What’s in a Chinese name?

Monday, January 30, 2012 0 comments
The Chinese New Year is here and Jakartans of all ethnic backgrounds, not just Chinese, celebrate the event openly, in marked contrast to when the holiday was largely a closed-door private affair 15 years ago. This and the articles on page 22 look at what has changed, based on reports prepared by Amahl S. Azwar, Anggi M. Lubis, Corry Elyda, Dhenok Pratiwi, Fikri Z. Muhammadi, Hans Nicholas Jong, Muhammad Rizqi A., Nadya Natahadibrata, Pras Gustanto, Satria Sambijantoro, Tassia Sipahutar and Yuliasri Perdani.

Oey Tjin Eng has always used his Chinese name and never really cared much about how society treats him. The 68-year-old caretaker of the Boen Tek Bio (Virtue Fort) Temple in Benteng, Tangerang, says he has never felt the need to change his name to something less Chinese to feel accepted by society.

The fact that he has never held any formal job helps.

“I am unemployed,” says Oey, who has tried to run a foodstuff business unsuccessfully. “I’m no merchant, that’s for sure. So, what could they possibly expect to extort from me?”

For more than three decades under the Soeharto regime, a Chinese name was an open invitation to all kinds of discrimination, especially when dealing with the government.

But since Oey lives in a predominantly Chinese neighborhood, he rarely has to deal with the government, except for obtaining and periodically renewing his ID card.

“Most Ciben children use Chinese names,” he says, slipping into the slang describing Cina Benteng (Benteng Chinese). “At least they use them at home.”

Anita Novianti, a Ciben born during the Soeharto era, is one example. The 25-year-old, who works for a private firm, is referred to by her Chinese name, Tjiu Hau Lien, when she is at home. Lien means lotus and Hau means nice, she says.

Her name and appearance are probably about the only Chinese attributes in her daily identity. Her family speaks Indonesian at home, so she never learned to speak Chinese. However, she says she knows quite a lot about Chinese culture and traditions through her work as a volunteer at a temple.

Under Soeharto, Chinese Indonesians were barred from expressing their cultural identity, including the use of Chinese names, speaking the language and celebrating the Lunar New Year. This policy was intended to promote assimilation of the Chinese minority with the rest of the Indonesian population as part of the nation-building process. Chinese Indonesians, however, resented being singled out to forsake their cultural roots.

They were discouraged, though not completely banned, from using their Chinese names. This motivated most Chinese to embrace “Indonesian-sounding names” and Christian/biblical names, although some did not.

The sport of badminton offers a look at how this policy played out among the Chinese community. Rudy Hartono, one of the many world champions Indonesia has produced, most of them Chinese Indonesians, dropped his original name. He won the All-England championship eight times, all under his adopted Indonesian name. Other Chinese-Indonesian badminton champions, like Susi Susanti, Alan Budikusuma, Haryanto Arbi and Christian Hadinata, did the same. However, Liem Swie King, who earned a number of world titles in the 1980s, used his Chinese name comfortably.

Another case in point is Xie Qing Mei, who was crowned Miss Indonesia in 2005 under her Indonesian name, Imelda Fransisca. She says that she rarely uses her Chinese name, which means “green beauty”. Everyone in the Xie clan has a Chinese name, and one of the syllables designates a color.

“I didn’t choose my Chinese cultural heritage. However, because I was born and raised in Indonesia, everything I do is for this country. I am 100 percent Indonesian,” she says, recalling that some people had questioned her “Indonesian-ness” when she was crowned Miss Indonesia.

Harry Tjan Silalahi, chair of the board of trustees for the Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), says he took on his Batak name after the clan accepted him as one of them through long friendship. It was not a name that was forced on him.

“The use of an Indonesian name facilitates your interaction with the people,” Harry says. “There was never any ban against the use of Chinese names, in the same way that Javanese were never barred from using Arabic names.”

The practice of changing names among Chinese immigrants dates back to Dutch colonial times, he says. Upper-class Chinese adopted Dutch names, but many in the lower to middle classes adopted names common in their locality.

Many people have tried to retain the essence of their Chinese names by concealing it in their new Indonesian names. Tycoon Soedono Salim comes from the Liem clan, and his heir successor Anthony Salim continues this tradition. Mari Pangestu, the minister for tourism and creative economy, comes from the Pang clan.

Herdiana, 29, an editor for a woman’s magazine, says she feels comfortable with her name and the fact that she never had a Chinese name. “Even my mom didn’t have a Chinese name,” she says.

Melani Budianta, an English literature professor at the University of Indonesia, says she never resented the name change policy even though she felt compelled to drop her Chinese name, Tan Tjiok Sien, in 1966.

“Our family converted to Christianity, and we have embraced the Indonesian culture,” Melani says. “The real problem is not so much about the use of a Chinese name as it is about society’s stereotyping and the prejudice against Chinese.”

Article and Photos are courtesy of The Jakarta Post
http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2012/01/30/what-s-a-chinese-name.html

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When cultures collide, what do Chinese do?

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The Chinese New Year is here and Jakartans of all ethnic backgrounds, not just Chinese, celebrate the event openly, in marked contrast to when the holiday was largely a closed-door private affair 15 years ago. This and the articles on page 22 look at what has changed, based on reports prepared by Amahl S. Azwar, Anggi M. Lubis, Corry Elyda, Dhenok Pratiwi, Fikri Z. Muhammadi, Hans Nicholas Jong, Muhammad Rizqi A., Nadya Natahadibrata, Pras Gustanto, Satria Sambijantoro, Tassia Sipahutar and Yuliasri Perdani.

Eko Heryanto sees the Chinese New Year as an opportunity for a family get together. This year, he hosted the festivities for his core family at his home in Kelapa Gading, North Jakarta, where lanterns and an angpao (money) tree greeted the coming of the Year of the Water Dragon.

“I like the freedom that we have in celebrating the New Year now. We don’t need to conceal this from the public anymore,” Eko, who runs a software company, says.

However, he says he does not care so much about the spiritual aspects of the Lunar New Year, and is even prepared to debunk some of the myths that come with it.

He cites the superstition that if one sweeps the floor the night before the New Year, it brings bad luck.

“I would sweep the house if it’s dirty,” Eko, who doesn’t have a Chinese name or speak the language, says.

“We don’t even buy new clothes for the occasion,” says Eko, who is married to a woman named Asthri, with whom he has an 8-month-old child named Kayana.

He admits that he is not a devout Buddhist and rarely visits the temple for prayers, sometimes in defiance of his father’s advice.

“I only do what I think is practical,” Eko says.

Corry, a 24-year-old visitor at the Taman Anggrek Mall, also sees the Chinese New Year as a time for family gatherings and does not see any spiritual values in the event.

“It’s a time for angpao and to have fun,” she says.

Her family has converted to Catholicism and stopped observing the full rituals of the Chinese New Year since her grandmother passed away. There are no ornaments in her home and the family never says prayers at the temples.

“I was fully raised in the Catholic tradition,” she says.

Tan Kho Tjiang, 93, also stopped observing many of the rituals when he converted to Catholicism six years ago. During his family’s Chinese New Year dinner, this patriarch, who heads four generations of the Tan clan that numbers more than 100, led the event with prayers to thank Jesus Christ for all the blessings they have enjoyed.

Gone is the tradition of paying respect to the ancestors on Chinese New Year, but this did not stop the family from using the gathering to show their respect and reverence toward their patriarch.

In Bekasi, Darsono Salim, 51, says his Buddhist prayers with his wife at their home on the eve of the Lunar New Year. None of their three children, who are already married, join them because they have all converted to Christianity.

“It’s just the two of us now,” Darsono says.

Changing attitudes among Chinese about their traditions and cultures come largely with their conversion to one of the organized religions.

For the three decades under Soeharto, not only were the Chinese denied the right to express their cultural identity, they were also required to join one of the five recognized organized religions: Islam, Protestantism, Roman Catholicism, Hinduism and Buddhism.

In 1999, then president Abdurrahman “Gus Dur” Wahid added Confucianism as the sixth religion recognized by the state. However, many Chinese had already converted.

Although some converts practice Confucianism along with the teachings of their new religion, others see Chinese traditions and Confucian teachings as clashing with their new faith.

Eveline, 58, came to the Dharma Bakti Buddhist Temple on Chinese New Year because her husband wanted to take photographs. She did not burn incense like most other visitors. She just sat there watching

Eveline, who lives in Glodok, West Jakarta, says she could not see herself joining the prayers because it goes strictly against her Christian faith. “I cannot say pagan prayers. That would be turning my back on Christianity,” she says.

Au Bintoro, who hosted a gathering of four generations of the Xie clan at his mansion overlooking the Rancamaya Golf and Country Club in Bogor, says that the majority of his family members have converted to Christianity.

The clan, however, insists that the eldest son of each Xie generation must remain a Buddhist to continue family traditions and preserve the values and teachings of that religion.

This year, Hartawan, the eldest of the 27th generation of Xie, led the ceremony and made sure that the rituals and values of the Chinese New Year were fully observed.

His uncle Au Bintoro says everyone took Hartawan’s lead despite their religious beliefs. “When he says prayers for our ancestors, we pray with him.”

Article and Photos are courtesy of The Jakarta Post
http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2012/01/30/when-cultures-collide-what-do-chinese-do.html

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Chinese paint Jakarta red

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The Chinese New Year is here and Jakartans of all ethnic backgrounds, not just Chinese, celebrate the event openly, in marked contrast to when the holiday was largely a closed-door private affair 15 years ago. This and the articles on page 22 look at what has changed, based on reports prepared by Amahl S. Azwar, Anggi M. Lubis, Corry Elyda, Dhenok Pratiwi, Fikri Z. Muhammadi, Hans Nicholas Jong, Muhammad Rizqi A., Nadya Natahadibrata, Pras Gustanto, Satria Sambijantoro, Tassia Sipahutar and Yuliasri Perdani.

Members of the Tan family lined up on Chinese New Year’s Day (Imlek) before their patriarch, 93-year-old Tan Kho Tjiang. First, they wrapped their hands before their noses and said “Gong Xi Fa Cai” (Congratulations and Prosperity), and then they hugged him.

As is with tradition, each of his children, grandchildren and great grandchildren — more than 100 in all — received an angpao, a small red envelope filled with money, and some words of wisdom.

“How’s your medical study? Where do you practice?” Tan asked Farell, one of his grandchildren. The widowed Tan remembers the names of all his 10 sons and daughters and their spouses, all his grandchildren and some of the great grandchildren.

The Tan family, most wearing bright red outfits — even the babies and toddlers — celebrated the arrival of Chinese New Year at Riung Tenda, a family-owned Sundanese restaurant in Bendungan Hilir, Central Jakarta. The special room they used at the back of the restaurant was decorated with red lanterns and trees from which red envelopes hung. Chinese music played softly in the background.

Chinese Indonesians, a small ethnic minority, have been celebrating Imlek in the open, without fears of retribution these past few years. During the three decades of Soeharto’s rule until 1998, they were forced to conceal their cultural identity under the regime’s forced assimilation policy. Chinese New Year was a very private affair for most.

Although they represent a small minority — most estimates put them at about 3 percent of the total population of 240 million — Chinese Indonesians are highly visible, especially in big cities. Until the recent rise of indigenous businesses, the Chinese were also seen as overwhelmingly dominant in the economy, making them prey to recurrent attacks whenever the economy headed south.

The political reforms that began in 1998 have made Indonesia more open and amenable to cultural differences. It was president Abdurrahman “Gus Dur” Wahid who made Confucianism the sixth religion recognized by the state in 1999. His successor Megawati Soekarnoputri followed it up by making Chinese New Year a national holiday.

Over in Bogor, in a two-story mansion overlooking the Rancamaya Golf and Country Club, the Xie family marked the coming of the Year of the Water Dragon in style. A stage with a Chinese gate set up in the spacious living room was used as a backdrop for family photos.

The Xies keep a neat record of their family tree that takes them back all the way to their ancestors in San Tao (north China). The current crops of Xies have 137 family members belonging to the 25th to the 28th generations.

“Years ago, we would go to Singapore or Hong Kong,” said Au Bintoro, the house’s owner from the 26th generation. “Now, thanks to Gus Dur, we are celebrating the New Year here in Indonesia,” added the man, who at home goes by his Chinese name, Xie Jia Yu.

His daughter Imelda Fransisca, Miss Indonesia 2005, who acted master of ceremonies at the event, added: “I remember I had to skip school just to be able to celebrate the New Year.”

Although Chinese Indonesians today mark the Lunar New Year more openly than in the past, some families still have reservations about the openness of society toward the Chinese expressing their cultural identity.

Udaya Halim, whose Chinese name is Lim Tjin Peng, celebrated the New Year with his wife and four children in his home in Benteng, Tangerang. He feels that the Chinese as an ethnic group remain marginalized, even after nearly 14 years of political reforms. He took his family to Australia in 1997 just months before one of the biggest and bloodiest anti-Chinese riots rocked Jakarta, which eventually led to the collapse of the Soeharto regime.

In the Senen district of Central Jakarta, the family of Jong Herwin Octora marked the coming of the New Year in their modest two-story house on a narrow street lined with printing shops.

The 47-year-old, his wife and three children enjoyed a mix of Indonesian and Chinese cuisines. Their favorite is homemade kue keranjang or basket cake, a gelatin made with coconut and palm sugar.

There has been a greater degree of acceptance of Chinese among Indonesians today, said Benny Setiono, chair of the Association of Indonesian Chinese (INTI).

“The Chinese language, the barongsai [lion dance] and Chinese cuisine are now part of the evolving cultural landscape in Indonesia,” he added.

There is also a lot of acculturation going on between the Chinese and various indigenous ethnic groups in Indonesia. One example is lontong cap go meh, a dish of rice cake served with either chicken or vegetable curry, a fusion of Chinese and local cuisine found in many parts of Indonesia.

“We are seeing a positive and interesting acculturation process,” Melani Budianta, an English literature professor from the University of Indonesia, said. “The results will become part of the Indonesian cultural heritage,” Melani, who celebrated the New Year in Malang, East Java, told The Jakarta Post by phone.

Imlek is also openly celebrated today in various Chinese Confucian temples, which under Soeharto had to mask themselves as Buddhist temples.

Jakarta Governor Fauzi Bowo visited the Kim Tek Ie (Golden Virtue) Temple in Jakarta’s Chinatown of Glodok on New Year’s Day, donning a traditional Chinese dress and cap that the organizers described as “emperor-like”.

He gave a brief but reassuring speech to the Chinese, saying: “Every citizen has the right to live without being discriminated against. We are the government of the people, and it is our job to guarantee the security of everyone.”

The visitors on that day were not only the Chinese who came to pray, but also hundreds of beggars and tourists, including expatriates.

At Boen Tek Bio (Virtue Fort) Temple in nearby Tangerang, the administrators expect more than 15,000 visitors to offer prayers to the Goddess of Compassion, Kwan Im, comprising food, flowers and golden paper to candles, including the largest that cost Rp 18 million (US$2,000) apiece.

“Now we see far more people than before,” said Oey Tjin Eng, the 68-year-old public relations chief of the 17th-century temple. “It’s certainly more open. And it involves non-Chinese, including traders,” he added.

The public has also caught on to the festivities, many thronging malls to take advantage of the holiday and to partake in the New Year’s celebrations.

At Taman Anggrek Mall in West Jakarta, the main hall at the center was converted into a little Chinatown, and the area was practically painted red. Illustrations of the 12 shio (Chinese zodiac) told visitors about the personal characters of those born in different years. There was also a photo booth for visitors to pose wearing Chinese garb.

At Kelapa Gading Mall in North Jakarta, one department store offers Imlek sales with discounts of up to 50 percent. Those who spend more than Rp 1 million in the mall can give their receipts to be hung on the angpao tree. There will be drawing with prizes that include smartphones.

For most people, particularly non-Chinese, the chief attractions in the malls are the barongsai (lion) and liong (dragon) dances.

In the three-story Summarecon Serpong Mall just outside Jakarta, the main hall is decorated with an 80-meter-long dragon that goes all the way to the top floor. A troupe of dancers performs acrobatic lion and dragon dances. The troupe tours the mall and goes into the stores to entice shoppers.

The changing atmosphere facing the Chinese did not escape the attention of a longtime expatriate during a Jelajah Kota Toea (Tour of the Old City) in Jakarta’s old Chinatown on New Year’s Eve.

“I’ve been here more than 20 years. The Chinese culture was banned under Soeharto. It’s nice to see it making a comeback,” said Briton Geoff Tucker, 49, who is married to an Indonesian Chinese and lives in Cipete, South Jakarta.

Article and Photos are courtesy of The Jakarta Post
http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2012/01/30/chinese-paint-jakarta-red.html



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Happy Birthday, Google.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011 0 comments
Almost everyone on the planet knows Google. Yes, the best search engine in the world is having its 13th birthday.

Google has helped millions to find answers for 13 years!

Happy birthday, Google. May your service helps more and more to find what they need.
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Bandh: Players and Supporters

Friday, July 22, 2011 0 comments
Osmania University was closed last week after a political movement showed up again with their hunger strike. Osmania College of Arts was used by these people to do their action, having lots of polices surrounding the campus. All campus entrances were closed except the main entrance, where the police still give access to students with urgent importance. But it all went pretty well, in my opinion, because the strike did not make the campus go totally closed, making the students can still do their work. The campus was then re-opened on 18 July.

Until yesterday, every campus activity went well. The campus entrances were all opened, less police was there in the campus. But when I woke up this morning, I heard some people shouting to a store in front of my house to close. Yes, again, a strike. All I thought was that this will go well like last week's strike, because I had two things to do today, i.e. Apply for an exit permit of India (because I have finished my education here) and take my degree certificate from the Examination Branch, Osmania University. I only have today to do it, so I should plan my time so that both can be done. Adi, a friend of mine, came all the way from New Delhi just to extend his residential permit, and plans to go back to New Delhi on Sunday, with me. So we left home at 10.

Apparently, all stores were closed, petrol stations, barber shops, etc. I already had the feeling that this is so not good. Nonetheless, I only have today, so I have to do it today. We reached the Hyderabad Police Commissioner at 10.30, and I directly applied for my exit permit. Adi, because he hasn't got his bonafide certificate, has to go to the college. So he left me there.

My work was done. Unfortunately, as for Adi, which has came all the way from Delhi, has to come another day to the police because his college, Nizam College, was closed. All of his plans were torn till the last piece. We moved on to my second plan; taking my degree certificate.

We reached the Examination Branch at 2, unfortunately, to watch the closure of the campus. No one was there except the securities and the cleaning service and some students wandering. I was so disappointed because of this. I could not do my academic activity because of some political chaos, which has nothing to do with me.

Politics Shouldn't Disturb Education

I might not understand about the people's struggle. Other foreigners would not even care either. But what we do know, is that we are troubled by this situation. Hyderabad is not populated merely by Indians. It's populated by foreigner from around the globe, which has personal businesses to do in the country, which because of this, could not be done.


Politics is politics. It has to have a clear line that separates it with educational institutions. Osmania University, is an educational institution which do not have any relations (at all) with politics and has to remain that way. People should understand, that a movement should have an objective. Here, the objective is clear; to have a separate Telangana State. Fair enough. Then they should fight for it, discuss, give a clear, logical and feasible explanations of why you want this. Come on, India is the LARGEST DEMOCRACY in the world. People control the government, not the government controls people. If this is what the people of India wants, then so be it. Except, it is not.

I feel sorry for what happened in Hyderabad. Some people even have committed suicide because of this issue. It's not that I don't care about these people. But, still, these people should also understand other people's interest. Millions of people live in Hyderabad, millions of interest, millions of work to be done, and what we do should not disturb others, no?

You might have a sweet house, but if your neighbor turns on the music very high, then you will not have convenience after all. I'm just saying, that we have to respect others' interest. Like me right now. I have to change my whole plan because of what happened today. I already bought a plane ticket to go back to Indonesia, and I WILL go on time, if I have both of my works done today. Now I'm gonna have to make another plan. Not only me, many people. People like Adi, people like the ones I met at the campus waiting for the office to open, people who rely on selling goods everyday to meet their daily expenses; but had their stores closed. Many people.

Osmania University should never be a hostage to the people's movement. It is a place of knowledge and excellence and has nothing to do with this. Students, Indians and foreigners, both have the same thing to do there, study. There may be a few students who are willing to join the movement, then it is their rights to do so. Involvement in the movement should only be of personal choice, not forced. The total closure of the campus means that the rest of the students who are not willing to take action in this are forced to join. In fact, they do not want to. And that includes me. Some are supporters, some are players. I'm a supporter, not a player.

Just my two cents.

Image Source: (Telangana Illustration) from http://images.outlookindia.com/images/articles/outlookindia/2010/1/25/telengana_illus_20100125.jpg and (Stike at Osmania University) from http://static.indianexpress.com/m-images/Thu%20Jan%2021%202010,%2011:50%20hrs/M_Id_132102_Telangana.jpg

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Haleem Hyderabad

Wednesday, July 20, 2011 0 comments
Favorit mahasiswa Indonesia di Hyderabad pas bulan Ramadhan, Haleem. Haleem ini semacam bubur ayam di Indonesia, tapi beda bahan dasar. Bahan dasar haleem bukan beras layaknya bubur ayam, tapi daging. Bisa daging sapi atau daging ayam. Daging ayam atau sapi ini nanti dimasukkan ke dalam tungku besar dan direbus dengan "Ghee" sampai hancur dan lembut, dengan suhu yang sangat tinggi. Menarik. Ghee sendiri adalah semacam mentega yang dibuat dari lemak susu sapi atau kerbau melalui suatu proses tertentu. Saya juga kurang paham secara detail prosesnya. Yang jelas, ghee ini adalah salah satu bahan makanan wajib untuk negara di kawasan Asia Selatan, seperti India, Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh, dan beberapa lainnya.

Haleem ini hanya ada di Hyderabad. Di kota India lainnya, Haleem tidak populer. Mahasiswa Indonesia suka makanan ini karena rasanya memang mirip bubur ayam, jadi bisa sebagai ganti bubur ayam Indonesia, karena disini tidak ada yang jual. Daging yang sudah hancur tadi selanjutnya dihidangkan dengan kuah yang dibuat dari rempah-rempah a la India. Maknyus, pemirsa!

Haleem biasa dijual di bulan Ramadhan karena memang ini makanan khas Ramadhan, bahkan bisa dibilang makanan orang Muslim. Karena makanan ini memang tergolong kategori Non-vegetarian. Di daerah perkampungan Muslim, biasanya terdapat puluhan penjual Haleem yang berlomba mendapatkan pelanggan. Mereka buka sejak sebelum buka puasa, sampai tengah malam (atau sampai barang mereka habis). Harganya pun murah, berkisar antara Rs.20-Rs.35 (sekitar Rp. 4,000-Rp.7,000).

Diantara ratusan penjual Haleem di Hyderabad, ada yang paling enak (menurut masyarakat setempat). Namanya Haleem Pista House. Jadi ceritanya, di India sering diadakan lomba makanan, baik tingkat lokal maupun tingkat nasional. Nah, untuk lomba makanan terbesar, kategori Haleem dimenangkan oleh haleem dari Pista House ini. Slogan mereka "100% Pure Meet, 100% Pure Ghee". Dan memang, kalau saya pribadi menilai, Haleem dari Pista House paling enak. Selain dagingnya sangat halus, rasa Ghee-nya juga terasa sekali. Namun, dengan nama besarnya, Pista House juga menjual satu porsi Haleem mereka dengan harga Rs. 80 (sekitar Rp. 16,000), dua kali lipat haleem standar. Untuk yang ada rencana jalan-jalan di India bulan ini, bisa mampir ke Hyderabad buat nyoba Haleem.
Akhirnya, Ramadhan hampir tiba, penjual-penjual Haleem saat ini sudah mempersiapkan kios-kios mereka. Penyambutan Ramadhan di India sendiri tidak semeriah di Indonesia. Maklum, negara Hindu terbesar di dunia. Tapi saya akan merindukan puasa di India. Tantangannya juga lebih besar. Semua orang makan, semua orang tidak puasa, waktu kegiatan tidak ada yang dipotong, dan lainnya. :)

Yang jelas, untuk semuanya, selamat menyambut Ramadhan kali ini. Saya pribadi bersyukur sekali karena masih diberikan kesempatan untuk menjalankan Ramadhan pada tahun ini. Dan Ramadhan kali ini pun beda, karena saya bisa puasa di rumah sejak hari pertama, insya Allah.

"Man fariha bi dukhuli Ramadhan, harramallahu jasaduhu 'ala niiran." - Hadits.
Barang siapa yang senang dengan datangnya bulan Ramadhan, Allah mengharamkan jasadnya atas api neraka. Wallahu a'lam bi shawab.

Image Source: (Haleem on the Plate) from http://hyderabadipakwan.com/images/Haleem2.jpg and (Pista House) from http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_hnCo-aEUkow/SMzYwOw-oAI/AAAAAAAAB0s/JNVLWtN48es/s400/DSCN2419.JPG

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Moral Politisi Indonesia Merosot

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Tadi sore, waktu lagi chatting via BlackBerry Messenger sama pacar, tiba-tiba dia nyuruh saya liat Metro Tv. Baru bangun dari tidur siang juga itu. Saya tanya, "Emang ada apa?"

Mungkin sudah menjadi rahasia umum juga, kalau sekarang ini BBM-an di Indonesia agak seret, banyak pending-nya dari pada terkirimnya (entah, mungkin karena terlalu banyaknya pengguna BlackBerry di Indonesia, sehingga jaringan penuh), jadi pertanyaan saya tidak mendapatkan jawaban langsung dari si pacar. Tapi, karena dia kayaknya baru liat sesuatu yang seru, yaudah, langsung nyalain laptop, streaming www.metronews.com.

Ternyata, lagi ada ex-Bendahara Umum Partai Demokrat nyanyi, Muhammad Nazaruddin. Seru. Nyanyi dalam arti membongkar rahasia.

Ex-Bendahara sekaligus anggota DPR dari Fraksi Demokrat yang lokasi keberadaan-nya tidak diketahui orang ini (atau mungkin juga disembunyikan, Wallahu a'lam), sedang kontak telpon dengan Metro Tv. Dia menceritakan "kondisi yang sebenarnya" (versi dia tentunya) kepada Metro Tv. Ya saya juga ga tau sih versi dia ini yang benar atau yang salah. Tapi Nazaruddin ini kok tampaknya meyakinkan sekali ya? Hehe..

Dia menceritakan bahwa Anas Urbaningrum-lah yang menjadi lakon semua kasus yang dituduhkan kepada dia. Dengan nada yang menggebu-gebu dan meyakinkan, dia melanjutkan ceritanya kepada hal-hal lainnya. Menarik juga, "Whistle Blower" baru.

Tapi masalah yang saya soroti bukan itu sebenarnya. Saya lebih melihat kepada kekisruhan yang terjadi di partai pemenang pemilu 2009 ini sendiri. Okay, politik kita dinamis. Akan tetapi, kasus penyerangan sana-sini oleh para politisi kepada politisi lainnya ini, agaknya tidak beretika.

Pergerakan para politisi kita sekarang ini tidak elegan lagi. Ambil contoh saja kasus Nazaruddin ini. Dia banyak bicara di televisi (media pun melakukan blow up sehingga berita jadi tersebar kemana-mana), tapi ga berani menunjukkan diri. Gimana orang mau percaya lagi sama dia? Apa dia membawa bukti ke publik, kalau yang dia katakan itu benar?

Apakah kelas politisi kita sudah jatuh kepada level dimana mereka hanya bisa saling menuduh tapi tidak punya bukti apapun? Memprihatinkan, kalau memang begitu.

Ini tidak terjadi sekali lho. Ada kasus lagi, orang-orang menyerang Majelis Ulama Indonesia (MUI). MUI dibilang ga becus kasih fatwa, fatwa mereka konservatif, dan lain sebagainya. Tapi di sisi lain, mereka juga tidak bisa menawarkan fatwa yang lebih baik. Kalaupun ada, itu hanya fatwa populis yang lebih ditujukan kepada "kesenangan" rakyat semata, bukan kepada tujuan utamanya, yaitu meluruskan paham agama.

Apakah di era kebebasan berbicara dan berpendapat sekarang ini, orang jadi seenaknya saja kritik sana-sini tanpa mikir dulu? Kritik dulu baru mikir belakangan?

Sebenarnya silahkan saja sih, kalau memang Anda senang menunjukkan betapa bodohnya Anda. Saya agak sentimen sama kritik kosong. Kalau mau kritik itu sebaiknya yang konstruktif (Constructive Critics). Jangan cuma kritik karena tidak sepaham dengan kita, dan kita ga bisa kasih solusi dan alasan dari kritik kita. Jangan karena yang mengeluarkan kebijakan adalah lawan politik kita, lalu kita lebih senang menyampaikan Destructive Critics, supaya yang kita serang bisa jatuh.

Saya takut kebiasaan ini mengakar. Coba Anda liat di Twitter, orang-orang yang mempunyai follower puluhan ribu (atau bahkan ratusan) sering kritik yang menjatuhkan. Yang memprihatinkan bagi saya, yang RT (Retweet) itu banyak. RT, bagi saya, adalah sebuah sikap afirmatif terhadap Tweet tersebut. Artinya, jika hal ini berlanjut, apa jadinya negara kita di masa yang akan datang? Politisi semua ga punya etika, mikirnya urusan perut dan uang saja dan agar lawan mereka jatuh, tanpa memikirkan elegan dan bijaknya tindakan mereka. Apalagi untuk memikirkan tindakan mereka di mata Tuhan Yang Maha Kuasa, sudah tidak ada waktu.

Ya saya bukan sok suci, tapi ini realita yang terjadi, dan bisa dijadikan bahan renungan saja. Masyarakat kita butuh pendidikan. Ikut serta dalam suatu tindakan bodoh itu karena tidak mau belajar. Tidak mau baca. Maka, seperti kata Al-Qur'an, "Iqro", Bacalah. Maka wawasan Anda akan terbuka, dan Anda bisa mengerti tentang apa yang sebaiknya Anda lakukan dan tidak.

Wallahu a'lam bi-shawab.

Image Source: (Partai Demokrat Logo) http://www.fahnenkontor24.de/FOTW/images/i/id%7Dpdem.gif and (Nazaruddin on Interpol's Website) from Private Collection

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Selamat Hari Lahir, Nahdlatul Ulama

Monday, July 18, 2011 0 comments
Selamat Hari Lahir Nahdlatul Ulama yang ke-85. Semoga tetap konsisten mengajarkan Islam sebagai agama "Rahmatan lil 'alamin". Di usia yang sudah tidak lagi muda, tentu Nahdliyyin mengharapkan agar NU dapat menjadi pusat pergerakan untuk berdialog dengan gerakan-gerakan ekstrimis dan liberalis, agar mereka dapat beragama sesuai dengan yang diajarkan oleh Al-Qur'an dan Al-Hadits. Amin.

Image Source: Wikipedia


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