Isteri pertamaku, Isteri keduaku
Ahli baru dalam keluarga - Abdullah Azzam B Azhari
Eidul Adha 2009@Abu Dhabi
raya mode
Assalamualaikum..!!
Rokok, Arak, Babi dan Dakwah
"Kenapa?" tanya saya.
Dia tidak menjawab persoalan saya. Sebaliknya, dia bercerita kepada saya tentang kebenciannya terhadap agama kristian.
"Di Korea, rakyat kebanyakan beragama apa?"tanya saya.
"Kebanyakannya Kristian dan buddhist, tapi saya benci kristian. Mereka seolah-olah memaksa orang untuk menyertai kristian."
"Orang orang korea yang beragama kristian sangat bodoh apabila mengajak orang di negara lain memeluk kristian dengan paksaan. " ujarnya lagi.
Ini sudah bagus. Saya rasa inilah pertama kali saya berbicara berkenaan perihal agama dengan orang bukan Islam di sini. Hendak saja saya nak berceramah berkenaan perihal agama islam kepada beliau, tetapi hati kecil ini berbisik mengatakan terlalu awal untuk berbuat demikian.
"Nenek dan ayah saya kristian, tetapi bukan saya. Saya tidak percaya pada agama. Kamu tahu, saya sering diajak untuk menemani nenek saya ke Gereja untuk mendengar karut marut mereka. Kamu tahu apa yang saya buat dalam gereja tersebut? katanya dengar nada bersemangat.
"Hmm, apa dia?"
"Saya tidur berdengkur!"
Kedua-dua kami ketawa besar dalam kereta.
Rokok, babi dan arak
Perjalanan masih jauh lagi, lebih kurang 1 jam setengah untuk sampai ke destinasi. Sambil mendengar lagu korea, kawan saya masih rancak bersembang dengan saya sambil memandu.
Kemudian, dia membuka tingkap kereta. " saya nak hisap rokok kejap," katanya. Saya hanya mengangguk.
"Kamu merokok sejak di bangku sekolah?"tanya saya lagi.
"Tak. Saya mula merokok semenjak menyertai tentera di Korea," katanya.
"Tak terfikir untuk berhenti rokok ke?" ujar saya untuk melihat reaksi beliau.
"Saya sedang terfikir untuk berhenti tahun ini. Tengoklah..."
"Untuk berhenti rokok, senang saja, Kamu mesti berada dalam lingkungan orang- orang yang tidak menghisap rokok. Baru menjadi!" nasihat saya kepada beliau.
Dia terdiam. Mungkin setuju dengan kata-kata saya agaknya.
Tidak berapa lama kemudian, dia bersuara kembali,
" Kamu tahu, saya percaya tuhan beri kita tiga benda di dunia ini untuk menikmatinya."
"Apa 3 benda itu?"
"Rokok, arak dan babi!" Sebab itu saya merokok, saya minum arak dan saya makan babi. Sebenarnya saya menghargai pemberian tuhan kamu tahu,"
Saya hanya tersenyum. Dalam hati, hendak saja dilempang mamat sorang ni. Tadi katanya tidak percaya kepada tuhan, sekarang digunakan pula hujah "pemberian tuhan" untuk halalkan benda yang telah diharamkan Allah Taala.
Mujur saya tak membalas hujahnya tadi dengan mengatakan " kamu tahu tuhan dah haramkan kesemua benda tu di atas muka bumi?"
Agak-agaknya dia peduli atau tidak dengan halal haramnya benda-benda tersebut? Bukan apa, takut nanti dibalasnya dengan hujah ini,
"Saya tengok orang Islam pun merokok, orang Islam pun minum arak, dan orang Islam pun makan babi!"
Letih nak menepisnya!
Mutiara dakwah yang tercicir
Bila memikirkan perihal tanggunjawab dakwah kita kepada -orang bukan Islam, terkadang boleh memakan diri bila ilmu tidak cukup di dada. Ternyata, mutiara dakwah sudah tercicir di kalangan orang Islam.
Berjayalah 'dakwah' penjajah kepada kita sebelum ini. Orang yang mengaji agama hanya buleh bercakap bab agama sahaja. Orang yang mengaji agama, kerjanya hanyalah duduk di masjid, mengajak orang ke masjid, dan mengajar bab-bab agama di masjid sahaja. Orang yang tidak mengaji agama, tak buleh sentuh bab agama. Hanya buleh sentuh bab-bab yang dia belajar sahaja. Urusan agama serah kepada orang agama. Orang yang tak mengaji agama cuma fokus kepada hal dunia.
Angkara dakyah inilah, mutiara dakwah telah tercicir dikalangan umat islam. Masing-masing hanya mengharapkan orang agama untuk menghidupkan agama, sehingga orang yang bukan mengaji agama lalai dalam kehidupan dunia. Itulah, bila terlalu mengharap, last-last tertiarap!
Cuba check balik sirah. Siapa yang berada di samping Rasulullah s.a.w semasa perkembangan Islam di Mekah dan di madinah? Semasa itu, tiada istilah orang beragama dan tidak beragama, semuanya terdiri daripada pelbagai latarbelakang, yakni pahlawan, dermawan, bangsawan, negarawan dan banyak lagi. Semuanya ditekankan kepada dua perkara yang menjadi tonggak dalam kehidupan seorang muslim, iaitu kewajipan berdakwah dan kewajipan bersama-sama dengan perjuangan Islam.
Doakan moga Allah Taala memelihara Jamaah dan ahlinya dari terpesong dari landasan perjuangan yang diredhainya.
Wallahualam
Catatan abu umar
27 april 2009
1.23 pagi
Tahun Baru, Barang Baru dan Saudara Baru
BIsmillahirrahmanirrahim..
Sedar tidak sedar, kita sudahpun berada di penghujung tahun 2008, dan tahun 1430 hijrah sudahpun menjelma (Selamat tahun baru hijrah 1430). Nila dikatkan dengan tahun baru ini, pasti kita teringat zaman kanak-kanak dahulu tentang bagaimana kita diajar untuk memperbaharui azam kita apabila tahun baru bakal menjelma. Cumanya, tahun baru yang dimaksudkan itu bukanlah tahun baru hijrah, tetapi tahun baru gregorian! agaknyalah, kalau dibuat 'survey' kepada remaja-remaja islam sekarang, berapalah agaknya peratus remaja yang menyedari bahwa semalam sudah masuk 1 Muharram 1430? Hmm...
Rahmat dalam kesakitan

Kan Allah taala mengingatkan kita akan perkara baik dan perkara buruk yang kita tidak ketahui hikmahnya,
Sahabat Baru@Saudara Baru
Dalam perjalanan ke Sharjah, saya sempat bertaaruf panjang dan berborak dengan beliau banyak perkara berkenaan Islam. Mulanya ia agak suspicious sedikit untuk berbicara dengan saya(Mana tidaknya, saya asyik bertanya soalan seakan S.B yang interview pesalah aje). Tetapi setelah beberapa ketika dan juga saya memberitahu beliau yang saya bergiat aktif dengan Jamaah PAS di Malaysia, barulah beliau agak selesa untuk 'mengeluarkan' banyak informasi-informasi yang bukan sahaja sangat berguna malah mengejutkan saya sebenarnya!! Sangat terkejut sehingga saya terpaksa berighstifar banyak kali untuk menenangkan hati saya..
Bersambung...
Sahabat Usrah Di Tangkap
Seperti biasa, perkara rutin yang saya akan lakukan sebelum memulakan kerja di ofis ialah men'jenguk' keadaan semasa di Malaysia melaui webnews-webnews, antaranya ialah Harakahdaily.net,tranungkite.net,Utaraonline, utusan meloya,berita hairan dan the star.
Saya terbaca tajuk utama hari ini( disini dan disini ). Sudah di agak, perhimpunan mansuhkan ISA yang dianjurkan oleh Gerakan Mansuhkan ISA (GMI) di Padang MPAJ semalam memang akan diganggu polis. Ternyata, Polis Malaysia masih lagi tidak menunjukkan ketelusan dan keadilan yang sepatutnya. Manakan tidak, satu perhimpunan menyokong ISA (disini dan disini) boleh pula diadakan, malah di'manja'kan oleh pihak polis. Padahal, kedua-dua perhimpunan itu menyentuh perkara yang sama, iaitu ISA. Satu menyokong dan satu lagi membantah. Yang menyokong dimanjakan, yang membantah di'kerja'kan.
Apabila melihat senarai orang yang ditangkap pada malam itu, rupanya ada dua orang sahabat usrah pandan saya berada dalam senarai. Mereka ialah Azman Abd Hamid ( kami panggil dia Man Tok Kenali) dan juga Hafiz Zulkifli (juga dikenali dengan gelaran Hafiz Bere). Kedua orang yang saya kenal ini amatlah baik perwatakannya (walaupun terkadang agak nakal sikit, biasalah nakal-nakal sayang dengan sahabat seperjuangan). Saya yakin, mereka ini ditangkap bukan kerana bersikap liar ataupun ganas, tetapi kerana keberanian dan ketegasan mereka dalam nak menjalankan amanah sebagai petugas unit amal pada malam itu. Sekurang-kurangnya, taujihat yang dihadam dalam usrah jemaah berkenaan pengorbanan dan keberanian dlm memperjuangkan keadilan dapat dipraktikkan dlm kehidupan mereka.
Syabas diucapkan, semoga allah taala tabahkan hati kalian , mudah-mudahan akan lebih cekal dalam perjuangan.
Teruskan Perjuangan..!!!
Dan tatkala orang-orang mu’min melihat golongan-golongan yang bersekutu itu, mereka berkata: "Inilah yang dijanjikan Allah dan Rasul-Nya [1] kepada kita". Dan benarlah Allah dan Rasul-Nya. Dan yang demikian itu tidaklah menambah kepada mereka kecuali iman dan ketundukan. (22) Di antara orang-orang mu’min itu ada orang-orang yang menepati apa yang telah mereka janjikan kepada Allah; maka di antara mereka ada yang gugur. Dan di antara mereka ada [pula] yang menunggu-nunggu [1] dan mereka sedikitpun tidak merobah [janjinya]- AlAhzab,ayat 22 dan 23
Kad pengenalan UAE??

Bismillahirrahmirrahim..
Nampak gaya lepaih ni penuh pulak laa beg duit saya ni dengan kad. Semenjak datang ke sini, tak kurang 5 kad memenuni slot kad di beg duit saya, sampai naik kembung beg duit. Kalau kembung sebab duit takpa la, ni tidak...penuh dengan kad-kad, credit card la, labour card la, driving license card, dan yang sewaktu dengannya..
Yang terbaru, expatriates yang bekerja di UAE diarahkan untuk membuat kad pengenalan UAE la pulak. Yang bestnya, kena renew macam kita buat lesen memandu, setahun kena bayar AED100.. Betoi punya kedarah laa govt kat sini.. Bayangkan kalau ada sejuta expatriates bekerja di sini, senang-senang saja depa boleh dapat 100 juta setahun. Nasib baik kat sini tak kena bayaq income tax, kalau tidak habih lagu tu ja duit gaji ni..
kadang-kadang tu dok terpikir, takdak pembangkang ka kat UAE ni?? hmm...
The Teacher Turned Icon - Umar Al Mukhtar
(Taken from the weekend review on Gulfnews.com,)
Published on Nov 13 2008 by Joseph A. Kechichian
When Admiral Cappo Farafelli and his battleships reached the North African shores near Tripoli in October 1911, Italy intended to occupy territories under Ottoman suzerainty and would take into account neither Turkish objections nor opposition from the indigenous population.
Constantinople ordered its men, most of whom fled just before the Italians bombed Tripoli for three consecutive days, to surrender. Rome proclaimed victory.
Italian officials asserted that the Libyan people were “committed and strongly bound to Italy”. What followed was a series of battles between the occupiers and guerrillas organised and led by an extraordinary man — Omar Al Mukhtar.Al Mukhtar awakened among his followers love for their country and duty and put to rest an often-used Western claim that Arabs did not consider their lands dear.
Master strategist
Al Mukhtar embarked on an organised resistance in 1912 at Bir Halgh Barga, not far from Benghazi and close to the Egyptian border. This quiet teacher quickly became a master strategist in desert guerrilla tactics because he knew his country’s geography better than most.
Al Mukhtar led his highly mobile groups into skilful and successful battles, before fading into the desert which was a mystery to the Italians.
By attacking outposts, ambushing troops and cutting supply and communication lines, Al Mukhtar and his men outmanoeuvred the intruders.
Before long, he was the undisputed leader of the Sanusi resistance movement, which became a model for others throughout the Arab world.
Sanusi is a Sufi order founded by Sidi Mohammad Bin Ali Al Sanusi in 1843 in Cyrenaica whose theology asserted that believers should aim at communicating with the Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) in their waking hours and praying to God to be united with the Prophet.
Although the Italian invasion was initially concentrated on coastal cities such as Tripoli, Benghazi, Misrata and Derna, major battles were soon fought elsewhere as the Libyans stood up against the occupation.
Few villages in the mountains or the desert were spared. After the April 1915 Ghartabiyyah battle, in which the Italians lost thousands of soldiers, the colonial troops gained the upper hand even if they failed to gain full control.
To their credit, the Libyans fought fearlessly; thousands joined the resistance Al Mukhtar organised.
Most hid in the Jabal Al Akhdar (Green Mountain) in northeast Libya from where the resistance launched its fiercest assaults on the hapless Italians.
Fearing defeat, Rome dispatched a notorious officer, Pietro Badoglio, to pacify Libya, granting him carte blanche to resort to any method, including inhuman measures, to quickly end the resistance.
With such a mandate, the officer fought the guerrillas and imposed harsh punishment on ordinary people, whose only crime was to help the resistance.
After extensive negotiations, Badoglio reached a compromise with Al Mukhtar, although Italian sources falsely described the situation as an act of complete submission on the part of the resistance leader.
By the end of October 1929, Al Mukhtar denounced the compromise and re-established a unity of action among his forces. As Badoglio’s brutal techniques proved insufficient, then rising Italian dictator Benito Mussolini, who would become better known as Il Duce (Supreme Leader of Fascism), sent another high-ranking officer, General Rodolfo Graziani, to hone his atrocious methods in Libya.
Graziani versus Al Mukhtar
Historians differ on the issue but Graziani apparently agreed to go to Libya if and only if Mussolini gave him a free hand to behave without any consideration for Italian rules and laws. What Graziani proposed to do was unquestionably monstrous — to dispose of half the population, if need be, to control Libya.
Graziani wanted to strangulate Libya to prevent Al Mukhtar and his men from receiving material assistance from neighbouring Egypt. Towards that end, he ordered the construction of a 300-kilometre, 2-metre high by 3-metre wide wall from Bardiyat Slaiman port to Al Jagboub in the south along the Egyptian border.
Moreover, he authorised the creation of several concentration camps — in Al Aghaylha, Al Maghrun, Soluq and Al Abiyar among others — where thousands of Libyans were forced to live under complete Italian military control.
Those who escaped detention fled to the Jabal Al Akhdar or hid deep in the desert, living in severe conditions. These measures caused the deaths of thousands of men, women, elderly folk and children — directly through public hangings and shootings or indirectly due to hunger and illness.
Graziani placed over 100,000 Libyans in his infamous concentration camps between 1929 and 1931 and, according to authors Hala Khamis Nassar and Marco Boggero, who penned the essay titled Legacy of Libyan Freedom Fighter — Omar Al Mukhtar (published in The Journal of North African Studies in June), an estimated 40,000 were killed in these facilities.
Life was miserable in the camps and thousands died of hunger or illness. In the words of Dr Todesky, chairman of the Italian Army Health Department: “From May 1930 to September 1930, more than 80,000 Libyans were forced to leave their land and live in concentration camps; they were taken 300 at a time, watched by soldiers to make sure that the Libyans went directly to the concentration camps … By the end of 1930 all Libyans who live[d] in tents were forced to go and live in the camps; 55 per cent of the Libyans died in the camps.”
A leading Libyan historian, Mahmoud Ali Al Tayyeb, said that in November 1930 at least 17 funerals were held each day in these camps.
Libyans in concentration camps received meagre sustenance.
The condition of the guerrillas was far worse.
To say that Al Mukhtar and his men were deprived of reinforcements, spied upon, hit by Italian aircraft and pursued by Italian forces aided by local informers, would be gross understatements.
By early 1931 even food became scarce and, before long, vital ammunition ran out. Despite such hardship, Al Mukhtar kept fighting, even after he fell seriously ill.
Arrest and execution
Fighting against great odds and, perhaps inevitably after a 20-year guerrilla engagement, Al Mukhtar was ambushed, wounded in battle and subsequently captured by the Italian army in the desert near the city of Zaltan, about 150 miles south of Benghazi, on September 11, 1931. Fatigue or his innate dignity compelled Al Mukhtar to remain calm.
He understood his situation and accepted his fate. His jailers were overwhelmed by his steadfastness and several interrogators later confessed that Al Mukhtar looked them in the eye and read verses of peace from the Quran as he was interrogated and tortured.
As expected, he was tried by a kangaroo court, convicted and sentenced to death. Al Mukhtar welcomed the verdict quoting from the Quran: “From God we came and to God we must return.”
Rome hoped that the speedy execution of the old fighter five days after his arrest — carried out in the concentration camp of Salluq in front of many of his followers on September 16, 1931 — would wither the resistance.
Remarkably, the Libyan resistance was not silenced, even if it was significantly weakened.
Italy lost the moral high ground since it opted to ignore World War treaties, international law or humanitarian considerations for an individual well advanced in age. Even in this feeble condition, Al Mukhtar — who was known as the “Nimr Al Sahrah” (The Lion of the Desert) — instilled such fear in most Italian hearts that no great indignation anywhere around the Arab world would budge the callous decision to hang him.
Legacy and impact on Libya
Al Mukhtar’s final years were immortalised in the 1981 film Lion of the Desert, starring Anthony Quinn, Oliver Reed and Irene Papas.
The film climaxes with the execution, when the old man’s glasses fall to the floor. A boy fetches the spectacles and hands them to his mother, perhaps to preserve a simple memento of the Libyan hero.
In real life, Al Mukhtar’s impact was far greater, as all three Libyan regimes — monarchic, revolutionary and military — declared him their national hero (today, his face is on the Libyan 10-dinar bill).
Beyond the symbolic, however, his historic character crossed Libyan boundaries as he contributed to the formation of different forms of Arab nationalism.
Over the years, his memory defined Libyan opposition against the Italians and later against those who were power hungry.
In all instances, Al Mukhtar taught Libyans to love, protect and defend their land and their freedoms.
He also taught an entire generation to fight as religious men, proclaiming the words of God in every battle, assuming that no one but Libyans had any right over their country.
It may be safe to conclude that he invented Libyan nationalism in the modern sense of the word, rejected foreign domination and, most importantly, refused to submit to the usurper.
A humble individual from a modest background, Al Mukhtar did not venture out of Libya to defy order but simply defended his flock and his land. Even if colonial times defined sovereignty in peculiar terms — granting the powerful intrinsic privileges — Al Mukhtar stood up for what were his rights.
He was a devoted practitioner of freedom, whose basic understanding of authority compelled him to fight and die for his nation.
Dr Joseph A. Kechichian is an author, most recently of Power and Succession in Arab Monarchies, Lynne Rienner Publishers, Boulder, Colorado, 2008.
This article is the eighth in a series, which appears on the second Friday of each month, on Arab leaders who greatly influenced political affairs in the Middle East.
Biography
Omar Al Mukhtar Bin Omar Bin Farhat was probably born around 1860 although various birthdates range from 1856 and 1862.
Little is known of his early life except that he saw light in the Ghayth family, which was part of the Farhat clan and which was a branch of the Manfahah Badu tribe from Burqah, Libya. His father was a courageous man and a fighter, which meant that he was frequently absent from home.
His mother, Ayshah Bint Mohair, taught the young man and his brothers piety and religious values and may be said to have raised Al Mukhtar on a more or less exclusive basis.
As he grew older, Al Mukhtar was assigned by Ahmad Sharif Al Sanusi as a teacher in a Sanusian school, which allowed him to delve in teaching positions for much of his life.
Al Mukhtar’s son, Al Haj Mohammad Omar Al Mukhtar, fought alongside his father as the former developed a hugely successful technique, based on small-scale and swift attacks, which were followed by rapid retreats into the desert. These methods led Italian forces to resort to poison gas and a systematic policy of ethnic cleansing.
Holy cities were attacked, the ‘zawias’ (residential complexes used by the clergy as forms of monasteries) were expropriated and religious leaders expelled.
When all else failed, Italian troops cut supply lines by building an enormous wall along the Egyptian border, but to no avail.
After a decades-long guerrilla commitment, Al Mukhtar was captured by the Italians in September 1931 during a fierce battle that pitted a few thousand of his men against more than 20,000 well-equipped troops that possessed aircraft and modern weapons.
He was submitted to a mock trial and hanged as a bandit in front of his own people at Solush after which he became a martyr of the Cyrenaican rebellion.
Welcome

Welcome to my new blog..!
After a while, i have decided to change my blog from wordpress.com to blogger.com instead.
Insya Allah, i will try my best to make this blog as useful as possible to visitors.
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Selamat datang ke blog baru saya!!
Setelah lama memerhati dan mengkaji, saya memilih untuk bertukar dari wordpress.com kepada blogger.com. Sebab? Banyakkkk sangat, tak tertulis agaknya..
Insya Allah, saya akan pastikan blog ini seceria dan seinformasi yang mungkin
Abu Umar in Abu Dhabi