ASSALAMU'ALAIKUM WR.WB.....
Marhaban Yaa Ramadhan....... Marhaban Syahru Shiam......... Marhaban Syahru 
Qiyaam.......

" Wahai orang-orang yang beriman, diwajibkan atas kamu berpuasa
Sebagaimana diwajibkan atas orang-orang sebelum kamu agar kamu
Bertakwa " (Q.S. Al-Baqarah [2]:183).


Do'a Malaikat Jibril  adalah sbb:

"Ya Allah tolong abaikan puasa ummat Muhammad,
Apabila sebelum memasuki bulan Ramadhan dia tidak melakukan hal-hal yang 
berikut:


Tidak memohon maaf terlebih dahulu kepada kedua orang tuanya (jika masih 
Ada);

Tidak berma'afan terlebih dahulu antara suami istri;

Tidak berma'afan terlebih dahulu dengan orang-orang sekitarnya.


Maka Rasulullahpun mengatakan amiin sebanyak 3 kali.
Dapat Kita bayangkan, yang berdo'a adalah Malaikat Dan yang meng-amiinkan 
adalah Rasullullah
Dan para sahabat, Dan dilakukan pada Hari Jum'at.

Hadits Nabi Muhammad SAW :
1. "Barang siapa hatinya bergembira akan datangnya Bulan Ramadhan, niscaya 
Allah SWT haramkan Api Neraka  menyentuh Jasadnya"

2. Allahumma Bariklanaa Fii Rajaba Wa Sya'bana Wa Balighna Ramadhan (Yaa 
Allah berkahilah kami di bulan Rajab & Sya'ban Dan sampaikanlah kami pada 
bulan Ramadhan)

Mari....... Kita jelang bulan penuh rahmat dengan hati penuh suka 
cita.......Dan dari lubuk hati yang paling dalam perkenankan Enjang & 
Keluarga Mengucapkan :


"MOHON MAAF LAHIR & BATHIN"


" SELAMAT MENUNAIKAN IBADAH PUASA RAMADHAN"

Tanpa Disadari

11 bulan
Banyak kata sudah diucapkan Dan dilontarkan
Tak semua menyejukkan,

11 bulan
Banyak perilaku yang sudah dibuat Dan diciptakan
Tak semua menyenangkan,

11 bulan
Banyak keluhan, kebencian, kebohongan
Menjadi bagian dari diri,


Saatnya istirahat dalam "perjalanan dunia"
Saatnya membersihkan jiwa yang berjelaga,
Saatnya menikmati indahnya kemurahanNya
Saatnya memahami makna pensucian diri

Selamat menunaikan Ibadah Puasa
Bersama Kita leburkan kekhilafan,

Semoga dengan puasa mempertemukan Kita
Dengan Keagungan Lailatul Qadar
Dan Kita semua menjadi pilihanNya
Untuk dikabulkan do'a - do'a
Dan kembali menjadi fitrah

Amiin......,

Wassalam




Best Regards,


Miftah
====================
SQA Part PCB Assembly Engineer-Display Factory
PT. LG ELectronics Indonesia
Block G, MM2100 Industrial Town
Cikarang Barat, Bekasi 17520, West Java
Ph : 21-8989-138
HP : 081574836210 / 021 93698152
email : [EMAIL PROTECTED] / [EMAIL PROTECTED]






----- Original Message ----- 
From: "yudiavid bunkam" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <wanita-muslimah@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: 2006-09-23 Saturday 02:30
Subject: [wanita-muslimah] Ramadhan Inspires Growth


TARI YAPIN RENTAK MELAYU
RENTAK LANGKAH DIHITUNG DELAPAN
BULAN RAMADHAN DI AMBANG PINTU
SILAP DAN SALAH MOHON DIMA'AFKAN

Salam,
bunkzy69 bunkam

http://msnbc.msn.com/id/14945963/?GT1=8506
By Caryle Murphy

Updated: 1:50 a.m. ET Sept. 22, 2006
WASHINGTON - Chris Moore was an aspiring rock musician with earrings
and a shaved head when he walked into a Northern Virginia mosque a
dozen years ago and began asking questions about Islam.
A month later, the Christian-raised son of a U.S. Navy man became a
Muslim. His conversion initiated a spiritual odyssey that took him
to several Muslim countries, including Saudi Arabia, where he
adopted and then rejected the ultraconservative Wahhabi approach to
Islam.
Moore's faith journey ultimately brought the Annandale resident
home, and today he is pursing a master's degree at St. John's
College in Annapolis, a university noted for its demanding
curriculum based on reading classic works of Western civilization.
Like many other young Muslims in the United States, Moore is seeking
to fashion an Islamic identity that flourishes in American society
and influences it for the better. He feels a responsibility, he
said, to contribute to a more harmonious relationship between Islam
and the West -- a task that is on his mind as he observes this
year's Islamic holy month of Ramadan, a period of daytime fasting
and spiritual introspection that starts at sundown today.
"I'll be doing a lot of reflecting on how I can make a difference in
the state of affairs of Muslims -- in the West, specifically," said
Moore, 31, who attends the Mustafa Center in Annandale.
Fluent in Arabic, Moore said he hopes to foster understanding
between Muslims and non-Muslims by translating some of
the "beautiful, deep wisdom that I've found in Arabic
literature. . . . There's a lot in the Islamic tradition that people
in this country . . . would love."
But first, he wants to better understand his own culture, which is
why St. John's was a logical choice. "What better way to understand
the West," he said, "than by going directly to the foundational
texts and books and works that helped create that civilization?"

Ramadan, believed to be the period when God revealed the first
verses of the Koran to the prophet Muhammad, is the most important
month of the Islamic religious calendar. During this time, which is
dedicated to spiritual growth, Muslims must refrain from eating,
drinking and having sexual relations between dawn and sunset. It is
also customary for Muslims to spend part of the days during Ramadan
studying the Koran.
The daily fast is broken with an evening meal called the iftar ,
after which many Muslims attend special nightly prayers, known as
taraweeh , at their mosques. Ramadan evenings are often festive,
with visits among relatives and friends. The month ends with one of
Islam's major holidays, Eid al-Fitr.
A convert's spiritual journey
The arc of Moore's personal journey from a very conservative to a
more moderate expression of his faith echoes the spiritual path of
many Muslim American converts. For Moore, the story began in 1994, a
year after graduating from Annandale High School.
An only child, he became close friends with Aaron Sellars, another
young aspiring musician. The two also shared a yearning for
spiritual fulfillment, which led them to Dar al Hijra Islamic Center
in Falls Church. They walked in one day and began asking one of the
members about Islam. Sellars converted that day; Moore, raised
Catholic, did so shortly afterward.
He took to his new faith with an intensity typical of converts. He
adopted the Arabic name Khalil, which means intimate friend, and
gave up his beloved music, because a Saudi spiritual adviser
convinced him that it was a sinful waste of time.
Moore also enrolled in the Saudi-run Institute of Islamic and Arabic
Sciences in Fairfax to learn Arabic, because he wanted to read
Islam's scriptures in their original language.
Sellars, 35, who works as an audiovisual artist at the California-
based Zaytuna Institute, an Islamic educational center, said he was
not surprised that his longtime friend threw himself into studying
Arabic after his conversion, since that was his approach to
everything.
"All of a sudden, there's all these Post-It notes of Arabic all over
the wall [of his bedroom]," Sellars recalled. "It was pretty amazing
for me to see that quality of doing everything right transferred to
his approach to Islamic studies."
Sellars said that Moore displayed the principles of Ramadan even as
he moved to accept Islam. "Ramadan is about stopping, cutting off
certain aspects of your normal life to think about that which is
higher and that which is deep within yourself," Sellars said.
As Moore began to seriously consider converting, "there were certain
aspects of his life that he put aside, people who had negative
influences . . . who were just about partying, getting high, getting
drunk," Sellars said. "The core principle of Ramadan, of doing
without and looking within, he was already manifesting some of those
qualities . . . in his journey for the truth."
'Another version of Islam'
When the Fairfax institute offered Moore a scholarship to study in
Medina, Saudi Arabia, he grabbed it -- because to live in the town
that Muhammad called home for several years is "the dream of every
Muslim," Moore said.
He arrived in Medina in 1996. "When I first got there, I was pretty
much in awe. I truly, honestly believed . . . that the only scholars
on the face of the Earth that had anything to truly say about Islam
were . . . Saudi-related in some way," he said. Theirs, he thought,
was "the true Islam."
But in his third year of studies, he started having doubts about the
Wahhabi version of Islam taught at Medina. He saw "inconsistencies"
in some of his professors' teachings, he said, and was perplexed by
the way they selectively chose scriptural stories to back up their
ideas but left out others that contradicted them.
Determined to explore Islam on his own, Moore began reading
respected ancient Muslim scholars whose views were contrary to the
Wahhabi outlook. He also listened to a taped lecture by Hamza Yusuf,
the founder of the Zaytuna Institute and a leading figure in the
American Muslim community.
"Sparks started to go off, like maybe [his Saudi professors were]
pulling the wool over my eyes," Moore recalled thinking. "Maybe
there is another version of Islamic history and another version of
Islam."
When he started pulling away from the Wahhabi approach, some of his
fellow students, including American and British colleagues, called
Moore an unbeliever and an "innovator" -- a sin in Wahhabi thought.
In 1999, he decided to study Islam elsewhere and traveled to
Mauritania, Morocco, Yemen and Egypt. He worked at an Islamic
educational center in Abu Dhabi for a while. During his travels, he
returned in the summer to study English and religious studies at
George Mason University, where obtained a bachelor's degree in 2001.
'A very personal affair'
To develop "a truly Muslim identity within the American context,"
Moore said, Muslims in the United States need to combine what is
best from their Islamic traditions and their American culture.
Moore, who no longer shuns music, is looking forward to the rigors
of Ramadan. Although his current reading assignments from St. John's
include "King Lear" and "The Canterbury Tales," he said he will
strive to complete the traditional Ramadan practice of reading the
Koran, a book of more than 6,000 verses, "from cover to cover" over
the next 30 days.
He also, of course, will be fasting from dawn to sunset, a sacrifice
that the Koran teaches is prescribed for Muslims "in order that you
should become God-conscious," Moore said.
"Ramadan is a very personal affair," he added, noting that no one
but God knows if you are truly fasting or sneaking a bite to
eat. "Everyone can see that you're praying," he said. "But fasting --
 how can you tell?"
© 2006 The Washington Post Company






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Milis Wanita Muslimah
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