Tuesday, February 27, 2007

The Famous mawlid dibai with english translation

If you are looking for the famous Mawlid Dibai' book with english translation especially in South East Asia region. Since the mawlid month Rabbiul Awwal is coming, insha'Allah, we would like to inform you the availability of this mawlid dibai . Its only $10.00. Its limited now while stock last.For those who are interested pls email me at khalid_ajmain@yahoo.com.sg or call me +65 90687106

excerpt:
Imam Daiba' i
was a well known pious learned ('Aleem) whose full name was Abdul Rahman bin Ali bin Muhammad bin 'Umar asShaibani. He was refered to as az Zabidi Al-Yamani because he came from Zabidi area of Yemen, Al Hafiz because he memorised more than a hundred thousand hadith Sharif of the Holy Prophet and the Face of Religion {Wajh Al-Din} because he was a learned scholar {Aleem} of hadith and history.

Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Mawlid of Habib Umar bin Hafiz " The Glitettering Illumination A maulid Eulogy in Rememberance of the Intercessor Prophet s.a.w. book

The long awaited Mawlid of Habib Umar bin Hafiz " The Glitettering Illumination A maulid Eulogy in Rememberance of the Intercessor Prophet s.a.w. with english translation book is finally out published bAy Ilham Press. This is defitnely a must for those who strive on the path of love for the Beloved Prophet s.a.w. Insha'Allah with the english translation, you may understand the meaning of these wonderful and amazing words from this Divine poetry composed by Habib Umar bin Hafiz.

This book consist of 84 pages amd A5 size. It only cost you $10. 00 singapore dollars (doesnt include postage). While stock last. If you are keen, pls email me at khalid_ajmain@yahoo.com.sg or +65 90687106
*For USA, Uk and Europe, we deal with distribution.

http://ilham-press.blogspot.com/

Thursday, February 8, 2007

Tok Ku Paloh "Al Idrus"

Tok Ku Paloh was a very well known 'alim of Trengganu, his name is Sayyid Abdul Rahman al-Idrus, and his grave is well-kept in Kampong Paloh, situated not far from his masjid. The title'Tok Ku' was given to him and his forefathers and decendants in Trengganu signified the high respect from the society for this blessed family, 'Tok Ku' ia abbrevition of 'Datuk Tengku', the title usuallyreserved for the royalties. And actually, in the recent past history of the Trengganu Sultanate, the leading 'alim from this family would coronate the new sultan for the state, and the members of this family was considered as having the same status or almost equal to the sultan's family itself, and some of them are until married to each other.

They practice naqshabandiyyah tariqah, some of them such as Tok Ku Pulau Embun and Tok Ku Paloh himself wrote a number of books in malay and arabic, especially on tasauf matter.

Tuan Guru Haji Abdul Rahman Limbong was a 'murid' to Tok Ku Paloh, he initiated a revolt against the British ruling on the land-tax imposed the people of Trengganu, he was, therefore was imprisoned for several times, and finally was exile by the British to Makkah, he died in Makkah. May Allah benefited us from their knowledge and amal.

This short but important writing was done by Ust Zaidi Hassan. I recieved from one of the egroups. I found it very interesting to share with you. If you find any other articles on Tokku Palo, pls email me. thanks

Radin Mas


The name Radin Mas sound very familliar to many of us who are born in Singapore. However, the biography of Radin Mas is much unknown. Most of the stories we heard about her is inconsistent. Some claimed it was just a legend but according to many sufi sources stating that their Shaykh claimed, Radin Mas is a Waliyah (female muslim saint). There was a Filem about her in the early 60s. Radin means royal in javanese terms like tengku in malay. Another point to ponder would be the name Radin Mas. A friend of mine from Java said, if the name is Radin Mas, it would be male. Wallahu Walam. If anyone knows about the biography of Radin Mas and would like to share with us on this blog, pls do so. I was there a couple of times and you can feel the spiritual atmosphere.You can email me for more details.
pic taken by Herwan Samat

Maqam Tok Kenali, Kelantan


This is the Picture of Maqam Tok Kenali at Kelantan, Malaysia
taken from the website dergah utara, Naqshbandi
(The biograpghy of this wonderful Sufi scholar is the earliest posting)

Wednesday, February 7, 2007

THE ENDURING SPIRIT OF ACHEH

THE ENDURING SPIRIT OF ACHEH
Shaykh Abdul Hakim Murad

WHEN MARCO POLO PASSED THROUGH, ISLAM WAS ALREADY WELL ESTABLISHED. IBN BATTUTA WAS DELIGHTED BY THE STRENGTH OF ITS PEOPLE’S FAITH. BUT UNTIL THE TSUNAMI STRUCK IN DECEMBER 2004, FEW MUSLIMS HAD HEARD OF ACEH. ABDAL-HAKIM MURAD TRACES THE GLORIOUS HISTORY OF SOUTHEAST ASIA’S ANCIENT ISLAMIC NATION.

Acheh is an ancient Islamic nation. Its origins are buried in legends, but already in 1292 when Marco Polo passed through, Islam was solidly established in the region. Ibn Battuta, who visited in 1345 was delighted by the strength of Acehnese faith. Already, the growing Aceh sultanate was sending mis­sionaries and traders throughout Southeast Asia, spreading the Qadiri and Naqshbandi orders and the Shafi’i school of law. To this day, Sufism, Ash’arism and the Shafi’i madhhab define Muslim life in this distant yet densely-populated tip of the great island of Sumatra.

The growth of Aceh was first challenged in the six­teenth century by the appearance of the Portuguese. Lisbon’s empire at the time was built on a fiercely anti-Muslim crusading ideology; so that the creation of Portuguese enclaves in the region were usually accom­panied by vicious massacres. The sultans responded by sending an embassy to Constantinople to ask for help. Their arrival coincided with the death of Sulaiman the Magnificent, and it was two years before the envoys were granted an audience. But the Ottoman empire, grand as ever in its ambitions, sent a fleet to Aceh, providng ships and artillery which served as a deterrent against the Crusader threat.

The seventeenth century witnessed Aceh’s greatest glory. Sultan Meukuta Alam ruled not only much of Sumatra, but enclaves in Malaya, Borneo, and the dis­tant Celebes as well. Skilfully manipulating the rivalry between the Portuguese in Malacca and the growing Dutch presence, he maintained the absolute independ­ence of the sultanate, despite its nominal possession by the Ottoman sultans. Long epic poems in the Acehnese language celebrate the brilliance of the sultan’s battles by land and by sea. Many of them also praise his suc­cessors, four Acehnese queens who ruled from 1641 to 1699 with considerable flair.

So intimidated were the Dutch by Aceh’s martial reputation that they delayed their invasion until 1873. The huge profits they had reaped in Java from planta­tions and mines were diverted to create an invasion fleet. But expectations of a rapid victory soon faded. Not until 1910 did the Dutch declare Aceh officially ‘pacified’, after a brutal campaign that claimed hun­dreds of thousands of lives, as many villagers were rounded up and executed by enraged Dutch soldiers. After the destruction of the sultanate, the jihad during this long period was led by the Qadiri and Naqshbandi ulema, many of them from the scholarly stronghold of Kampong Tiroh, which, although destroyed several times by the Dutch, remains to this day a centre of Islamic scholarship.

The last mujahid scholar, Tungku Maat, died in 1911. Scattered resistance to Dutch garrisons and plan­tation owners continued, but it was only in the 1930s that the Acehnese organised themselves again on a mass scale. This was the time of PUSA, a society of Shafi’i scholars established to counter the reformist opinions of the Java-based Muhammadiya movement, which was attempting to spread the ideas of Muhammad Abduh and Rashid Rida in the archipelago.

Like the similar traditionalist movement Nahdhatul Ulema elsewhere in Indonesia, PUSA was largely suc­cessful in defending the integrity and values of tradi­tional Islam. Following the Second World War, howev­er, and the brutal Japanese occupation, the Dutch reoc­cupied Aceh, amid scenes of extreme brutality, and many PUSA members were executed. Indonesian inde­pendence continued the pattern, as the province was occupied by mainly Javanese troops, many led by Christian officers. Benny Murdani, the Christian Indonesian general responsible for the invasion of East Timor, also created a reign of fear in Aceh. Many Acehnese responded by launching a guerrilla war, under the aegis of GAM, the Free Aceh Movement, triggering, in turn, a new wave of repression. According to Human Rights Watch, ‘thousands of civilians were extra judicially killed, disappeared or tortured.’ The same organisation protested again in May 2003, when the Indonesian government closed off the province, and gave the military carte blanche to ‘crush’ GAM.

While most Acehnese support the recovery of their country’s independence, seeing the Indonesia military as just as alien and brutal as the Japanese or the Dutch, the general view among Muslim scholars in Indonesia could be described as one of sympathetic disagreement. Western powers pressed Jakarta to free East Timor, they believe, because of that province’s largely Christian population. The older and more credible national claims of Aceh, however, are unlikely to be viewed with sympathy by the West because over 98% of Acehnese are Muslims. On this view, Aceh should throw in its lot with Indonesia’s other Muslims, to try to reform the country from within. Generals such as Murdani are now giving way to a new class of civilian administra­tors, many of them practicing Muslims, and Indonesia should stay together in order to fulfill its destiny as a Muslim superpower.

Indonesian Islam, largely through the efforts of activist organisations such as PUSA and Nahdhatul Ulema, has been remarkably successful in insulating young Indonesian Muslims from modern Arab radical­ism. The president of the main Islamic university in Jakarta, Shaykh Azyumardi Azra, is a Shafi’i scholar who has published widely on the phenomenon of extremism. He points out that Indonesian Muslim extremism is very unusual, despite the media attention generated by the 2002 Bali bombings. That event he characterises as a ‘blessing in disguise’, because it result­ed in the closure of the few centres where what he calls ‘radical Salafiyya’ were being taught.

As with the 9/11 bombings in the United States, the initial response of many Muslims had been to blame an American or Israeli conspiracy, but this view has now subsided, and the ulema have recognised the reality of extremism among the young and confused. In particu­lar, he welcomes the disbanding of the Jama’a Islamiya (JI), which grew out of a group supported by a Saudi Arabian organisation, Rabita. Small Salafist cells claimed responsibility for a string of church bombings on Christmas Eve in 2000, and the Atrium shopping mall bombing in Jakarta in August 2001. Local Muslim journalist Djarnawi Ghufron claims that with the sud­den appearance of terrorist Salafism, Saudi Arabia has now cut off its support for most Salafi groups, which, according to the Indonesian Muslim press, have lost no time in condemning their former Saudi backers.

The number of JI supporters at no time rose above a few hundred, and none of the country’s popular ulema or pesantren colleges were involved. Overall, the picture of Indonesian Islam is one of growth and strength, with the creation of a new generation of col­leges (Indonesia has more Islamic universities than the entire Arab Middle East, and 100,000 Qur’anic schools). A vibrant theological scene, along with a revival in traditional arts and other traditions, is at the centre of the current Muslim revival in the country. Largely moribund under the Dutch, Indonesian Islam is now asserting itself, with enormous rallies in the country’s main cities, and a lively dialogue with the country’s Christian minority, which, as in most Muslim countries, is disproportionately wealthy, and is currently trying to deal with the influx of American missionaries convinced hat Islam is the Antichrist. Ulema such as Abdur Rahman Wahid continue to be at the forefront of the pro-democracy and human rights movement, and Western Islamophobes are currently perplexed by the Islamic landscape in South-East Asia, where democratic Malaysia and Indonesia straddle tiny, non-Muslim, non-democratic Singapore. Middle Eastern visitors convinced that democracy and Islam cannot be reconciled are politely referred to the works of local scholars who, they are convinced, have resolved the issue definitively. Djarnawi Ghufron believes that Indonesian missionar­ies will soon be visiting the Middle East, opening centres to sell the Indonesian Islamic success story in what he calls the ‘failure zone of the Arab world’.

It remains to be seen whether the tsunami will change this positive direction. Three-quarters of its victims were Muslims, and some evangelical churches in Indonesia have announced that it happened because of the local refusal “to believe in the Lord Jesus Christ”. The immense devastation on Aceh’s coastline, with the loss not only of lives, but of mosques, libraries, colleges, and manuscript collections, has left many feeling per­plexed. Yet local commentators point out that the Acehnese have lived with tragedy for over a hundred years. Large-scale loss of life and property are part of everyone’s personal experience. And the Islamic theology which insists that all is the will of God, and the human response should be to accept in submission, is the best possible consolation in the face of such destruction.
Taken from Q-news magazine
Pic taken at Acheh after tsunami

Tuesday, February 6, 2007

History of Qadiriyya and Naqshbandiyya Orders in Indonesia

History of Qadiriyya and Naqshbandiyya Orders in Indonesia
By Sri Mulyati
PhD Candidate, McGill University, Montreal

The world’s two largest sufi orders, namely the Qadiriyya and Naqshbandiyya, are both prominently followed in Indonesia. It is not known exactly how the Qadiriyya came to Indonesia. Syed Naguib al-Attas states that Hamza Fansuri of Barus, North Sumatra was a Qadiri and, being a man of repute, he gathered about him a large circle of disciples. The earliest known Indonesian reference to Shaykh `Abd al-Qadir al-Jilani, is found in the poems of Fansuri himself, who lived in Acheh in the second half of the 16th century. In addition, Fansuri’s prose works mention notable sufi shaykhs Abu Yazid Bistami, Junayd al-Baghdadi, Mansur al-Hallaj, Jalaluddin Rumi, Ibn `Arabi, Jami, `Attar and several others.

The first Indonesian author who expressly claims to have been initiated into the Qadiriyya is the famous Shaykh Yusuf Makassar (1626-1699). His Qadiriyya teacher, Muhammad Jilani ibn Hasan ibn Muhammad al-Hamid, was an immigrant from Gujarat and the paternal uncle of Nur al-Din al-Raniri. In Yemen, Shaykh Yusuf learned the Naqshbandiyya doctrine from a famous Arab shaykh, Muhammad `Abd al-Baqi. The other Achehnese sufi, `Abd al-Ra’uf al-Sinkili, who studied in Madina in the mid 17th century under the Sufi masters Ahmad al-Qushashi and Ibrahim al-Kurani, also lists them as a line of Qadiriyya teachers.

Lombard informs us of the rise of the Naqshbandiyya order in the Indonesian Archipelago, pointing to L.W.C. van den Berg’s statement that he had come across Naqshbandiyya activity in Acheh and in Bogor (West Java), where he had witnessed the Naqshbandiyya dhikr being performed. He then goes to describe the coming of the Naqshbandiyya to the region of Medan, where a community was founded at Langkat. The author further states that Shaykh `Abd al-Wahhab Rokan al-Khalidi al-Naqshbandi introduced the Naqshbandiyya to Riau. After spending two years in the Malay Archipelago engaging in trade, he went to Makkah and studied under Shaykh Sulayman al-Zuhdi. In 1854 he received his certificate and came back to Riau where he finally built a Naqshbandi village called Bab al-Salam, “The Door of Peace”.

The merits and benefits of dhikr in Pesantren Suryalaya can be determined by the large numbers of those who have been cured.In the nineteenth century the Tariqat Naqshbandiyya had a branch in Makkah, where, according to Trimingham, one Naqshbandiyya shaykh from Minangkabau (West Sumatra) was initiated in 1845. From Makkah the Tariqat Naqshbandiyya was spread to other countries including Indonesia through the pilgrims every year. Both tariqats were well established as they were born in the 7th and 8th centuries Hijra (12th/13th centuries CE).

Formation of Tariqat Qadiriyya wa Naqshbandiyya Sufi orders play an important role in Indonesian Muslim society, particularly the Tariqat Qadiriyya wa Naqshbandiyya (single tariqat with both titles). The significance of this order lies in its Indonesian character. Not only was its founder the locally-born Shaykh Ahmad Khatib Sambas, but the order itself was involved in the struggle against the Dutch and continued being active as a socio-religious movement and an educational institution after independence. A survey of the Tariqat Qadiriyya wa Naqshbandiyya’s history therefore pertains closely to the development of Indonesian society in this century.

This tariqat is uniquely Indonesian, not only for the reasons cited above, but owing also to some of its practices which are particularly in tune with the beliefs and cultural needs of the people of Indonesia. Further, Shaykh Sambas did not teach the two tariqats separately but in a combined fashion.

Illustrious Founder of the Order Born in Sambas, West Kalimantan, Khatib Sambas settled in Makkah in the early nineteenth century, where he remained until his death in 1875. Among his teachers were Shaykh Daud ibn `Abd Allah al-Fatani, a great Islamic scholar who had also lived in Makkah, Shaykh Muhammad Arshad al-Banjari, and Shaykh `Abd al-Samad al-Palimbani. According to Naquib al-Attas, Khatib Sambas was a Shaykh of Qadiriyya and Naqshbandiyya. Hurgronje mentions as well that he was one of Nawawi al-Banteni’s teachers, excelling in every branch of Islamic knowledge. Zamakhsyari Dhofier has shown the significant role of Shaykh Sambas in the intellectual genealogy of Java’s leading shaykhs and instrumental in the dissemination of Islam throughout Indonesia and the Malay world in the second half of the nineteenth century.

Key to this effort was Shaykh Sambas’ work Fath al-‘Arifin (Victory of the Gnostics), which became one of the most significant works on sufi practice in the Malay world, elaborating on initiation (bay`a), remembrance of Allah (dhikr), meditation (muraqaba) and lineage (silsila) of the Tariqat Qadiriyya wa Naqshbandiyya.

Disciples of the Illustrious Shaykh
Primarily natives of Java and Madura, disciples of the Shaykh passed on his teachings upon their return from Makkah. It has been said that Shaykh Sambas, in addition to developing Indonesia’s most influential ’ulama, also trained leading ‘ulama in fiqh (Islamic jurisprudence) and tafsir (Qur’anic commentary), such as Shaykh `Abd al-Karim Banten, his successor. Known as “Sultan of Shaykhs”, Abd al-Karim encouraged the uprising against the Dutch in 1888 and then left Banten for Makkah to succeed Shaykh Khatib Sambas.

A majority of European writers are radically mistaken in asserting that Indonesian ‘ulama were generally hostile to Sufi orders.The importance of Shaykh Sambas as a scholar must be stressed here as a majority of European writers are radically mistaken in asserting that the `ulama were generally hostile to the Sufi orders. Among the leading disciples of Shaykh Sambas one can point to scholars such as Shaykh Tolhah from Cirebon (West Java) and Shaykh Ahmad Hasbullah ibn Muhammad from Madura (East Java), both of whom had lived in Makkah.

The Tariqat Qadiriyya wa Naqshbandiyya attracted numerous Indonesian disciples, especially in Madura, Banten and Cirebon, and by the end of the 19th century had become the most popular. Tariqat Qadiriyya wa Naqshbandiyya has spread throughout Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Brunei, and Darussalam.

After Shaykh Ahmad Khatib SambasBy 1970, there were four important Tariqat Qadiriyya wa Naqshbandiyya centers located in Java: Rejoso (Jombang) under Shaykh Romly Tamim; Mranggen (close to Semarang) under Shaykh Muslikh; Suryalaya (Tasikmalaya) with Shaykh Ahmad Sahib al Wafa’ Taj al-`Arifin (Abah Anom) as its head; and Pagentongan (Bogor), under Shaykh Thohir Falak. Rejoso represents the line of Ahmad Hasbullah, Suryalaya the line of Shaykh Tolhah and the others that of Shaykh `Abd al-Karim Banten and his khalifas. In some cases teachings of the tariqat have, over time, been imparted through speeches in mosques and during informal gatherings in the houses of various individuals. So it is not surprising that during that period discourses were not meticulously recorded. However, under Abah Anom, the teachings have been outlined in a book entitled Miftah al-Sudur, “The Key of Hearts”. The book’s objective is to convey the theory and practice of Tariqat Qadiriyya wa Naqshbandiyya to achieve tranquility in worldly life and victory in the hereafter. Other of his contemporary works include ‘Uqud al-Juman, Al-Akhlaq al-Karimah and Ibadah sebagai Metoda Pembinaan Korban Penyalahgunaan Narkotika dan Kenakalan Remaja (Worship as a Method of Rehabilitation in Narcotics Abuse and Juvenile Delinquency).

The Tariqat’s Role in Social Reform
Mawlana Shaykh Muhammad Nazim Adil has stated that next to terrorism, the second biggest problem of mankind particularly for youth is drugs (The Muslim Magazine, Spring 1999). This social problem is not confined to Western countries but has unfortunately affected youth throughout the world. Although the number of drug addicts in Asian countries is not as great as it is in the West, the problem was serious enough for Abah Anom to establish the “Pondok Inabah”, a drug rehab center that employs the healing aspects of dhikr.

Abah Anom’s methodology was developed as a result of his belief in the practical experience of Sufi masters and in his belief that dhikr Allah contains enlightenment, special characteristics and secrets which can cure the hearts of Muslim believers. This belief is based on God’s saying: “Remember me, I will remember you,” meaning “When you remember Me, the curtain of heedlessness will be removed from you, and you will then become the one remembered and the one given help.” The merits and benefits of dhikr in Pesantren Suryalaya can be determined by the large numbers of those who have been cured.The Tariqat remains active as a socio-religious movement and aneducational institution.A scientific study of Abah Anom’s methodology was made by Dr. Emo Kastomo in 1989. Over eight years, his evaluation included a random selection of 5925 patients from 10 Pondok Inabah rehab centers. Of these, he found 5426 were cured, 212 were still experiencing the healing process, and 7 patients had died.

The Tariqat’s Role in Politics
The first of the three Indonesian uprisings involving the followers of Tariqat Qadiriyya wa Nashbandiyya saw the involvement of many shaykhs and hajjis in the Banten revolt of July 1888. It is reported that while Shaykh `Abd al-Karim Banten did not seem to be interested in political activities, his khalifah, Hajji Marzuki was much more reformist-minded and predominantly anti-Dutch. Although the tariqat was not a leading player in the revolt, the Dutch were worried about its influence, and many of them believed that the Sufi orders in general, and particularly Tariqat Qadiriyya wa Naqshbandiyya, was a secret organization whose objective was the overthrow of colonial power.

The second revolt was fomented by the Sasak tribe, followers of Tariqat Qadiriyya wa Naqshbandiyya Shaykh Guru Bangkol. The Dutch therefore considered the tariqat as an important factor in the overall rebellion. Although the Dutch advisor Snouck Hurgronje counseled that it was an exaggeration to believe that the tariqats were a political threat to the Dutch, his opinion was not embraced until Sarekat Islam, a well-established political organization, appeared in 1911.Presently in Java, the three largest branches of the Tariqat Qadiriyya wa Naqshbandiyya—Rejoso, Mranggen and Suryalaya—each uphold different policies in terms of political affiliation, with some more actively aligned with the ruling political party of Indonesia.

Present State of Indonesian TariqatsIn 1957, the “Jam`iyya Ahl Thoriqoh Mu`tabaroh” was established by Nahdlatul Ulama, Indonesia’s current ruling party. Its objective is to unify all sanctioned tariqas and to preserve the silsila (chain of authority) that originated with Prophet Muhammad (s). The Jam`iyya preserves teachings of tasawwuf from 45 sanctioned tariqas

In 1975, Shaykh Musta`in Romly of Rejoso was appointed its chairperson of the Jam`iyya. However, in 1979 when his affiliation changed from Partai Persatuan Pembangunan (Development United Islamic Party, to which the majority of NU `ulama were affiliated) to Golongan Karya (former ruling political party), the `ulama established “Jam`iyyah Ahl al-Thariqoh Mu`tabaroh al-Nahdliyyah”. The present chairperson of the Jam`iyyah, Shaykh Haji Dr. Idham Khalid, had the opportunity to welcome Shaykh Muhammad Hisham Kabbani during his visit to Indonesia in December 1997.
copyright The Muslim Magazine
pic:The great saint of our time, Abah Anom