IBN FIRNAS (810 – 887): ‘Father of Aviation’

Abbas Ibn Firnas

Abbas Ibn Firnas

Name : Abbas Qasim Ibn Firnas
Title : Armen Firman, Polymath: an inventor, engineer, aviator, physician, chemist, poet, and musician
Birth : 810 in Izn-Rand Onda, Al-Andalus (today’s Ronda, Spain)
Death : 887
Ethnicity : Andalus (Spanish)
Region : Iberia (Al-Andalus)
Main interests : Physics, chemistry, aviation, engineering, poetry, music
Notable ideas : Designed a water clock called Al-Maqata; devised a means of manufacturing colorless glass; made corrective lenses (“reading stones”); developed a chain of rings that could be used to simulate the motions of the planets and stars, and developed a process for cutting rock crystal that allowed Spain to cease exporting quartz to Egypt to be cut. In his house he built a room in which spectators witnessed stars, louds, thunder, and lightning, which were produced by mechanisms located in his basement laboratory. He also devised some sort of “metronome,” a device that produces a regular sound to help musicians play a piece of music at particular speed. Have made an attempt at flight using a set of wings. His glider flight is considered to be the first attempt at heavier-than-air flight in aviation history. He has been commemorated on stamps from Libya, by a statue near the Baghdad International Airport, and by a namesake airport north of Baghdad. The crater Ibn Firnas on the Moon is named in his honour. — Wikipedia; http://www.fact-index.com

Islamia/The Brunei Times
Friday, 14 May 2010

How can ‘pesantren’ contribute to national education

pesantren_kh-abdullah-syukri-zarkasyi-gontor-modern-pesantren-in-_120418200656-500

Salahuddin Wahid
JOMBANG

HISTORY shows that pesantren (Islamic boarding schools) have made a great contribution to the independence of this country; most have also played a significant role in making Indonesian Muslims moderate and tolerant. However, the condition of pesantren, especially in rural areas, is deplorable. Most have been left behind in comparison to other educational institutions in urban areas. One reason is the lack of attention from the government on the development of pesantren.

Thus, the government needs to create an affirmative program to help the schools develop, and to support their surrounding communities to face the influence of globalization. Only about 7 percent of students from rural areas continue their studies to a university level; most cannot study in major cities due to the high living costs.

ABA2004011Z00088/15The affirmative program should include affordable non-religious studies for people in rural areas. Such programs would have a multiplier effect, which would improve their competitiveness. Importantly, these programs would reduce urbanization as well as reducing the gap between urban and rural areas; and they are plausibly a good method of de-radicalization.

Not many understand that the oldest and earliest education in the Indonesian archipelago was Islamic education, particularly in pesantren. Islamic education started in the ninth century in Barus, on the western coast of Sumatra, when many foreigners including Islamic scholars arrived there. Foreigners were particularly attracted to the camphor trees in the area, as their sap can be used to produce kapur barus (camphor).

Historical records suggest that the zenith of Islam in the archipelago occurred from 1400 to 1680. Modern Malay civilization developed the use of Arabic script for writing instead of the Latin alphabet; this became known as the Jawi script. Well-known scholars during this time included Hamzah Fansuri, Syamsuddin Sumatrani, Nuruddin al-Raniri and Abdurrauf al-Singkili.

pesantren-gontorAnthony Johns considered the Malay people’s conversion into Muslims as a remarkable historical development. Firstly, it happened during the setback of the Islamic imperium in the Middle East. Secondly, the process was relatively rapid, in the absence of political support from any military power. Thirdly, the number of people converting from Hinduism to Islam was more than 89 percent of the population. Indisputably, the key to this phenomenon was the existence of pesantren.

The ‘Walisongo’ (nine Javanese Islamic saints) were the early figures who spread Islam in the future Indonesia. One of the Walisongo, Maulana Malik Ibrahim, who died in 1419, is known as the grand master of the pesantren tradition. Meanwhile, Java’s oldest pesantren is Tegalsari in Ponorogo, East Java, which was established 300 years ago by Hasan Besari. Ronggowarsito, a great Javanese poet, was one of his students.

Pesantren Tebu Ireng, Jombang, East Java.

Pesantren Tebu Ireng, Jombang, East Java.

Several old pesantrens that are still in operation today include: the Sidogiri in Pasuruan, East Java, which was first established in 1745; the Jamsaren in Surakarta, Central Java, established 1750; Miftahul Huda in Malang, East Java, established 1768; the Buntet in Cirebon, established 1785; Darul Ulum in Pamekasan, Madura, East Java, established 1787; and Langitan in Tuban, East Java, established 1830.

Several pesantren which are now well-known were actually established at later times, such as the Tebuireng in Jombang, East Java (established in 1899), Lirboyo in Kediri (established in 1910) and Gontor in Ponorogo, East Java (established in 1926).

In the Minangkabau highlands in West Sumatra, a similar institution to the pesantren exists, called the ‘surau’, as does the ‘dayah’ in Aceh.

Secular educational institutions were established by the Dutch East Indies in the early 1840s at the suggestion of Snouck Hurgronje. The main purpose was to attain more educated employees for the Dutch administration and private companies. However, the development of the secular educational institutions was also believed to challenge the influence of pesantren which had begun to irritate the colonial government.

C. Snouck Hurgronje

C. Snouck Hurgronje

According to Hurgronje, the culture of the East Indies had to be combined with European culture. The Dutch education system was thus expanded, making many more Indonesians eligible to attend. This education policy, later part of the “ethical policy” toward colonial subjects, was deemed the best political decision to reduce and eventually defeat the influence of Islam in the Dutch East Indies.

In 1919, the Bandung School of Technology was set up, followed by the School of Law in 1924 and the School of Medicine in 1926, the latter two both in Jakarta. Interestingly, even though many students received a western education, they did not lose their identities.

A number of them gathered in Jakarta in October 1928 to hold the second youth congress, which then resulted in Sumpah Pemuda’ (The Youth Pledge). That moment surely formed the embryo of Indonesian independence. To achieve this vision, the future years saw cooperation and understanding between our founding fathers, who graduated from pesantren and western style education.

KH Wahid Hasyim

KH Wahid Hasyim

In 1950, the religious affairs minister of the time, Wahid Hasyim, and the education minister, Bahder Johan, signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to combine Islamic and secular education. Furthermore, the pesantren also contributed to the establishment of the Islamic Indonesian University (UII) as the first private university in Indonesia. The proponents of Islamic higher education further enabled many pesantren alumni to continue their studies in any discipline they chose.

Bahder Djohan

Bahder Djohan

Nowadays, there are some 28,000 pesantren across Indonesia, mostly in East Java. In 1971 there were 4,200 such schools while, in 1998, the figure rose to 8,000, and rose again to 22,000 by 2008. The increasing number of schools shows the public’s appreciation as many citizens choose to send their children to pesantren — which have continued their tradition, over hundreds of years, of educating our society.

The writer is the director of Tebuireng Pesantren, Jombang, East Java

The Jakarta Post
Fri, January 24 2014

pesantren1

http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2014/01/24/how-can-pesantren-contribute-national-education.html

Enthusiasm on Quran recitation growing among Indonesian Muslims

quran

Fuji Pratiwi/Mutia Ramadhani
JAKARTA

REPUBLIKA.CO.ID. – Growing enthusiasm in Quran recitation among Indonesian Muslims demonstrated the increasing awareness towards their holy book, chairman of Indonesian Muslim Preacher Association (IKADI), Satori Ismail said. He praised the growing interest on Quran recitation learning or tahsin.

Ahmad Satori Ismail

Ahmad Satori Ismail

“A strong nation is built on strong spirituality,” Ismail said.

More tahsin programs are expected to strengthen spirituality among Indonesians. Learning Quran at early age will help Muslims to build strong spiritual foundation at adolescent stage.

indonesia education englishIsmail said that some institutions had developed good program in teaching Quran recitation. He added that those institutions implemented various teaching methods to attract all Muslims, children and adults to learn about Quran.

Ismail admitted that translating Quranic values into daily life was not easy. But he believes that if a Muslim tries to memorize, understand, then implement one Quranic verse every day, he or she will have good understanding on the Muslim’s holy book in less than 20 years.

quran2

http://www.republika.co.id/berita/en/islam-in-archipelago/14/01/28/n0483n-enthusiasm-on-quran-recitation-growing-among-indonesian-muslims

AL-BAITAR (1188 – 1248): “A Notable Botanist and Pharmacist of the Islamic Golden Age”

Al-Baitar

Al-Baitar

Name: Abu Muhammad Abdallah Ibn Ahmad Ibn al-Baitar Dhiya al-Din al-Malaqi
Title : Al-Baitar, Al-Baytar, botanist, chemist, pharmacist and physician
Birth : 1188 in Malaga, Andalusia (Spain)
Death : 1248 in Damaskus, Syria
Nationality : Andalusian-Arab
Region : Andalusia (Iberia)
School : Arabic literature, Islamic science, Mu’tazili
Main interests : Botany, Chemistry, Pharmacy, Physics, Agriculture
Works : Kitab al-Mlughni fi al-Adwiya al-Mufrada, an encyclopedia of Islamic medicine; and Kitab al-Jami fi al-Adwiya al-Mufrada, one of the greatest botanical compilations in history, and was a botanical authority for centuries. It was also a pharmacopoeia (pharmaceutical encyclopedia), containing details on at least listing 1,400 plants, foods, and drugs, 300 of which were his own
original discoveries. It referred to 150 other previous Arabic authors as well as 20 previous Greek authors. Translated into Latin in 1758, it was being used in Europe up until the early 19th century. — Wikipedia; islamonline.net

Islamia/The Brunei Times
Friday, June 11, 2010

‘Mysterious banners’ escalate religious tension in Malaysia

banners

AP
KUALA LUMPUR

REPUBLIKA.CO.ID – A Malaysian church was attacked with firebombs early Monday, police said, escalating tensions in a long-running dispute over the use of the word “Allah” by non-Muslims. Penang state police chief Abdul Rahim Hanafi said two men on a motorcycle threw Molotov cocktails into the compound of The Assumption Church. No one was injured.

banners2The attack came after unknown people hung a provocative banner outside five Penang churches, including The Assumption, on Sunday. The banner read in English: “Allah is great, Jesus is the son of Allah.”

The churches said they had nothing to do with the banner and that it was put up to create animosity between Muslims and Christians in the majority-Muslim Southeast Asian nation. They complained to police.

John David, a supervisor with the Penang Catholic Church city parish, said the banner mysteriously appeared outside four Catholic and one Lutheran church on Sunday morning. He said he believed it was the work of individuals out to create religious animosity.

“We are worried. We have been living in harmony all this while,” he said.

Lim Guan Eng and Najib Razak

Lim Guan Eng and Najib Razak

Penang Chief Minister Lim Guan Eng condemned the act, saying it was the work of “religious extremists and racial bigots” who want to sow discord in the opposition-ruled state. Police said they will increase patrols at churches.

The wording of the banner was likely to be highly provocative to Muslims. Hardliners and the government object to the use of “Allah” by Christians, saying that it could confuse Muslims.

banners3The government says Allah should be exclusively reserved for Muslims. Christians in Malaysia said the restriction violates their religious rights.

About 60 percent of Malaysia’s 29 million people are Malay Muslims. Christians make up about 9 percent of the population.

Monday, 27 January 2014

http://www.republika.co.id/berita/en/international/14/01/27/n022ah-mysterious-banners-escalate-religious-tension-in-malaysia