Friday, October 07, 2005

Green Green Grass of Home

Suddenly I feel like writing about my home town. I was surfing this website about Taiping and were taken aback for a while by the responses on old Taipingites there talking about their fond memories of the town. I came from a humble and conservative Malay family and was brought up all my life in Taiping. Since I was born, I never really did leave Taiping until I came here to Australia. Was actually offered for a boarding school when I was 12 but Mom and Dad kinda loathful me going there. So I rejected the offer. Now I know that I did not regret upon my decision back then. Boarding school clamps your mind and blocks your horizon. You only mix with the same race (Malay to be precise) and have no chance of widening your social circle. When I think back about it, I am grateful to all my friends in high school that has somehow shaped me personally into what I am today which I think I would not be who I am today if I was a boarding school product. And so I live my life in Taiping again for another 7 years.




My old school mate Raymond (I used to call him papa elephant at school) is a hardcore advertiser of Taiping. He will talk about Taiping wherever he goes and I can say that he is a truly Taipingite. I love the serenity of the Lake Garden and I savour all the profound memories of my schoolling life. I went to St.George for my primary and high school and indeed still a proud Georgian. St. George plays a memorable role in my life and the friends that I made there are indeed friends that you can rely upon. All of them now are scattered all over the world pursuing their own course of life. I cycled to school back then.



I hardly went out of Taiping when I was there but a visit to KL became frequent during my foundation year and that was when I was 18. Perth (a beautifully boring place) resembles a bit like Taiping with not so much of a traffic and the ever beautifiul Swan River remind me of the Lake Garden. Historically, Taiping was high in the list. First Railway Station, an old mining town, first zoo etc. Not so much like JB or Penang but Taiping is a place that you can unwind and let you mind wonder wildly.



My life in Taiping is very much a simple one. My first house was in Jalan Pauh, Assam Kumbang and then we moved to Kamunting. I only spent a month in Kamunting before I left for Australia. Most of my childhood was in Assam Kumbang. Love the neighbours there and my badminton colegues (one of them has passed away, may God bless him). The people there were less complicated than the people here. I never knew my neighbours here. Probably modernization is making us more selfish.

I dunno but I feel that Taiping is the place that where I want to retire and have a wonderful life with wife, sons, grandsons etc. I'd love to see Taiping as it is today and not be devoured by modern society with complex traits of mind that changes the intactness and the beauty of the town.

Thursday, October 06, 2005

Repost : My Son Doesn't Understand the World

I came across this post in islamonline.net and feel like blogging it here.

As-salamu `alaykum.

Dear counselors, I have a problem. My son came to me 2 weeks ago and cried and said, "Mum, I don't understand the world. How should I handle the world?" I looked at him and then thought he is only 20 years, he has money, a car, he studies medicine in one of the best universities, has a beautiful and religious wife, has kind parents, is good looking, has many friends, has good health, so what is his problem??? So I asked him what problems does he have, why can't he understand the world. He answered with tears in his eyes, "It is all very complicated, I don't understand the world—evil wins, people who hate me congratulate me on my birthday, which I don't expect, and beloved ones don't congratulate me. Everything is running differently: The good lose and evil wins, etc." So how can I help him? Thank you.




In the name of Allah the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful. May He bestow His peace and blessings on His Messenger Muhammad, his family, his Companions, and all of those who follow them sincerely.

As-salamu `alaykum,

Dear sister, yes, we do live in a world that often seems upside down. Your son is very perceptive, in fact. Given that Allah has blessed him with so much, it is a refreshing sign to see someone who is so concerned with the state of the world. What your son is echoing, in my opinion, is what many people, particularly young people, are feeling today. In many ways it is a very dark time we are living in with so much ignorance, hatred, inequality, oppression, violence, and other things occurring in the world. This is what your son is picking up on and it is, indeed, very difficult to understand. Nevertheless, as Muslims we must always seek understanding in our lives, for that is how we learn about Allah and His way of operating in the world.

First off, your son must understand that good never loses and evil never wins. Of course in this temporary world that may appear to be the case, but in Reality, in the world of Truth, only Allah exists and Allah is good. Evil, according to many erudite scholars and saints of Islam, only exists—is created by Allah—for the purpose of pointing mankind to good, to the all-pervading mercy of Allah. Remember the hadith qudsi: "My mercy overcomes My wrath." According to those such as Jalaludin Rumi, evil only exists to point us human beings back to, and be grateful for the all-pervading mercy of Allah. The following is from my last article on this Web site. It might help to put this in perspective:

Everything is from Him. This was one of the first lessons I learned in Islam prior to my conversion six years ago. It is the peak of tawheed; simple, yet so important and powerful. Everything is from Allah. When we attempt to understand our lives in this way, through the eyes of tawheed, with Allah as the ultimate cause of everything ("Such is Allah, your Lord, the Creator of all things" [Ghafir 40:62]), quite naturally we will seek understanding in our lives. We know Allah creates everything, we know Allah is the primary cause behind everything, and we know that Allah is the Most Merciful and the source of ultimate good. Thus, with everything that occurs in our lives, might we ask “what are we to learn, Lord, and how should we respond to that which You have willed?” From this vantage point, we will naturally yearn to know what Allah wants us to do, which in fact we already have the answer for: to know Him.

If Allah wants us to know Him, does it not make sense that the manifestation of severity and rigor is Allah’s way of calling us back to Him and His all-pervading mercy and goodness? Could it be that the “whip” of severity is the Creator’s way of reminding us of our ultimate purpose here? The Qur’an teaches us that there are three ways to know Allah: through revelation (the Qur’an), through creation, and through the self. …

One of the important roles that hardship plays in life is to facilitate introspection, to help us look toward the inside and better understand our innermost selves and hearts. When we experience tragedy or calamity, often the first thing we do is go inside ourselves, seeking understanding and solace. It is an important soulful activity that must be done in order to fully realize our humanness. …

Part of the self-surrendering to Allah (al-Islam), therefore, must be to accept all of the Names of Allah, and to embrace all of the ways that He chooses to manifest Himself in our lives, including those perceived as severe or harsh. Not being appreciative of the mercy of Allah in our lives and merciful in our interactions with others will inevitably result in the experience of Allah’s wrath. For to be neglectful in our role as the community of the Mercy to All the Worlds (Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him) is deserving of a divine wake-up call.

The craziness in the world that your son has picked up on is the result of all these human decisions to live lives in opposition to the Divine Reality and Allah's guidance for mankind. Islam means "peace" in that it is the way of life of unity—as a manifestation of tawheed, or the oneness of Allah. That is why the people of tawheed (i.e., the Muslims) should be the people showing the world how to live in unity and peace. Nevertheless, in too many cases, we are not. We are not exemplifying our way of life to bring peace. Allah says very simply in the Qur'an that He created us different for one reason: so that we can know one another.

"O mankind! We created you from a single (pair) of a male and a female, and made you into nations and tribes, that ye may know each other (not that ye may despise (each other). Verily the most honored of you in the sight of Allah is (he who is) the most righteous of you. And Allah has full knowledge and is well acquainted (with all things)." (Al-Hujurat 49:13)

Yet, we are not. Humanity as a whole is not. Therefore, we are shunning Allah's mercy by turning away from His guidance and we are essentially getting what we have asked for, which is Allah's wrath. What we can do from what we see happening around us is to get involved—even if it's in a simple way like helping a loved one or a neighbor. Allah records all of our good deeds, no matter how seemingly mundane they are.



"And the Book (of Deeds) will be placed (before you); and thou wilt see the sinful in great terror because of what is (recorded) therein; they will say, 'Ah! woe to us! what a Book is this! It leaves out nothing small or great, but takes account thereof!' They will find all that they did, placed before them: And not one will thy Lord treat with injustice." (Al-Kahf 18:49)

The best way to respond to the craziness and negativity that we see around us is to transform it—by doing something good! Bring mercy, peace, love, and understanding to someone—anyone, for that matter.

"The good deed and the evil deed are not alike. Repel the evil deed with one which is better, then lo! he, between whom and thee there was enmity (will become) as though he was a bosom friend." (Fussilat 41:34)

If we all were to focus on these small things, in time, in sha' Allah, we would see things begin to transform for the better. We are all capable of doing good and bringing goodness into the world. We just have to do it. It doesn't have to be earth-shattering change either. Remember what the Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings be upon him) told us about the importance of small deeds:

`A'ishah (may Allah be pleased with her) reported: The Messenger of Allah (may peace be upon him) did not observe fast in any month of the year more than in the month of Sha`ban, and used to say, "Do as many deeds as you are capable of doing, for Allah will not become weary (of giving you reward), but you would be tired (of doing good deeds)." And he also said, "The deed liked most by Allah is one to which the doer adheres constantly even if it is small." (Muslim 6, #2582)

Narrated Abu Hurairah: The Prophet (peace be upon him) said, "A man never did a good deed but removed a thorny branch from the road; it was either in the tree and someone cut it and threw it on the road, or it was lying in it, he removed it. Allah accepted this good deed of his and brought him intoParadise." (Abu Dawud 41, #5225)

I hope this helps your son in some small way.

Source: www.islamonline.net

Tuesday, October 04, 2005

Have I Told You Lately

I am 'engaging' in a Rod Stewart's song Have I told You Lately the moment I wrote this. Actually I do not have a specific topic for this post. It is just this uncanny feeling somewhere from up above that prompted me to write something tonight. Tomorrow is the first day of fasting ad I just got back from Tarawih. I hope this Ramadhan will bring something different in me and wish it can be more fruitful to me than my last Ramadhan. I think I can appreciate the blessed month better here in Perth than when I was in Malaysia. I don't why. I always think that we take thing for granted too much regarding Islamic practise in an Islamic country (so-called!!)than when we are abroad. We do things beacuse other people do it and we do it to not feel isolated from others. That was my observation in Malaysia. Living in an Islamic environment somehow has engaged our mind to just follow the norm of the place. I do not know if it is good or bad but I'd rather do things by knowing why I am doing it. Not just because others do it. That was my hypothesis and yet to be proven. Any sociologists? That feelings strengthen my determination to stay here coz I feel I am more sincere in what I do here.



Well that was a bit on my thought of this blessed month. It has been lingering in my mind for some time and now only I feel to pen it down. I have finished all my presentations and thank god it all went well. Now I am concentrating on my thesis write-up and kind of sick of looking at the same thing over and over again. I suffered from this very bad prolonged cough for quite sometimes already. I dunno if it is an early indication for something serious. Hope not.



Still waiting for someone to knock on my empty heart right now. Loneliness is no longer something that I mourn about. Kinda got use to it but I cannot pretend for long for my heart knows what it needed. The time will come when the time will come hey! And know you know it when you know it! BUT you will never know it should you never try. I will let my heart decide with the guidance from up above. Time will tell everything.

Have I told you lately that I love you
Have I told you there’s no one else above you
Fill my heart with gladness
Take away all my sadness
Ease my troubles that’s what you do

For the morning sun in all it’s glory
Greets the day with hope and comfort too
You fill my life with laughter
And somehow you make it better
Ease my troubles that’s what you do
There’s a love that’s divine
And it’s yours and it’s mine like the sun
And at the end of the day
We should give thanks and pray
To the one, to the one

Have I told you lately that I love you
Have I told you there’s no one else above you
Fill my heart with gladness
Take away all my sadness
Ease my troubles that’s what you do

There’s a love that’s divine
And it’s yours and it’s mine like the sun
And at the end of the day
We should give thanks and pray
To the one, to the one

And have I told you lately that I love you
Have I told you there’s no one else above you
You fill my heart with gladness
Take away my sadness
Ease my troubles that’s what you do
Take away all my sadness
Fill my life with gladness
Ease my troubles that’s what you do
Take away all my sadness
Fill my life with gladness
Ease my troubles that’s what you do

**The first picture above was taken by Harris during his honey moon in Maldives.