ialah seorang doktor kanak-kanak (paediatrician) berbangsa Arab Mesir.Ahmet sebenarnya dilahirkan di Mesir dan tidak hairanlah dia sangat fasih berbahasa Arab selain bahasa Turki.Walau bagaimanapun, bapanya gagal mendapatkan pekerjaan sekembalinya ke Turki kerana kekangan kerajaan sekularis terhadap graduan-graduan bidang agama.Bapa Ahmet kini mengajar secara sambilan, mengadakan kuliah-kuliah tafsir di kampung halaman mereka di Izmir.
Bergambar kenangan bersama Emre di depan Sultan Ahmet Camii (Blue Mosque).Shaykh Abdul Aziz Hudayi, pemuka terkenal tariqat Jelwatiyya di Turki merupakan khatib pertama di masjid ini.Shaykh Abdul Aziz Hudayi juga merupakan murshid kepada Sultan Ahmed I dan penasihat kepada Sultan.Kebanyakan guru-guru tariqat di Turki pada zaman Uthmaniyyah tidak pasif dan mengasingkan diri daripada pemerintahan.Malahan, mereka banyak sekali turun menasihati Sultan dan memberikan pandangan-pandangan konstruktif terhadap dasar-dasar kerajaan dan pemerintahan.Hampir kesemua Sultan dan Khalifah Turki mempunyai hubungkait dengan tariqat-tariqat di Turki.

Sunday, December 31, 2006

Eid Mubarak!!

Three Final Year Lads with Without-A-Year Chap

Friends Along South Circular Road After Prayer in Dublin Mosque


Tahun ni, saya bersolat sunat 'Idul Adha di Dublin Mosque.Di kalangan masyarakat Melayu, sambutan Raya Haji sangat kurang meriah jika dibandingkan dengan 'Idhul Fitr.Di Dublin juga, sambutan Raya Haji baik di kalangan masyarakat Melayu atau Muslim bukan Melayu tidaklah semeriah Raya Puasa.Guru BM saya di Kolej MARA Banting pernah memberikan alasan,

" 'Idhul Fitr lagi seronok untuk disambut, sebab gembira posa dah habis!!"

Walau bagaimanapun, hakikat sebenar adalah jauh berbeza.Tingkatan sambutan Raya Haji sebenarnya lebih tinggi jika dinilai dari neraca syara'.Pada Hari Raya Puasa kita cuma disunnahkan untuk memperbanyakkan takbir, tahlil dan tahmid selama sehari sahaja.Namun, untuk perayaan Raya Haji kita disunnahkan untuk melakukannya selama 4 hari termasuk pada hari-hari Tasyri'.Di tanahair, sambutan Raya Haji lebih meriah di negeri-negeri Pantai Timur tetapi dianggap sedikit enteng di negeri-negeri Pantai Barat.

Senario berbeza dapat disaksikan di negara-negara Arab, mungkin kerana lokasinya agak hampir dengan Makkah dan Madinah.Aura kemeriahan suasana haji mempengaruhi gelombang sambutan di sana.Suasana sambutan Raya Haji jauh lebih meriah.Pada saat-saat begini tiba-tiba saya teringatkan kenangan manis menziarahi dua Tanah Suci pada musim panas yang lepas. Terasa sedikit kehilangan dan terkilan kerana tidak dapat menghabiskan lebih banyak masa di sana.Ditambah pula dengan beberapa kenangan pahit melihat nasib beberapa tempat bersejarah yang telah dimusnahkan secara sistematik dan beransur-ansur oleh Dinasti Saudi.Mungkin itulah sebab saya masih belum pernah memperkatakan tentang pengalaman saya di sana.

Apapun, marilah kita mengubah budaya kita dalam menghayati falsafah haji dan prinsip pengorbanan yang tersembunyi dalam kisah Nabi Ibrahim dan anakandanya Ismail.Antara huraian mengenai falsafah haji yang paling saya minati ialah buku karangan pemikir Islam terkemuka dari Iran, Dr Ali Shariati.Anda boleh menghadam tulisan-tulisan beliau di sini.

Tuesday, December 26, 2006


"Encik, berapa harga buku ini?"
Aku bertanya kepada pegawai di IRCICA yang asalnya dahulu Yildiz Sarayi, pusat pentadbiran dan istana khalifah Uthamniyyah yang terakhir, Sultan Abdul Hamid II.

"Ohh, buku ini ada 2 jilid, satu jilid berharga 60 USD"

Aku mengerut-ngerutkan dahi.Kalau dua jilid,harganya sudah lebih 120 USD iaitu hampir 240 juta lira.Poket aku sebenarnya sudah kering sejak kembali dari berkelana di Konya dan Urfa.

Pegawai di IRCICA itu hanya tersenyum.Mungkin dia memahami situasi aku.Buku yang disunting oleh bekas Pengarah IRCICA, Prof Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu itu sangat bernilai.Buku itu adalah himpunan ulasan-ulasan sejarah Turki Uthmaniyyah yang ditulis sendiri oleh sejarawan Turki.Selama ini, kebanyakan sumber sejarah yang aku tatapi hanyalah dari kaca mata orientalis.Sejarah yang ditulis oleh peribumi Turki pula hampir kesemuanya dalam bahasa Turki moden.Oleh itu, aku bertekad untuk membeli juga buku tersebut.

"Adakah awak seorang pelajar?Di mana awak menuntut?" tanya pegawai itu lagi.

"Saya menuntut di Ireland, tapi datang ke sini untuk menziarahi sahabat-sahabat di CerrahPasa Medical Faculty, Istanbul University.Saya agak berminat untuk mendalami sejarah Daulah Uthmaniyyah.Saya rasa pusat ini mempunyai sumber yang baik tentang sejarah Uthmaniyyah."

Pegawai itu tersenyum lagi.

"Baiklah, harga asal untuk satu jilid sahaja sudah 60USD.Tetapi tidak mengapa, awak bayarlah 20USD.Dan ambillah kedua-dua jilid yang ada.Asalkan awak memanfaatkan buku ini, itu sudah menjadi modal yang berbaloi untuk pusat ini."

Aku bersyukur.Impian untuk memiliki buku yang bernilai ini akhirnya tercapai.Moga Allah membalas kebaikan pegawai-pegawai IRCICA yang cukup dedikasi dalam memelihara pengetahuan dan warisan sejarah Bani Uthman.

Monday, December 18, 2006

Fatih

Maqam Huma Hatun, ibu Sultan Muhammad al-Fatih.Di sebalik kejayaan seorang lelaki, ada ibu yang mendıdık dan membesarkannya.Harıjadi Huma Hatun turut dıraıkan sebagaı tarıkh memperıngatı penawanan Istanbul


Maqam Sultan Muhammad al-Fatih, Penakluk Constantınople.Nabı Muhammad membayangkan bandar ını akan jatuh ke tangan sebaık-baık raja dan sebaık-baık tentera.Inılah maqam sebaık-baık sultan






Saturday, December 16, 2006


Ney:Sufi Musical İnstrument




Ahmad Ozhan Consert: From the Heart of Mawlana in Konya










Semaa: Celebratıng Unıty wıth God




Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Salam Mawlana



I am drunk with the love of Thee,


Not with wine, or opium;


I am mad; dost Thou look to see


In a madman decorum?


A hundred torrents rise


From the surge my soul within;


The heavens in glad surprise


Stand still to behold me spin.


Mawlana Rumi

Konya, Central Anatolia

Saturday, December 09, 2006

CerrahPaÅŸa

Saya sekarang dı Istanbul.Tınggal bersama-sama sahabat-sahabat Turki saya yang menuntut dı CerrahPaşa Medıcal Faculty, Istanbul Universıty.Baru balık darı menzıarahı Masjıd Fatih dan maqbarah Muhammad Al-Fatıh yang mengepalaı tentera Uthmanıyyah menawan Constantınople.Kalau berkesempatan, saya akan post perkara-perkara menarık yang saya temuı dı sını.Bagaımanapun, saya terpaksa ke ınternet cafe yang talıannya begıtu lembap dan huruf-huruf pada keyboard pula sangat berbeza.Sehari dua lagı, mungkın saya akan terus berkelana ke Bursa atau Konya.Doakan keselamatan saya dı sını

Monday, December 04, 2006

Keith Ellison, the first Muslim to be elected to the United States Congress, announced that he shall not take an oath of office on Bible. He shall to do so on the Bible of Islam, the Qur'an.I wonder what will be the reaction of US citizen.

Mintak-mintak bukan macam mamat ni

Friday, December 01, 2006

Mat Saleh 'Alim

Pertama kali bersua muka dengan Sidi Abdal Hakim Murad (SAHM) di luar Walton Theatre, Trinity College, aku terpaksa mendongak sedikit.Tinggi juga orangnya.Wajahnya kelihatan serius.Mungkin kerana kepenatan kerana dibawa (dipaksa) berjalan-jalan sekitar kota Dublin oleh Umar dan kawan-kawan.Namun, dia tersenyum bila aku menghulurkan tangan.Cepat-cepat aku mengucup tangannya.Dia agak tergamam sedikit dan cepat-cepat menarik tangannya kembali.Mungkin dia berasa segan dihormati dengan sedemikian rupa.

Berdasarkan tahap keilmuannya dan jasa-jasanya terhadap perkembangan Islam di dunia Eropah, tidak keterlaluan jika dia dihormati sebegitu.SAHM merupakan antara orang 'alim yang begitu disegani bukan sekadar di UK atau di Eropah, malahan turut dikenali di kalangan para masyaikh di negara-negara Timur Tengah. Di dunia ini, antara universiti yang paling tua dan berprestij ialah al-Azhar, Oxford dan Cambridge. Keistimewaan SAHM ialah beliau pernah menuntut di ketiga-tiga universiti tersebut! Beliau merupakan pengasas dan penggerak IHSAN, satu organisasi yang berperanan mengumpulkan kesemua hadith-hadith dan manuskrip-manuskrip hadith di seluruh dunia.Visi dan misi IHSAN yang diilhamkan bersama oleh SAHM dan beberapa ilmuan hadith lain sebenarnya sangat besar.IHSAN merupakan platform untuk pengumpulan semua hadith yang terdapat pada kitab-kitab hadith di atas muka bumi ini.Hadith-hadith yang dikumpulkan akan disalin dalam versi digital, diindeks dan dicatat secara rapi jalan periwayatan, pengijazahan, status dan sebagainya. Cita-cita SAHM ialah untuk melengkapkan satu ensiklopedia hadith yang boleh dimanfaatkan oleh generasi Islam yang akan datang.Melalui database hadith ini, rujukan terhadap hadith termasuk status dan sumbernya dapat disemak dalam sekelip mata.Khabarnya beberapa kitab-kitab hadith yang muktabar telah siap dalam edisi digital termasuk Sunan Sittah, Sunan Baihaqi, Musnad Ahmad bin Hanbal, Musnad Humaydi, Sunan Daruqutni, Sunan Darimi, Shamail Tirmidzi dan Tuhfah al-Ashraf al-Mizzi. Ratusan ilmuan hadith dari pelbagai institusi pengajian tinggi Islam terlibat secara langsung dengan usaha murni ini.Mudah-mudahan Allah SWT akan memberkati usaha ulama-ulama ini yang sedang berusaha melindungi sumber agama Islam yang kedua terpenting ini daripada pencemaran dan kekaburan.Ameen ya Rabb!!

Pertemuan dengan SAHM kali ini sangat istimewa.Sebelum lecture beliau bermula, beliau mengambil kesempatan untuk bertemu dengan pimpinan dan aktivis Islam di Dublin. Walaupun aku bukanlah pemimpin mana-mana organisasi Islam di Ireland, Bro Umar dari FOSIS bersungguh-sungguh mengundangku ke sesi tersebut.Mungkin sebagai membalas jasa aku yang memberikan tutorial bahasa Arab di rumah Ashraf tempoh hari!


SAHM pada muqaddimahnya menyentuh tentang mentaliti pendakwah-pendakwah Islam sepanjang zaman.Beliau memberikan contoh binaan-binaan masjid yang dibina ketika zaman permulaan dakwah Islam. Masjid-masjid di Jawa, China, Balkan bahkan di Melaka mempunyai identiti yang unik.Mengapa?Kerana semua masjid-masjid berkenaan seperti Masjid Demak dan Masjid Agung Xi'An di China mempunyai identiti tempatan. Masjid Demak misalnya sarat dengan seni binaan Jawa zaman Majapahit.

Di Xi'An pula, masjidnya tidak ubah seperti pagoda!Masjid-masjid yang dibina ini tidak punya kubah-kubah bulat mahupun menara yang tinggi-tinggi seperti di mana-mana negara Arab.Apa yang cuba disampaikan oleh SAHM ialah pendakwah-pendakwah Islam pada zaman dahulu sebenarnya sangat memahami pemikiran, budaya,adat dan identiti penduduk tempatan.Kedatangan mereka bukanlah untuk mengubah identiti masyarakat setempat secara radikal.Di Jawa misalnya, kebudayaan mereka masih tebal dengan animisme dan kepercayaan Hindu.Islah dan dakwah mahupun tajdid bukanlah proses yang radikal ataupun tergesa-gesa.Bahkan pendakwah-pendakwah dahulu seperti Wali Songo di kepulauan Jawa begitu memahami uslub dakwah yang diwarisi daripada Rasulullah SAW yang sensitif dengan kefahaman masyarakat setempat. Di kalangan Wali Songo misalnya, mereka sendiri menggunakan nama baru bila berhadapan dengan masyarakat, meskipun nama asal mereka rata-ratanya dalam bahasa Arab.Sunan Ampel misalnya bernama Raden Rahmat. Penggunaan nama Jawa beliau adalah untuk menunjukkan kebersamaan beliau dengan masyarakat setempat, satu methodologi yang cukup berkesan dalam lapangan dakwah.Masjid Demak yang dibina oleh Wali Songo ini misalnya mempunyai senibina Jawa yang sama dengan senibina tempatan pada zaman tersebut.Secara tidak langsung, method dakwah yang digunakan oleh Wali Songo ini mendekatkan hati penduduk tempatan dengan mereka.Adat-adat mereka yang tidak bercanggah dengan Islam tidak pernah disentuh.Malahan jika ada yang baik ia akan diteruskan tanpa halangan.Contoh terdekat ialah wayang kulit yang asalnya mempunyai boneka-boneka menyerupai manusia.Kisah-kisah yang diceritakan oleh tukang-tukang karut biasanya berkisar tentang epik Ramayana dan Mahabrata Hindu.Wayang kulit meruapakan salah satu sumber hiburan masyarakat ketika itu.Oleh itu, adalah tidak bijak jika Wali Songo mengambil pendekatan untuk membid'ahkan, mensyirikkan ataupun melabelkan budaya sebegini dengan label yang keras-keras sehingga menjauhkan manusia daripada Islam.Sebaliknya, para pendakwah ini mengubah bentuk persembahan wayang kulit.Karektor dalam wayang kulit 'dicacatkan' sedikit supaya tidak menyerupai manusia sempurna dan plot penceritaannya digubah supaya tidak lagi berkiblatkan kandungan kitab-kitab epik Hindu.Ini antara kebijaksaan dakwah yang seharusnya dicontohi.

SAHM turut membandingkan sikap dan approach dakwah sebegini dengan sesetengah pendakwah yang ada sekarang.Menurut beliau, ramai pendakwah terutama di dunia Barat ini kurang memahami aspirasi dan kebudayaan penduduk setempat.Lebih malang lagi terdapat segolongan daripada mereka yang mempunyai kefahaman yang kabur tentang konsep bid'ah dan sebagainya.Hasilnya, mereka terlalu cepat menghukum amalan-amalan tertentu masyarakat yang sebenarnya boleh diterima dalam Islam.Tidak kurang juga golongan yang mendakwa mereka sebagai pendokong Sunnah dan pembawa aspirasi Golongan Salaf-as-Soleh.Tetapi berbahasa Inggeris pun masih gagal meskipun sudah tinggal bertahun-tahun di sini. Apa yang terbentuk ialah satu komuniti yang tidak pernah melakukan reach out terhadap non-Muslim yang berpotensi untuk menerima Islam.Orang Islam yang berhijrah ke UK, kekal dengan kefahaman dan budaya mereka lantas membina tembok besar daripada masyarakat setempat.Tiada usaha dakwah dan tiada kesungguhan untuk menyampaikan mesej Islam.Yang tinggal cumalah pandangan hina dan negatif mereka terhadap non-Muslim di UK atau Ireland.

Perkara sebegini tidak seharusnya berlaku.Komuniti Islam tidak kira samada yang menetap atau bermukim di benua ini untuk bekerja ataupun belajar punya tanggungjawab untuk menyampaikan risalah suci sekadar kemampuan mereka. Mengambil posisi dalam politik bukanlah agenda utama umat Islam di Eropah buat masa sekarang.Umat Islam di sini lebih memerlukan usaha dakwah dan pendidikan yang sistematik dari sumber-sumber yang sahih. Bukan daripada golongan pelampau ataupun liberal.

Dalam masa yang sama SAHM menyatakan kekesalan terhadap reaksi umat Islam yang keterlaluan terhadap sesuatu isu.Contohnya dalam isu karikatur Denmark dan kenyataan Pope mengenai Islam.Tunjuk perasaan atau demonstrasi menurut beliau, bukanlah cara yang paling baik kerana masyarakat bukan Islam di sini tidak begitu ambil pusing tentang mana-mana demonstrasi.Pendidikan dan peningkatan kefahaman Islam adalah satu-satunya cara untuk mengubah persepsi masyarakat bukan Islam terhadap agama kita.

Beberapa jam bersama beliau bagaikan beberapa minit.Aneh sekali, seorang yang dilahirkan Muslim seperti aku kini belajar dengan seorang British yang dahulunya beragama Kristian. Belajar tentang Islam dan dakwah.Yang lebih aneh, belajar tentang kebudayaan dan sejarah Nusantara daripada seorang mat saleh seperti Sidi Abdal Hakim Murad!

Friday, November 17, 2006

Sidi Abdal Hakim Murad


At last, he is back from Istanbul!
Here is his programme in Dublin:






Venue:Walton Theatre, Trinity College Dublin
Date: 18th November 2006
Time:5-7 pm



Abdal Hakim Murad graduated from Cambridge University with a double-first in Arabic in 1983. He then lived in Cairo for three years, studying Islam under traditional teachers at Al-Azhar, one of the oldest universities in the world. He went on to reside for three years in Jeddah, where he administered a commercial translation office and maintained close contact with Habib Ahmad Mashhur al-Haddad and other ulama from Hadramaut, Yemen.

In 1989, Shaikh Abdal Hakim returned to England and spent two years at the University of London learning Turkish and Farsi. Since 1992 he has been a doctoral student at Oxford University, specializing in the religious life of the early Ottoman Empire. He is currently Secretary of the Muslim Academic Trust (London) and Director of the Sunna Project at the Centre of Middle Eastern Studies at Cambridge University, which issues the first-ever scholarly Arabic editions of the major Hadith collections.

Shaikh Abdal Hakim is the translator of a number of works, including two volumes from Imam al-Ghazali's Ihya Ulum al-Din. He gives durus and halaqas from time to time and taught the works of Imam al-Ghazali at the Winter 1995 Deen Intensive Program in New Haven, CT. He appears frequently on BBC Radio and writes occasionally for a number of publications, including The Independent; Q-News International, Britain's premier Muslim Magazine; and Seasons, the semiacademic journal of Zaytuna Institute.

Saturday, November 11, 2006

Naguib Mahfouz


My talk…comes in a language unknown to many of you but [that language] is the real winner of the prize. It is, therefore, appropriate that its melodies should float for the first time into your oasis of culture and civilization. I have great hopes that this will not be the last time, either, and that literary writers of my nation will have the pleasure of sitting with full merit among your international writers, who have spread the fragrance of joy and wisdom in this grief-ridden world of ours.

“I was told by a foreign correspondent in Cairo that the moment my name was mentioned in connection with the prize, silence fell, and many wondered who I was. Permit me, then, to present myself in as objective a manner as is humanly possible. I am the son of two civilizations that at a certain age in history formed a happy marriage. The first of these, 7000 years old, is the pharaonic civilization; the second, 1400 years old, is the Islamic one…. As for Islamic civilization, I will not talk about its call for the establishment of a union of all humankind under the guardianship of the Creator, based on freedom, equality and forgiveness….

I will, instead, introduce that civilization in a moving, dramatic situation summarizing one of its most conspicuous traits. In one victorious battle against Byzantium it gave back its prisoners of war in return for a number of books of the ancient Greek heritage in philosophy, medicine and mathematics. This is a testimony of value for the human spirit in its demand for knowledge, even though the demander was a believer in God and what was demanded was the fruit of a pagan civilization.

“Ladies and Gentlemen, you may be wondering: This man coming from the Third World, how did he find the peace of mind to write stories? … Fortunately, art is generous and sympathetic. In the same way that it dwells with the happy ones it does not desert the wretched. It offers both alike the convenient means for expressing what swells up in their bosom.

“In this decisive moment in the history of civilization it is inconceivable and unacceptable that the moans of Mankind should die out in the void. There is no doubt that Mankind has at last come of age, and our era carries the expectations of entente…. The human mind now assumes the task of eliminating all causes of destruction and annihilation. And just as scientists exert themselves to cleanse the environment of industrial pollution, intellectuals ought to exert themselves to cleanse humanity of moral pollution. It is both our right and our duty to demand of the great leaders in the civilized countries, as well as of their economists, to effect a real leap that would place them in the focus of the age.

“In the olden times every leader worked for the good of his own nation alone. The others were considered adversaries, or subjects of exploitation…. Today, this view needs to be changed from its very source. Today the greatness of a civilized leader ought to be measured by the universality of his vision and his sense of responsibility toward all humankind. The developed world and the Third World are but one family. Each human being bears responsibility toward it to the degree that he has obtained knowledge, wisdom and civilization. I would not be exceeding the limits of my duty if I told [the leaders] in the name of the Third World: Be not spectators to our miseries…. We have had enough of words. Now is the time for action.”

Read the memoir of Naguib Mahfouz here

Thursday, November 02, 2006

Deen Intensive II Audio

After few months, those who were 'crippled' from attending DID II can now download and listen to the lecture by our teacher, Ustaz Mohammad Fauzi Hadrami. The lectures available are on Syafi'i Fiqh, Tasawwuf and Islamic Parenting.The corpora used were:

1)Tarbiyatus Shibyan by Imam al-Ramli
2)Wasiyya of Imam Haddad by Imam Habib Abdallah 'Alawi al-Haddad
3)Safinah Najah by Shaykh Abdullah bin Saad bin Sumair al - Hadrami

Click here to download and listen

Ramadan in Istanbul



Sidi Abdal Hakim Murad once again wrote about his experience in Istanbul during Ramadan. Ramadan has left but the memories were commemorated in this wonderful piece.I just couldn't wait for my next ziarah to Istanbul.Ahmet, Sekdas and Celaladdin are waiting for me in Turkey.May Allah bless my trip in December and make me pass my exams!!

"Sabah prayer at the mosque of Eyüp is the most popular worship experience in the city; but arrive even at two in the morning on the 27th, and you will find it hard to squeeze beyond the leather curtains into the mosque interior. Here, more than anywhere else in the City, the Turks are feasting, and feasting again, on the Qur’an."


"Like a benign watchful presence, behind the five-hundred year old plane tree planted by the Conqueror’s own hand in the mosque court, lies the grave of the Companion Abu Ayyub al-Ansari, which, of the hundreds of active pilgrimage sites in the City, remains the greatest magnet for visitors. The space is ablaze with a turquoise glow, supplied by the Iznik tiles, which are among the most precious ceramic masterpieces in the world. Close beside it is the I‘tikaf chamber built for Princess Adile, who spent her Ramadans here a century ago, before being buried among the royal tombs nearby. Outside lie the graves of warlike pashas, sayyids, and ulema, including Ebussuud Efendi, the great
tafsir scholar, and reviver of the Shari‘a in the time of Sultan Suleyman. Here too are the sainted ladies, and then great madrasas and tekkes, beyond the stone stairs where a new Sultan, visiting the mosque for his coronation, would descend from his horse, to walk the remainder of Enthronement Road humbly on foot. In his palace, the Sultan alone could ride; at Eyüp, he too was required to dismount."

"As Urdu-speakers well know, prayers in a language where everything happens before the verb have tremendous dramatic impact: ‘And our sins, in this and earlier months, against You and other members of our nation, Our Lord, forgive! And the affairs of the Muslims here and in the world, Our Lord, set right! And to the soul of Sultan Ahmet, Our Lord, grant rest!’"

Read the article here.

Friday, October 27, 2006

Masa iftar dan majlis tadarrus Quran anjuran PPIMI lepas, aku sempat berbual dengan seorang 'tetamu kehormat' majlis itu.Namanya Father Kieran yang tinggal di Leeson Park berdekatan Malaysia Hall. Memandangkan budak-budak Dublin lain sedang sibuk menghadap nasi tandoori Pakcik Yusof, aku cuba sedaya upaya untuk melayan pertanyaan-pertanyaan Father Kieran. Kami sama-sama mempunyai minat mendalam terhadap voluntary work ataupun relief work terutamanya di kawasan pedalaman. Rupa-rupanya Father Kieran sudah lama berkelana untuk missionary work beliau di Afrika.Bila ditanya;

"How long have you been in Africa for missionary work there?"

"Ahh... not that long. Just couple of years to help the needy in Nigeria.There's plenty of Muslims out there.They are all nice."

"I see.So, how long have you been there?I guess 2, 3 years probably?"

"Hmmm...about 10 years"

"Ten years????"

SENYAP

Nak dihantar berkhidmat ke kawasan pedalaman di Malaysia oleh Kementerian Kesihatan pun, ramai antara kita yang merungut.Inikan pula kerja-kerja dakwah.Padanlah agama Kristian berkembang pesat di Afrika. Subur kerana penganut-penganutnya yang jujur dan komited terhadap seruan agama mereka.Tiada secalit pun sikap materialistik.Alangkah baiknya kalau sikap altruism begini tertanam pada jiwa anak-anak muda dan para daie kita.

Sunday, October 22, 2006

Letter to Benedict XVI



"Show me just what Muhammad brought that was new and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached."

Byzantine Emporer Manuel II

This is some of the remarks of Pope during his lecture at the University of Regensburg on Sept. 12, 2006. In a spirit of goodwill, 38 Muslims scholars from around the globe joined to send a letter to respond to speech made by His Holiness Pope Benedict. Among scholars that signed the letter are, Shaykh Ali Jumu‘ah (the Grand Mufti of Egypt), Shakyh Abdullah bin Bayyah (former Vice President of Mauritania, and leading religious scholar), and Shaykh Sa‘id Ramadan Al-Buti (from Syria), in addition to the Grand Muftis of Russia, Bosnia, Croatia, Kosovo, Slovenia, Istanbul, Uzbekistan, and Oman, as well as leading figures from the Shi‘a community such as Ayatollah Muhammad Ali Taskhiri of Iran. The letter was also signed by HRH Prince Ghazi bin Muhammad bin Talal of Jordan and by Muslim scholars in the West such as Shaykh Hamza Yusuf from California, Professor Seyyed Hossein Nasr of George Washington University in Washington, D.C., and Professor Tim Winter of the University of Cambridge.

The letter tackles the main substantive issues raised in his treatment of a debate between the medieval Emperor Manuel II Paleologus and an “educated Persian”, including reason and faith; forced conversion; “jihad” vs. “holy war”; and the relationship between Christianity and Islam.The letter is now published by Islamica Magazine. Read here.

Saturday, October 14, 2006

Risalah Mu'awanah:Imam Haddad on Fasting



Increase your good works, especially in Ramadan, for the reward of a supererogatory act performed during it equals that of an obligatory act performed at any other time. Ramadan is also a time when good works are rendered easy and one has much more energy for them than during any other month. This is because the soul, lazy when it: comes to good works, is then imprisoned by hunger and thirst, the devils who hinder it are shackled, the gates of the Fire are shut, the gates of the Garden are open, and the herald calls every night at God's command: 'O you who wish for goodness, hasten! And O you who wish for evil, halt!'

You should work only for the hereafter in this noble month, and embark on something worldly only when absolutely necessary. Arrange your life before Ramadan in a manner which will render you free for worship when it arrives. Be intent on devotions and approach God more surely, especially during the last ten days. If you are able not to leave the mosque, except when strictly necessary, during those last ten days then do so. Be careful to perform the Tarawih prayers during every Ramadan night. In some places it is nowadays the custom to make them so short that sometimes some of the obligatory elements of the prayer are omitted, let alone the sunnas. It is well known that our predecessors read the whole Qur'an during this prayer, reciting a part each night so as to complete it on one of the last nights of the month. If you are able to follow suit then this is a great gain; if you are not, then the least that you can do is to observe the obligatory elements of the prayer and its proprieties.

Watch carefully for the Night of Destiny [Laylat'ul-Qadr], which is better than a thousand months. It is the blessed night in which all affairs are wisely decided. The one to whom it is unveiled sees the blazing lights, the open doors of heaven, and the angels ascending and descending, and may witness the whole of creation prostrating before God, its Creator.

Most scholars are of the opinion that it is in the last ten nights of Ramadan, and is more likely to fall in the odd numbered ones. A certain gnostic witnessed it on the night of the seventeenth, and this was also the opinion of al-Hasan al-Basri. Some scholars have said that it is the first night of Ramadan, and a number of great scholars have said that it is not fixed but shifts its position each Ramadan. They have said that the secret wisdom underlying this is that the believer should devote himself completely to God during every night of this month in the hope of coinciding with that night which has been kept obscure from him. And God knows best.

Hasten to break your fast as soon as you are certain that the sun has set. Delay suhur long as you do not fear the break of dawn. Feed those who fast at the time when they break it, even if with some dates or a draught of water, for the one who feeds another at the time of breaking the fast receives as much reward as he without this diminishing the other's reward in any way. Strive never to break your fast nor to feed anyone else at such a time except with lawful food. Do not eat much, take whatever lawful food is present ' and do not prefer that which is tasty, for the purpose of fasting is to subdue one's lustful appetite, and eating a large quantity of delicious food will on the contrary arouse and strengthen it.

Fast on the days on which the Law encourages you to fast, such as the day of Arafat for those who are not participating n the pilgrimage, the ninth and tenth [‘Ashura] of Muharram, and the six days of Shawwal, starting with the second day of the Feast, for this is the more effective discipline for the soul. Fast three days in each month, for these equal a perpetual fast. It is better if these are the White Days, for the Prophet, may blessings and peace be upon him, never omitted to fast them whether he was at home or traveling. Fast often, especially in times of special merit such as the Inviolable Months, and noble days such as Mondays and Thursdays. Know that fasting is the pillar of discipline and the basis of striving. It has been said that fasting constitutes half of fortitude. The Messenger of God, may blessings and peace be upon him, said: 'God the Exalted has said: "All good deeds of the son of Adam are multiplied ten to seven hundredfold, except fasting, for it is Mine, and I shall reward a man for it, for he has left his appetite, his food and drink for My sake!"' 'The one who fasts has two joys, one when breaking his fast, the other when meeting his Lord.' And; 'The odour of the fasting man’s mouth is more fragrant to God than that of musk.' God says the truth and He guides to the way. [XXXIII:4]

Taken from: Al-Haddad, Abdallah Ibn Alawi. The Book of Assistance. 2st ed. Trans. Mostafa Al-Badawi. London: The Quilliam Press, 1998.

PUISI 2006

Tahun ini tak berkesempatan untuk ber'PUISI' memandangkan saya akan berziarah ke bumi Bani Osman Disember ini.Ini promo PUISI tahun ini.

Wednesday, July 26, 2006

... Rise from under the rubble
Like a flower of almond in April.
Get over your sorrows,
For revolution grows in the womb of grief!
Rise in honor of the forests.
Rise in honor of the rivers.
Rise in honor of humankind.
Rise, O Beirut!
(Nizar Qabbani on 'Beirut: The Queen of the World')