Category Archives: ugama + islam

your mother nasyeed – yusuf islam

Who should I give my love to?
My respect and my honor to
Who should I pay good mind to?
After Allah
And Rasulullah

Comes your mother
Who next? Your mother
Who next? Your mother
And then your father

Cause who used to hold you
And clean you and clothes you
Who used to feed you?
And always be with you
When you were sick
Stay up all night
Holding you tight
That’s right no other
Your mother (My mother)

Who should I take good care of?
Giving all my love
Who should I think most of?
After Allah
And Rasulullah

Comes your mother
Who next? Your mother
Who next? Your mother
And then your father

Cause who used to hear you
Before you could talk
Who used to hold you?
Before you could walk
And when you fell who picked you up
Clean your cut
No one but your mother
My mother

Who should I stay rigt close to?
Listen most to
Never say no to
After Allah
And Rasulullah

Comes your mother
Who next? Your mother
Who next? Your mother
And then your father

jejak rasul 13 – as-salam/sahabat all episodes @ ramadhan 1428

saya sememangnya penggemar siri jejak rasul yang disiarkan di tv3. memang best jejak rasul neh. tambah pulak dengan suara zainal ariffin yang sememangnya kena dengan siri2 keagamaan aseperti jejak rasul. alhamdullilah ada hamba Allah yang masukkan siri jejak rasul kali ini dalam youtube secara penuh. terima kasih! 🙂

saksikanlah siri jejak rasul 13 dengan tema sahabat di bawah ya 🙂

Loading

jakim’s guideline for malaysian astronaut

PUTRAJAYA: How does a Muslim determine his prayer times in space? Where would be his qiblat (the direction he faces when praying)?

These and others issues are addressed in a five-page guideline to help Malaysia’s first astronaut cope with his religious rituals and routines while in space.

Malaysian Islamic Development Department (Jakim) director-general Datuk Mustafa Abdul Rahman said the Science, Technology and Innovation Ministry had requested that the department come up with the guideline and Jakim submitted it to the ministry last month.

“We are all excited about the fact that a Malaysian will be going to space and we are pleased to play our part in helping our astronaut, a Muslim, observe his religious duties at the International Space Station.”

Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi will announce Malaysia’s first man in space on Oct 6.
Currently, candidates Dr Sheikh Muszaphar Shukor, 34, and Kapt Dr Faiz Khaleed, 26, are undergoing training and preparatory programmes at Star City in Moscow, Russia.

Dr Sheikh Muszaphar is a medical officer attached with the Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia Hospital while Kapt Dr Faiz is a dentist with the Armed Forces.

About 10,000 people had applied to become Malaysia’s first space hero and the two were chosen after a series of rigorous and painstaking selection process.

Loading

a muslim astronaut’s dilemma : how to face mecca from space?

A Muslim Astronaut’s Dilemma : How To Face Mecca From Space 

By Patrick Di Justo Email 09.26.07 | 12:00 AM

Sheikh Muszaphar Shukor of Malaysia, a crew member on the 16th mission for the International Space Station, gives thumbs-up near the Soyuz-TMA capsule before the final test outside Moscow on Tuesday, Sept. 18, 2007.
Photo: Associated Press / Mikhail Metzel

Sheikh Muszaphar Shukor has a problem. Two problems. The first is that Mecca keeps moving.

Well, not really. It’s Shukor who’ll be moving. As Malaysia’s first astronaut, he’s scheduled to lift off October 10 in a Russian Soyuz spacecraft for a nine-day visit during the holy month of Ramadan to the International Space Station.

He’s a devout Muslim and when he says his daily prayers he wants to face Mecca, specifically the Ka’aba, the holiest place in Islam (“Turn then thy face towards the Sacred Mosque: wherever ye are, turn your faces towards it …. ” The Quran, Al-Baqarah, 2:149).

That’s where the trouble comes in. From ISS, orbiting 220 miles above the surface of the Earth, the qibla (an Arabic word meaning the direction a Muslim should pray toward Mecca) changes from second to second. During some parts of the space station’s orbit, the qibla can move nearly 180 degrees during the course of a single prayer. What’s a devout Muslim to do?

“As a Muslim, I do hope to do my responsibilities,” Shukor says. “I do hope to fast in space.”

Loading

fadhilat ramadhan di tv3

Loading