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30 October 2014

Solat tapi tak solat !

Salam Alayk!
solat tapi tak solat? gena tu?



“sekiranya solat seseorang itu tidak menghalangnya dari melakukan kemungkaran, maka dia tidak solat”..

Kadang kita perasan, ramai yang solat tapi masih melakukan kemungkaran. Takyah jenguk jauh-jauh.
Pandang yang dekat-dekat ja. Pandang diri sendiri.

Kita solat, tapi kita masih mengumpat. Sedangkan kita tahu mengumpat itu dilarang Allah.
Sedang  kita tahu mengumpat tu umpama memakan daging saudara sendiri.

Kita solat tapi kita masih mendedahkan aurat. Sepatutnya sebagai muslim kita kena wajib melaksanakan yang wajib. Melaksanakan apa yang Allah suruh. Allah dah suruh awak tutup aurat,
Tutupla sayang.
Ada suara sumbang yang kata, “aku tak pakai tudung tapi aku solat. ok la tu”.
 Astaghfirullah. Mengucap sisters. Tak malu ke berhadapan dengan Allah bila awak masih menayangkan aurat di luar solat?
:’(

Tak malu ke dengan Allah.
Wahai sisters se-Tuhan dengan saya, kakak hidayah tu awak kena cari. Awak kena usaha untuk cari dia. Bukannya awak kena tunggu dia datang kat awak ,jemput awak.
Bila awak asyik nak tunggu, saya risau kalau tak sempat. Takut malaikat maut yang datang jemput dulu.
*maaf

Kita solat, tapi kita masih membuang masa.
Boleh habiskan masa berjam jam di laman sosial. Memula facebook.  Lepastu wechat. Lepastu whatsapp. Twitter.Lepastu entah apa lagi.
Berjam jam duduk mengadap laptop semata nak habiskan drama korea yang ada 20 episode tu.
Study tak sempat pulak. Assignment pon buat last minit. Baca Al-quran pon tak sempat. Solat pon kadang last minute. Atas  alasan tak sempat. Konon-nyalah.
Hairan kan?
Ada keberkatan ke hidup kita macam ni? Ada makna ke hidup macam ni? Dah tahu kenapa kita solat tapi kita masih melakukan kemungkaran? Rasa-rasa Allah terima ke solat kita? Allah :’(
Recheck ehh. Kita recheck sesama.

Sesungguhnya solat itu merupakan satu medium penghubung antara kita dengan Allah. Masa kita solat adalah masa di mana kita paling dekat dengan Allah. Rasulullah bersabda yang bermaksud:
“Allah itu paling rapat dengan hamba-Nya ketika hambanya sedang sujud”.
Betapa mulianya solat, ia boleh mensucikan jiwa dan hati yang ampuh.
 “Dan dirikanlah solat, sesungguhnya solat itu mencegah perbuatan keji dan mungkar”.(Al Ankabut:45)
Terbuktikan? Dah dibuktikan dalam Al Quran sendiri yang solat tu sebenarnya boleh mencegah kita dari kemungkaran. Tapi.. kenapa eh? Kenapa kita masih buat kemungkaran eh? Maybe there is something wrong  in our solah. Jomlah kita sesama usaha cari kesalahan dalam solat kita. Jomlah sesama kita baiki solat kita. Supaya Allah lebih sayang. Supaya Allah redha. Supaya Allah bantu kita mencegah kemungkaran.
Spent the precious moment for awhile with Allah with love. Full of tawadhuk. Sebagai hamba yang mengadap Pencipta.  Manfaatkanlah lima persinggahan ini dengan sebaik mungkin.
Baiki solat. Here is some tips for those who are willing to improve their solah. Kepada yang belum “rasa”.. takpalah, hati awak Allah yang pegang. Saya akan selalu doakan awak. Supaya Allah sentuh hati awak :’)
Ok jom. Ana dapat tips ni dekat whatsapp. Dan ana rasa macam ia bantu ana baiki solat. Jadi ana rasa ana kena share dengan antunna semua.
*dah kenapa tetiba masuk mode ana antunna ni?* tah pape. sebab macam best jek. ihiks

Sebelum masuk waktu solat, ambil masa dalam 1-15 minit untuk diam dari melakukan apa jua kerja.
1- Yang perlu hanyalah berkomunikasi dengan Allah. Tidak memohon. Tapi sekadar bercerita. Tentang kerja, tentang hidup,tentang keluarga, anak-anak, tentang pelajaran. Mengadulah dengan dia. Semoga dengan cara ini kita akan lebih dekat dengan Dia.
2- Apabila telah masuk waktu solat, bangun untuk ambil wudhuk dalam kesedaran bahawa kita dalam perjalanan bertemu dengan-Nya secara formal. Kita akan memuji-Nya, berterima kasih pada-Nya.
3-Sepanjang wudhuk kita perlulah dalam kesedaran yang kita ingin bertemu adalah Allah. Pastikan wudhuk kita sempurna. Minta supaya segala anggota wuduk dilindungi dari melakukan kejahatan dan maksiat.
4- Semasa sejadah dibentangkan, tetapkan kesedaran anda adalah hamba yang akan bertemu dengan Pencipta.
5- Ketika berdiri untuk takbir, dahulukan dengan istighfar. Memohon keampunan pada Allah seawal lagi agar pujian kita datang dari hati yang benar-benar bersih.
6-Kemudian semasa mengangkat takbir, sedarlah bahawa kita sedang memanggil Allah yang Maha Besar, yang kita rindui.
7-*diringkaskan* lebih baik jika kita memahami apa yang kita ucapkan didalam solat. Memudahkan kita untuk menemukan khusyuk.

Iftitah:
Allah Maha Besar sebesar-besarnya.

Dan puji-pujian bagi Allah sebanyak-banyaknya.

Dan maha suci Allah siang dan malam.

Kuhadapkan mukaku, kepada yang menjadikan langit dan bumi, aku cenderung lagi berserah kepada Allah dan bukanlah aku dari golongan orang-orang yang menyekutukan Allah.

Sesungguhnya sembahyangku, ibadatku, hidupku dan matiku kuserahkan hanya pada Allah tuhan seru sekelian alam.

Sekali-kali tidaklah aku menyekutukanNya .

Dan dengan demikian aku ditugaskan, dan aku adalah dari golongan orang-orang Muslim (Islam).

Al-Fatihah: sebuah lagi skrip hadiah dari Allah untuk kita berkomunikasi di dalam bahasa arab namun kita faham yang kita sedang berkomunikasi dengan Allah,

“Dengan menyebut nama Allah Yang Maha Pemurah lagi Maha Penyayang”.

 “Segala puji bagi Allah, Tuhan semesta alam”

 “Maha Pemurah lagi Maha Penyayang”

 “Yang menguasai hari pembalasan”

 “Hanya kepada Engkaulah kami menyembah dan hanya kepada Engkaulah kami mohon pertolongan”

 “Tunjukilah kami jalan yang lurus”

 “(yaitu) jalan orang-orang yang telah Engkau anugerahkan nikmat kepada mereka, bukan (jalan) mereka yang dimurkai dan bukan (pula jalan) mereka yang sesat”.

8-Kemudian kita baca surah yang mudah dan kita fahami.

9-Diamlah sejenak sebelum kita rukuk . Tuqmaninah sebentar. Sedarilah kita rukuk untuk hormat dan memuji Allah. Lalu rukuklah. Namun diam dahulu. Diam namun sedar dan berterima kasih kepada  Allah.

"Ya Allah Maha SuciMu Tuhan yang Maha Agung ya Allah."

10- Iktidal dan tuqmaninah lalu nyatakan kepada Allah " Ya Allah, untukMu segala pujian Ya Allah"

Andai semuanya milik Allah segala pujian, adakah pujian milik kita? Siapa kita yang sering ingin dipuji? Siapa kita yang sering kecewa ketika orang lain tidak memuji kita? Siapa kita? Astaghfirullah

11- Sujud. Diam sebentar. Sedarlah ketika sujud ini jasad kembali kepada asalnyayakni tanah. Kita tidak punya apa-apa lagi. Segala pujian adalah milik Allah. Kita ini tidak punya apa-apa. Kita hanya mengharapkan redha Allah semata-mata.
Lalu pujilah,
"Ya Allah, MahasuciMu Tuhan yang Maha tinggi Ya Allah"

12- Duduk antara dua sujud. Pohonlah dengan satu persatu:

"Ya Allah, ampunilah aku "
"Ya Allah, rahmatilah aku"
"Ya Allah, cukupkanlah segala keperluanku"
"Ya Allah, angkatlah darjatku ya Allah "(darjat di sisi Allah)
"Ya Allah, murahkanlah rezekiku"
"Ya Allah, buaknkanlah pintu hatiku untuk hidayah/petunjukMu Ya Allah"
"Ya Allah, sihatkanlah aku"
"Ya Allah, maafkanlah aku"

Dr Fuad Latip.

Banyak yang aku ringkaskan sebenarnya dari artikel ni. Tapi harap-harap maksud yang nak disampaikan tetap sama.Allahurabbi betapa nikmatnya solat. Ayuh praktikkan. Kalau kau rasa macam lima waktu tu macam banyak sangat, baik kau fikir semula, macam mana orang lain boleh menambahkan solat solat sunat dalam kehidupan seharian mereka. Golongan ini sentiasa menunggu-nunggu waktu solat.

rasa macam tu jekot untuk kali ni punya post.
aku banyak rujuk buka Hilal Asyraf jugak. 


Moga bermanfaat. InsyaAllah.
Sekian
* aku yang tulis aku yang sentap*






13 October 2014

Study Week

Salam Alayk


Masa study week pernah tak kau rasa macam tak tahu apa nak buat? Rasa macam banyak lagi tak study? rasa macam dah tak sempat? Rasa macam tak tahu nak start yang mana satu dulu? ahaha. padan muka kau! eh takdelah.. gurau saje^^Aku tahu sebab aku pernah rasa.
Tapi kalau di kalangan kawan kawan terdekat aku mungkin tadak yang rasa cenggitu. Semua pandai pandai belaka. Aku ni je haa. Gelabah bewak setiap kali exam. Tapi lepas tu ada orang bagi tips. Orang tersayang. Ihiks. So aku rasa macam nak share dengan orang orang yang aku sayang kerana Allah.

First thing korang kena buat adalah tarik nafas dalam dalam ambil istighfar bebanyak. Jangan gelabah bhai. Walaupon satu apa pon kau tak sentuh lagi! ahaha. Risau tu memang patut ada sebab kalau kau tak risau aku rasa kau manusia paling pelik. Final exam kot. Tapi jangan risau kau tu melampau sangat sampai kau gelabah tak tentu fasal. Sampai orang sekeliling pon stess dengan kau. Kang exam ke mana, study ke mana! Kalau rasa tak tenang cuba amek wudhuk lepas buat solat sunat apa yang patut. Solat hajat ke, solat tahajjud ke, solat taubat ke. Tapi make sure lah solat lima waktu kau pon cukop. Percayalah dengan mengingati Allah hati akan menjadi tenang.

Lepastu cuba kau listkan apa yang kau nak study dulu. Ikut priority. Kalau kau rasa macam cliché sangat je nak list list bagai, kau buat je ikut suka hati kau. Cadangan aku kalau kau rasa macam tangah serabut, tengah stress better kau study subjek yang ringan ringan dulu. Subjek tak beratkan kepala sangat. Subjek yang kau sukalah senang cerita! Lepas rasa dah macam ok. Enjin pon dah lancar. Takda semput semput lagi, kau redah jelah. Study, study, study.

Manfaat kan masa seminggu tu sebaik mungkin. Jangan pernah memilih time buat revision. Maksud aku, anggap semua yang kau dah belajar tu penting. Takda yang tak penting. Jangan tinggal satu pon. Study sampai kau rasa macam dah betul betul sedia nak masuk dewan exam. Tapi kan, tapi kan, janganlah kau pulon study sampai kau lupa nak jaga hubungan kau dengan Allah. Jaga solat sayang. Doa banyak banyak sayang. Masa masa macam ni penting untuk kau bergantung pada Allah seratus peratus. Lepastu jangan lupa mak abah jugak. Kol selalu. Biar berkat. Ada orang pesan, biar kita yang kol mak abah dulu, jangan sampai mak abah yang kol kita dulu. ^^ arasso?

Hm, satu lagi, jaga pemakanan taw. study study jugak, makan jangan lupa. Eh kejap, ada ke manusia lupa nak makan? macam sik da jak?? Lupa nak solat, lupa nak baca alquran adalah.. *jatuhkatil*. ahaha. jangan asik makan maggi je. Aku dok pulon suruh orang jangan makan megi, aku pon sama:P Nak buat gena kan.. penghujung sem dah, kad atm dah kering :p Last, minum air bebanyak. keh..




Jangan pernah rasa macam dah terlambat untuk berjuang selagi kaki kau belom masuk dewan exam. Study je setakat mana mampu. Kbye.


Bittaufiq wan najjah ^^

p/s aku tulis entry ni dah berkurun. masa final sem 1 rasanya. saja simpan lama lama dalam draft. nak buat perkasam. ahaks:P
harini baru rasa macam nak post
hm

moga bermanfaat. moga Allah redha ^^

One year of Morsi versus one year of Al-Sisi

A year ago, on July 3, 2013, we witnessed the overthrow of Egypt's first democratically-elected civilian president and the first president since the January 25 revolution. The overthrow of Dr Mohamed Morsi came after just one year of his presidential term in a coup led by his Minister of Defence, Abdel Fatah Al-Sisi. It is timely to compare Morsi's one year in power with Al-Sisi's one year in power. The past 12 months have encompassed many unprecedented events, including a presidential campaign by Al-Sisi, who won an election which has been widely viewed as farcical and illegitimate.

The presidential campaigns

Comparing the ideas and policies of the coup leader, as a candidate for president upon whom many had pinned their hopes to solve Egypt's problems, with those of the deposed president, illustrates the enormous differences in vision and outlook between the two men.
During his presidential campaign, Al-Sisi was asked about some of the main issues facing Egyptians. Regarding the reoccurring electricity shortages, Al-Sisi's big idea was that every citizen should replace their light-bulbs into energy-saving bulbs and reduce their use of electrical appliances. When Morsi was asked the same question during his presidential campaign in 2012, which he titled the "Renaissance Project", he said he intended to use nuclear power to fill this deficit. Nuclear energy, he explained, would be used for electricity production. This would also create a surplus of energy which could be exported, increasing Egypt's national income.
Many Egyptians cannot even afford to buy bread and queue to buy government-subsidised bread. Al-Sisi's answer to this problem was that he would ask Egyptian families to sacrifice from the amount they eat and save just one piece of bread. "If 25 million families save a piece of bread by having three-quarters of a piece instead of a whole slice, there would be 25 million pieces of bread for those that do not have any," he argued.
Morsi, on the other hand, saw that increasing the production of wheat was the way to solve this serious problem; he suggested renting land in Sudan or Ethiopia for cultivation in order to save water. His plan was for Egypt to be self-sufficient in wheat within four years.
Regarding the shortage of foreign currency reserves (as a result of the dearth of tourists and foreign investors), Al-Sisi suggested that every Egyptian living abroad should donate $10 a month to Egypt. Morsi's solution was to increase the fee for all foreign ships passing through the Suez Canal.
With unemployment standing at 13.4 per cent of nearly 90 million Egyptians, Al-Sisi suggested buying a thousand carts for the youth to sell vegetables. For Dr Morsi, unemployment could be tackled by establishing micro-projects, such as assembling computers and televisions, and larger-scale projects such as the Suez Canal development project and other labour-intensive schemes. The Suez Canal project alone, according to Morsi, would not only increase national income but also provide up to a million jobs.
When Al-Sisi was asked for his position on the Camp David Treaty with Israel, he said that he will safeguard the agreement and will co-ordinate with Israel to protect the borders. When Dr Morsi was asked about his position, he stressed that Egypt is a country which maintains its international obligations providing other parties also keep to their commitments; it is impossible for "five million people anywhere to scare 90 million," he said.
The substantial disparity in outlook and vision of both men is evident from their handling of these issues. Whilst Al-Sisi seeks to administer a sticking-plaster to Egypt's economic wounds, Morsi's vision sought to cure the problems at their core and provide long-term solutions. "We have to produce our food, we have to produce our medicines, and we have to produce our weapons," he insisted. Al-Sisi's economic policy was hard to pinpoint during his presidential campaign, because he did not have one.

Before they reigned

So who are the two men and what was their life before entering Egyptian politics? Mohammed Mohammed Morsi Issa El-Ayaat was born in 1951; he obtained his bachelor's and master's degrees in Engineering at Cairo University before going to the US to complete a doctorate at Southern California University, which he completed in 1982. After completing his education, Morsi lectured in two American universities before returning to his homeland where he was appointed Professor and Dean of the School of Engineering in Al-Zaqaziq University.
Parallel to his academic career, Morsi partook in political life through the Muslim Brotherhood where he became the official parliamentary spokesman for the group after he won a parliamentary seat in the 2000 elections. He was chosen universally as the best parliamentary man for 2000-2005. In 2011, Morsi became the head of the Freedom and Justice Party (FJP), the political arm of the Brotherhood, and was elected as a member of the Egyptian parliament in 2012; he resigned from the movement and the FJP after he won the presidential election in the same year.
Abdel Fatah Saeed Hussein Khaleel Al-Sisi, born in 1954, served in the infantry following his graduation from the Military Academy in 1977. He studied at the Wartime Military College in the US in 2006, and was appointed Egypt's military attaché to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Despite not being involved in any actual battles, Al-Sisi was promoted within the military and held several important positions, including leadership of the infantry and the Northern Command in Alexandria. He was the head of intelligence warfare before he was selected by Morsi for the position of defence minister. Al-Sisi was generally unknown to the public until his appointment as a minister in August 2012.

Elections and popularity

Morsi's victory in the 2012 presidential election was a victory for the January 25 Revolution and for democracy. The revolution was famous for the unity it created among the Egyptian people, and his winning of five consecutive votes was an indication that they were united in selecting who they wanted to lead them. This year's elections came on the back of the bloody coup which has taken the lives of over 8,000 people and seen more than 44,000 men, women and children imprisoned for their opposition to the military takeover and the annihilation of the revolution.
Moreover, whilst the 2012 elections were open for participation by all, with thirteen presidential candidates, the 2014 elections saw one puppet opponent for Al-Sisi. He won, of course, in a stark reminder of the previous six decades of authoritarian rule, with a landslide 96 per cent of the votes. Indeed, various pro-coup anti-Brotherhood parties refused to celebrate the first anniversary of the 30 June "Revolution", such as the 6th April movement and the Salafi Noor Party, in protest at the exclusion of parties from the 2014 elections and the divisions that Egypt has seen since that historic day last year.
Morsi grew in popularity when he entered the public arena, appealing to Egyptians with his humble nature. Following his election, President Morsi remained in his rented home and insisted on a modest salary of $1,650 a month. He met with members of the public frequently and prayed alongside them in the mosques. When he addressed the people in Tahrir Square following his victory, and whenever he mingled with the crowds, he refused to have bodyguards as a barrier between him and his people. From the time that he first appeared in the public eye, including his presidential campaign, Al-Sisi has not made a single public appearance, fearing for his life despite his supposed popularity with Egyptians,
Al-Sisi has limited himself to carefully choreographed interviews and indoor meetings with handpicked groups. He kept his election platform secret for most of the campaign on the grounds of "national security". His supposed popularity was propelled and fuelled by Egyptian state television alone, which compared him with former Egyptian President Nasser and made a hero-saviour cult-figure out of him. This "Sisi-fever" continued despite the embarrassment that emanated from the campaign and the military's allegedly "complete cure device" for HIV and Hepatitis C. The media was quick to induce amnesia in his supporters after these embarrassments by filling the screens with their demonisation of opponents and magnifying their Egyptian Superman, Al-Sisi.

Achievements

The past 365 days under Al-Sisi have seen the breakdown of many human rights in Egypt. The sanctity of human life was squandered with 8,000 killed and 20,000 injured, with the media and even some Islamic scholars belonging to the regime, advocating and encouraging such bloodshed. Egypt has also seen the abolition of freedoms and rights with 44,000 political prisoners incarcerated in jails, including 48 journalists, and hundreds issued with death sentences in recent months.
Since the coup, Egypt has seen the closure of television channels and newspapers and the arrest of journalists and students. The country is now among 48 countries worldwide that do not enjoy any freedoms and, according to Freedom House, is regarded as a country which lacks media freedom and freedom of expression; political participation; civilian control and security-sector reform; peaceful assembly and civic activism; and judicial independence and rule of law. Egypt is back to being a police state and the military has full control over all state institutions.
During Morsi's time in office, despite the 30 protests that occurred, there was not a single fatality. The law prohibiting the arrest of those expressing opinions was cancelled and there was no longer any such thing as political prisoners. The number of tourists increased during Morsi's rule, with Egypt receiving almost seven million tourists in the first half of 2013, injecting $5 million into the economy. Following the coup and before the August massacres, tourism went down by 30 per cent, and went down to zero following the bloodshed in Cairo. When Morsi became president, foreign oil reserves had reached $14 million following the interim post-revolution military rule; that figure went up to $18.8 million. Shortly after the coup, oil reserves fell to 14.9 million; in one month alone, it fell by $3.9 million.
Morsi met with many world leaders, both at home and abroad. He attended the African Union summit where he was welcomed with great respect and was seated on the front row. Two days after the military coup in 2013 the Peace and Security Council of the African Union suspended Egypt's membership. It was readmitted reluctantly following Al-Sisi's presidential "victory", although Sam Akaki, the Director of Democratic Institutions for Poverty Reduction in Africa, has called for the withdrawal of this readmission, citing Al-Sisi's long list of human right abuses. During the recent African Summit, Egypt's Al-Sisi was seated in the third row.

History will be the judge

For Egyptians, the economy, security and personal freedoms are the key issues of concern. The past year has seen a culling of these freedoms, to a level never before seen in Egyptian history.
With Egyptians now fasting the holy month of Ramadan, many are facing severe difficulties in being able to feed their family with the increased prices of food and the continuous electricity cuts in Egypt's harsh summer heat. Indeed, Ramadan entered Egypt forlornly this year, with new laws and restrictions to dictate even the spiritual aspect of the people. Hundreds of mosques are closed; ID cards are requested for entry into those that are open; and the nightly Ramadan prayers (taraweeh) are cut short. State television is doing its best to distract the people with 30 new drama series this Ramadan, but will the Egyptian people wake from their intoxication and look at what Egypt has become, and then join the "opposition"? Time will tell.
President Morsi may not have been perfect and he may have made mistakes, but it was unreasonable to expect the country to get back on its feet in just one year after 60 years of authoritarian rule. After reviewing the "achievements" of the past year under Al-Sisi, can anyone honestly say they still support the coup?
sources:https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/