“You neither eat nor drink the whole day?” Tan asked me.
“Yes. The whole day. But not at night. Only from dawn to sunset”, I replied.
“How can you survive? Can you survive?”, Tan asked again.
I smiled.
“Well, it’s not just you. Even Habib Bourguiba, the late President of Tunisia who was also a ‘Muslim’, convinced that fasting is against productivity. You know the history?”, I took my turn asking Tan my question.
“How should I know? Tell me!”, he said.
In 1961, Habib Bourguiba made a controversial statement claiming that fasting should not be observed for it reduces productivity. He then appeared on television with his cabinet, eating and drinking during Ramadhan.
“Why so harsh?”, Tan was shocked.
“I don’t know. Was it out of ignorance or arrogance? Perhaps a combination of both”, I replied.
Even though fasting is there in the name of Lent among Christians, it is always the Muslim’s version that cultivates questions and debates.
In order to understand about the real meaning of fasting, one should agree that it has something to do with our own paradigm and world view. The way we view things; like I always quote, “what you see is what you get”.
petikan ini di ambil daripada saifulislam.com, erti hidup pada memberi...p/S -- sedikit komentar ini memberikan kepada kita bahawa setiap apa yang kita lakukan yang disyariatkan oleh Allah,pasti ada hikmah disebaliknya..janganlah kita menjadi seorang yang membuta tuli tanpa memikirkan sesuatu. perbuatan yang dilakukan oleh Habib Bourgiba memberi teladan bahawa,ceteknya minda kita sebagai umat Islam yang jahil. malah kita tidak mahu sedikit ingin merasa kenikmatan melakukan ibadah kepadanya.... segala apa yang baik itu jadikan teladan dan yang buruk itu jadikan sempadan..kepada semua pengunjung, jazakallah hu khairan jazak...
**MUTIARA KATA**
jika azam dan semangat untuk belajar terus berkobar dalam hati,maka tidak ada sebarang halangan yang boleh menghambat langkah seseorang daripada terus menguasai ilmu pengetahuan...
0 comments:
Post a Comment