Kamis, 11 Maret 2021

https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=10165330961165294&id=701210293That’s what I mean when I say that the secular liberal mantra “it doesn’t matter whether you are Muslim, christian, jew, buddhist or hindu etc _as long as_ you’re loyal to the divinized nation-state/submit to kafir liberal humanist ideologies/etc” really shows the truth of their system, because at that point, it really won’t matter “whether you are (a secular) Muslim or a kafir“, because your secular private individual ritualistic “religion” will be actually irrelevant_for the power-that-be, and your religion (your worshipped source of criteria of right and wrong and the object of your utmost loyalty) will actually be liberalism/Nation-State/humanism or any other kafir ideology.Because, for the secular powers, “Islam” really does becomes “irrelevant” (“it doesn’t matter!”) when it’s morphed from the complete Din of elevating God’s word in all aspects (from the inner, which includes refusing being influenced by “comfortable” kafir ideological, to the outer, which includes establishing Islam as a complete Din and a Shari`ah-implementing system of power where Islam is Supreme), to a “secular intimate personal private identitarian/ethnic” label with no real effect on one’s principles, conduct and allegiances. An “Izlaam” deprived of whatever the kafir ideologies disagree with and are afraid of. An “Izlaam” without complete Shari`ah implementation, without khilafah, without wala’ and bara’, without bughd for kufr. Just some representational folkish “hijab” without haya’, some representational folkish “kufi hat”, while partaking in spreading feminism, liberalism, himanksm, secularism, nationalism and partaking in du`a’s for the “prosperity and strength” of the respective harbi power, “unapologetically” loyal to its flag, Constitution and ideologies.I.e. The various “loyal proud American/British/French/Russian/Chinese/Indian Izlaams”.

Kamis, 11 Februari 2021

🇸‌🇪‌🇷‌🇮‌ 🇵‌🇦‌🇷‌🇪‌🇳‌🇹‌🇮‌🇳‌🇬‌ MENUMBUHKAN CINTA ANAK PEREMPUAN TERHADAP HIJAB[ 5/5 ] 1⃣0⃣ Mendidik Saat Usia 7 – 10 Tahun 🔹 Seiring dengan diperintahkan shalat, maka wajib diajarkan perkara-perkara yang dapat menjadikan shalat itu sah dan sempurna, di antaranya harus menutup aurat. Ajarkan batasan aurat.🔹 Diajak shalat berjamaah di rumah bersama ibu.🔹 Dijelaskan keutamaan, manfaat, perintah dan ganjaran dari Allah bagi wanita muslimah yang menutup auratnya dan berhijab. 1⃣1⃣ Mendidik Saat Usia 10 – 14 Tahun 🔹 Sudah mulai memberikan ancaman, dan memberikan hukuman apabila tidak mau berhijab, tentunya dengan cara yang hikmah dan ilmiah. Membawakan hadits-hadits berisikan ancaman dan adzab bagi yang menentang.🔹 Mendidiknya lebih intens berkaitan dengan pendidikan jinsiyah, berkaitan dengan haidh, cara mensucikannya, dan lain-lain.🔹 Jelaskan batasan-batasan hubungan laki-laki dan perempuan. Anak mulai dipisahkan pergaulannya di usia ini.🔹 Suburkan rasa malu pada anak dan ajarkan manfaat serta keutamaan berhijab bagi muslimah. Serta ancaman bagi yang menentang.🔹 Bapak harus lebih mendekati lagi sang puteri, agar ada sosok laki-laki yang hadir di dalam hati sang anak. 1⃣2⃣ Mendidik Anak Saat Usia 14 Tahun Ke Atas 🔹 Perlakukan dia seperti wanita dewasa, diantaranya dengan cara memanggil dan berbicara.🔹 Dekati anak dan jadilah sahabat yang dekat baginya, sehingga ia bisa curhat, terbuka dan sebagainya.🔹 Berbagilah pengalaman padanya dengan menceritakan masa muda dan juga problem-problem yang muncul.🔹 Jelaskan nilai seorang wanita itu terletak pada adab, akal dan rasa malunya. Bukan pada keindahan fisiknya. Selesai – 📝 Catatan Saudari @elahdewia ℳـ₰✍​✿❁࿐❁✿​@abinyasalma 👥 Al-Wasathiyah Wal-I’tidāl✉ TG :  https://t.me/alwasathiyah🌐 Blog : alwasathiyah.com‌🇫 FB : fb.com/wasathiyah📹 Youtube : http://bit.ly/abusalmatube📷 IG : instagram.com/alwasathiyah🔊 Mixlr : mixlr.com/abusalmamuhammad 📎 Sumber :Menumbuhkan Cinta Anak Terhadap HijabSabtu, 6 Juni 2020🎙️Oleh : Ustadz Abu Salma Muhammad حفظه الله تعالى🎬 Sponsored by Mujahadah Parents Projecthttps://www.instagram.com/p/CFq2LlHBHGT/?igshid=kls0cwu2odnq

Minggu, 07 Februari 2021

Unfolding Blessings; the Sudanese Hijab Unfolding Blessings; Hidden Texts, Witches and the Wicked, Love and Body Armour Setting the Scene Left, bands of richly tooled, leather-bound Hijab (plural; Hijbaat) drape the arm of a Sufi of the Qaadiriyyah order at the weekly Friday dhikr ceremony, at Hamed EL-Nil, Omdurman in 2017. These amulets, believed to be pre-Islamic, possibly Babylonian or Syrian in origin, bear holy writings, sacred names and astrological symbols and are still “prescribed to grant safe passage through life’s changes” for many Sudanese today. Interwoven within rituals that draw on rural medicine and herbology; mysticism, and folklore, they embody one of many expressions of Baraka, or benediction; blessings given by God and found in the person of holy figures, certain acts and “any phrase from an Islamic ceremony or prayer devotion which is believed to be infused with barakah and highly efficacious when retained on one’s person, either in the form of a memorized formula or an amulet…“ (Sanneh 1979:208), as quoted by Osman El-Tom (source below). For more on the Sufi dhikr of Hamid El-Nil, see The Eternal Dance Below, colonial photograph of a Beja tribesman wearing several Hijab. Many believe the term to come from the Arabic root for to veil or protect. Bestowing luck, protection and blessings, Hijabs may be worn discreetly under clothes or as above, joyfully centre stage, acknowledging their intrinsic visual appeal and the craftsmanship in their making. R G Anderson (see below), a colonial surgeon in the Egyptian Medical Corps, noted in 1909 that among those Kordofanis who couldn’t afford the true article, “false charms holding only small blocks of wood instead of writing are worn as a sign of respectability or prosperity and also with the view of hoodwinking not only seen but unseen neighbors.” Indeed, Hijab use has always been creatively interpreted by those who seek them and Anderson explores the more colorful, if not picaresque side of Hijab use in his article “Medical Practices and Superstitions among the People of Kordofan, their treatment of disease and the chief drugs, instruments and appliances in common use”, (source below) Below, another interpretation of barakah; a metal talisman with numbers and letters of mystical significance. Found in Omdurman market in the early 1980s. Personal collection. For more on the symbolic power of jewelry, see “A Necklace of Shells from Distant Seas…” Left, illustration of infant wearing Hijabs from Regional Folk Costumes of the Sudan, by Griselda El Tayib, p126. Abdullah El Tayib recounted “The fekki would be asked to write a small Hijab for the baby. This was called the hafizah or protector. The hafizah was written on Abu Shubbak paper and folded into a rectangular shape and then bound in leather with strings to hang from the baby’s neck on to its chest and abdomen. When this custom was not observed, there would be continual nagging from relatives and visitors. The fekki’s wife and women-folk would be the most critical. Sometimes, however, the parents would delay the hafizah until the child was due for weaning. This would be considered as cheating by the fekki. And he would point out that it was necessary to provide the child with two written amulets, a hafizah and a Hijab…” After remonstrating with the family, the fekki would say “ a curse on you, hypocrites”, and he would write a big amulet which was folded inside a leather cover of cylindrical shape and grumble that the child had been cheated of his hafizah”. El-Tom recounts in 1980s that the cost of a Hijab ranged from one to ten pounds – a not inconsiderable sum, depending on the type of Hijab the status of the healer and his relationship to the client, the financial situation of both, the time of consultation ….(Berti Qur’anic Amulets). Anderson d

Sabtu, 30 Januari 2021

Submitted Question About #WorldHijabDay: What is the ruling on World Hijab Day which takes place every February 1st. Many Muslims in the West promote it. Is it a bid’ah? if not, is it forbidden or doubtful since there is an imitation of the disbelievers? Answer: I put this question to a number of Scholars: Shaykh `Abdul-`Azīz Ibn Sālih al-Jarbū` in Riyadh, Shaykh Khālid Ibn `Abdir-Rahmān al-Qāsim in Jordan and Shaykh Māhir Ibn Yāsīn al-Fahl in Iraq. Below are their replies. I have excluded my original question and condensed my follow up questions for brevity:Shaykh `Abdul-`Azīz Ibn Sālih al-Jarbū`:“It is not allowed to specify a day for that nor for anything else except with a Shar`ī Evidence.” Shaykh Khālid Ibn `Abdir-Rahmān al-Qāsim:“Correct; this is an innovated matter in this form. And the default is to tie people to the Right of Allāh, Ta`ālā, upon them at all times.”I asked: “What if someone agrees but says it is needed due to the war being waged against Hijāb?”“These words are not accepted in the Sharī`ah, because calling to a Sharī`ah related matter must be through Shar`ī means. And the Sharī`ah is Perfect and Self-Sufficient. And It Contains the Shar`ī Methods to call to It. And due to that, there is no need for innovated methods.” Shaykh Māhir Ibn Yāsīn al-Fahl:“I see that this action is not good, and it will lead to wrongdoings. And from those wrongdoings are that we will be innovating an `Īd.”I asked: “What if someone agrees but says it is needed due to the war being waged against Hijāb?”“We clarify the Hijāb to the people by mentioning the Evidences from the Book and the Sunnah, and by explaining the Āyāt of the Book, in the gatherings of Thikr and Qur’ān.”I asked: “What if they say these are only attended by Muslims and we want to teach the disbelievers?”“This justification is flawed, and not valid except according to Machiavelli, who says that the ends justify the means.”And Allāh Knows Best.

Kamis, 28 Januari 2021

🇸‌🇪‌🇷‌🇮‌ 🇵‌🇦‌🇷‌🇪‌🇳‌🇹‌🇮‌🇳‌🇬‌ 🔗 https://t.me/alwasathiyah(Seri 1/5) MENUMBUHKAN CINTA ANAK PEREMPUAN TERHADAP HIJAB 1⃣ Mengapa Wanita Harus Berhijab? 🔹 Berhijab merupakan perintah Allah dan Rasulullah yang tegas dan jelas.🔹 Berhijab merupakan bentuk ketaatan kepada Allah dan Rasulullah.🔹 Berhijab merupakan wujud keimanan seorang muslimah.🔹 Berhijab merupakan harga diri, kemuliaan dan kesucian seorang muslimah.🔹 Berhijab merupakan aktualisasi nyata dan rasa malu seorang muslimah.🔹 Tubuh manusia adalah amanah dari Allah yang dititipkan dan harus dijaga, apalagi tubuh wanita yang Allah ciptakan lebih indah.🔹 Berhijab adalah bentuk pemuliaan Allah atas segala makhluk, di antaranya perintah menutup aurat.🔹 Hijab itu manifestasi dari kesucian dan kebersihan, baik hati, jiwa dan raga.🔹 Hijab itu refleksi dari ‘ghirah’ (kecemburuan) yang baik dan dituntut. 2⃣ Mengapa Kita Harus Mendidik Puteri Kita untuk Berhijab? 🔹 Karena puteri kita adalah amanah Allah yang harus kita pelihara dan jaga.🔹 Karena puteri kita adalah karunia dan sebab yang dapat menyebabkan orangtua memperoleh surga, terhindar dari neraka dan bisa dibangkitkan dekat dengan Nabi.🔹 Karena kita diperintahkan untuk mendidik anak kita mencintai Allah dan beribadah hanya kepada-Nya serta tunduk dan taat kepada perintah Allah.🔹 Karena puteri kita adalah ‘perhiasan’ paling berharga yang harus dilindungi, dijaga, dipelihara dan tidak boleh diabaikan, ditelantarkan, dan dibiarkan. Bersambung, insyaAllah – 📝 Catatan Saudari @elahdewia ℳـ₰✍​✿❁࿐❁✿​@abinyasalma 👥 Al-Wasathiyah Wal-I’tidāl✉ TG :  https://t.me/alwasathiyah🌐 Blog : alwasathiyah.com‌🇫 FB : fb.com/wasathiyah📹 Youtube : http://bit.ly/abusalmatube📷 IG : instagram.com/alwasathiyah🔊 Mixlr : mixlr.com/abusalmamuhammad 📎 Sumber :Kajian : Menumbuhkan Cinta Anak Terhadap HijabSabtu, 6 Juni 2020🎙️Oleh : Ustadz Abu Salma Muhammad حفظه الله تعالى🎬 Sponsored by Mujahadah Parents Projecthttps://www.instagram.com/p/CFq2LlHBHGT/?igshid=kls0cwu2odnq

Senin, 25 Januari 2021

My favorite fabric for scarves/hijabs is silk, hands down. Let me explain why I personally like it the best. It exudes delicacy, and it casts an ethereal ambiance. I’m referring to silk chiffon specifically. It’s sheer, not very slippery and floats in the wind from its light weight. Silk is also pricier than cotton and polyester due to the difficulty of production which makes it more valuable. 100% silk chiffon scarf from the middle eastI believe that no matter what one’s face shape, skin color or personal fashion style is, they can pull off silk. Silk chiffon will, of course, add a certain feminine look to a person, which may give off a limiting feeling to how it can be dressed. You can easily change up the color and wrapping style to accommodate your personal style. As a hijab, people tend to wear silk to weddings and high occassions, but I believe you can wear it anywhere and any time of the day as long as you wash it correctly and maintain it’s natural quality. I’ve had the same silk scarves that I purchased from the middle east years ago, and they still look like brand new. I found that it’s a bit tough to find silk chiffon scarves in the U.S., and it’s been tougher to get my hands on them especially since I’m not traveling due to covid, and so I decided to…make one or two! The one’s I handmade are silk georgette spandex, more durable than silk chiffon. The feeling of being able to share something online that I think is worth it, is very rewarding! It feels even better when a customer tells me how much they love it (the Silk Hijab Scarf is on both of my brand websites if you’re interested, and I offer black and off-white at the moment – links down below). Nora Dabas ‘The Silk Hijab Scarf’ in black I do wear cotton hijabs more often just because I don’t have to worry about accidentally ripping the silk when I throw it on really quickly in the morning to drop my son off at school. Going out with a friend, visiting family, having people over, etc. are all perfect occasions to wear silk and to look more presentable. I’d rather be overdressed than underdressed, always. Do you own a silk scarf? If so, what color is it, and how often do you wear it? Silk scarf on etsy silk scarf on noradabas.com <svg width="24" height="24" viewbox="0 0 24 24" version="1.1" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" role="img" aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" style="color: currentColor; fill: currentColor; width: 1em; height: 1em;"></svg> <svg width="24" height="24" viewbox="0 0 24 24" version="1.1" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" role="img" aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" style="color: currentColor; fill: currentColor; width: 1em; height: 1em;"></svg> <svg width="24" height="24" viewbox="0 0 24 24" version="1.1" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" role="img" aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" style="color: currentColor; fill: currentColor; width: 1em; height: 1em;"></svg> <form action="https://subscribe.wordpress.com" method="post" accept-charset="utf-8" id="" > Email Address: <input type="text" name="email" style="font-size: 16px; padding: 15px 23px 15px 23px; border-radius: 0px; border-width: 1px;" placeholder="Enter your email address" value="" id="subscribe-field" /> <input type="hidden" name="action" value="subscribe"/> <input type="hidden" name="blog_id" value="5836086"/> <input type="hidden" name="source" value="https://public-api.wordpress.com/rest/v1/read/tags/hijab/posts/"/> <input type="hidden" name="sub-type" value="widget"/> <input type="hidden" name="redirect_fragment" value="474"/> <input type="hidden" id="_wpnonce" name="_wpnonce" v

Senin, 18 Januari 2021

Shamima Lone stands with her mother at Miss Crab on Ponsonby Rd in Auckland, New Zealand. It is one week after the Christchurch terror attack. Later it would be confirmed 51 men, women and children were shot dead as they prayed on Al-Jumah, meaning the day of congregation, and Friday in Arabic. For Muslims, it is a holy day.  The shooter would become the first person ever to go to prison for life in New Zealand, without parole. He will not be named here, but it is clear he picked that day with hate in mind; streaming the shooting live on Facebook. The youngest shot, just three-years-old.  In Auckland, encompassed in the shell-shock from New Zealand’s southern island, women of all ethnicities sort fashion to show solidarity with New Zealand’s Islamic community. Worldwide, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern received criticism and praise for putting on a headscarf. At Miss Crab, Shamima was part of a team put together by The Love Movement, an Auckland based fundraising organisation that aids communities hit by devastating events like the shooting or the Indonesian earthquakes.   On their event page, they wrote, “Our Muslim sisters have spoken to us of the discrimination they still face while wearing a hijab and the elevated fear they have been experiencing simply leaving the house with their hair covered.. In abundance, Shamima, her mother and women from the Auckland Muslim community donated scarves to the cause. Something special Shamima’s mum was able to gift women who came to the #headscarfsforharmony event, was the knowledge of Noor. Meaning ‘the light’, it is said to be the glow that radiates from the face when a woman wears a hijab.  Shamima’s sister-in-law, Rebekah Bristow said at Miss Crab, “For Shamima, when she’s wearing a headscarf or a hijab, she’s had a lot of racist remarks and been discriminated against. “It’s important for us non-Muslim white women to really acknowledge the ease at which we can wear this,” Rebekah said. Rebekah Bristow and Shamima Lone, Miss Crab Ponsonby, March 2018It is March 2018, New Zealand’s staunch attitude that “racism does not exist here” is about to be exposed for the lie it is. So violent in its silence, racist people here, will smile in your face while they insult you, these are the type of scenarios Shamima has lived through. Born in Auckland, at 38, these days she does not wear a hijab unless it is to a funeral. “I wore a hijab from 14 to when I got married at 22, then after I got divorced I transitioned out of it wearing hats and stuff like that. “I just wanted to experience a different kind of experience. Back in those days, as soon as someone non-Muslim meets you, that’s all they want to know about you. The conversation is never around anything other than your religion or headscarf, you’re just so absolutely seen as that person. “Auckland uni can be quite isolating, you just go to classes with 100s of people and you don’t get to chill with anyone. I’d catch my bus from Queen St. People would just come up and scream shit at me at the university, like terrorist or whatever. It was so hard.” “Yeah, it was a very depressing period of my life.” Just before Covid-19 2020, Shamima married a Kiwi. He understood for Shamima to stay connected to her family, he’d need to convert to Islam, so he did. Shamima says for people of the Islamic faith, dating in New Zealand is a tricky ground. “You know you can’t date anyone, or hold hands with someone,” she said. “Growing up you’d have to date very respectful people who would try and understand where you’re coming from because I’m not trying to offend that person, I’m trying not to get in trouble with my family.” “We talked about it a lot, getting married would have to be in a way that my family would accept it because I thought about what it would be like if they were not to accept it and how I would be outcast and lose t

Minggu, 17 Januari 2021

I find that one of the ways to repentance is to call things by their name. Example: You know Allah commanded us to wear hijab.* Hence when you are not wearing it, it means you are disobeying that command thus disobeying Allah. You are DISOBEYING Allah This is what you should call it. No matter your reason or excuse Just reevaluate Be honest and see whatever prevents you whether it is a good reason to disobey Allah. Is there any good reason at all to disobey Allah to begin with. No. So that’s how calling things by their name makes you close to repentance if not take you directly to it. Because telling yourself you are disobeying Allah and telling yourself that you are waiting to be convinced are two different things. If you are just waiting to be conviced what are you waiting for exactly because the evidences are already there. *You just need a couple minutes to gather evidences read them and accept them. Because we don’t reject commands simply for not being able to fully grasp the reason and wisdom behind them. We accept them. And the thing is, Allah knew your “obstacles” and “excuses” before you or anybody else was born, He still commanded everybody and you included with the same things; nobody was exempt from smtg. It didnt say next to each command or obligation: “unless you struggle or face some wordly life thing then it’s fine…” all the obligations have to be obeyed by everybody unless the pen is lifted from their scroll. Even the sick still has to pray and make up for fasts when able to or feed the poor. Is it worth it to not decide to do that now? To go check the evidences when you have no knowledge of when your journey in this life ends. And, by the same way, to get more knowledge about your obligations and how to properly perform them before anything else. Sometimes if not most of the time what prevents us from moving forward is ignorance. How can you do something if you ignore that you have to be doing it or how it is supposed to be done. When you know you are disobeying Allah and that it is bad you are more likely to stop as soon as possible. Unlike calling things otherwise to comfort your consciousness. It applies to everything not just hijab. Call your actions by their true name. Be responsible for whatever you choose to do anyways. Be true to yourself. Don’t try to tranquilize your consciousness. The more you call things otherwise the more you dive deep in illusions and lies you tell yourself and end up believing them. Don’t forget that it’s not for you to define what is good or bad, what is sinful and what isn’t. Only He Who created everything can do so. He Knows everything, He knows the wisdom behind everything and the nature of everything , as He created it. Thus it can only be wise not to follow your own definitions of things. But try to acquire more knowledge about the actual definition of things. Just because something makes you happy or makes you feel at peace doesn’t mean it is right. Even when something brings you stillness it doesn’t mean it is right. Everything should be reached through the right means. Like someone stealing money to buy a house. It’s not because he has the comfort of that house now that stealing money was fine or right. He should have reached that through the right means. So we see here how being homeless and struggling to get a shelter is better than stealing to get a house. The point is to be still, to be satisfied but through the right ways. It’s not really the way you feel that always reflects how well you are doing in life and whether or not you are doing it right. “Right is right even if no one is doing it; wrong is wrong even if everyone is doing it.” ― Saint Augustine So if you care, learn what is wrong, try to be honest with yourself, take notes of the wrong things you are doing, see what is preventing you to do things right and how you can replace the wrong, how you can do things the right way. Because sometimes it could be reall