Faith in the Job – An Interview with The Star Newspaper

January 10th, 2010 by Abu Saif 8:03 am | 4,810 views | Print Print | Email Email | Leave a reply »

Although career opportunities in many fields dwindle in hard times, there is still a need for skilled workers and professionals in certain sectors.

FAITH IN THE JOB

By PRIYA KULASAGARAN

Religion plays an important role in society, but religious teachers do more than teach people to pray.

USTAZ Hasrizal Abdul Jamil’s family was not amused when he spurned a scholarship in economics to pursue theology.

“Choosing to do Islamic Studies while having excellent academic results was not seen as a sensible option,” says the 35-year-old.

“My idea was to overcome the stigma, because it’s not right that this field is seen as a last resort.”

After completing his degree in Sharia and Islamic Studies at the Mu’tah University in Jordan, Hasrizal made another radical decision. He wanted to venture further abroad.

Hasrizal in Tokyo, Japan, conducting a course on Islamic Studies for Malaysian students. His job has taken him all over the world.

“My experiences in Islamic school and university were monotonous in a sense, and not reflective of the varied society in Malaysia,” he says.

He explains that he wanted to understand people as much as he understood religious texts.

This quest took him to various locales. He was the first religious minister at the Belfast Islamic Centre of Northern Ireland, United Kingdom.

He also conducted research at the Research Centre for Islamic Art, History and Culture in Istanbul, Turkey.

Although his visits abroad are not as frequent nowadays, Hasrizal is still reaching out to people.

Between conducting motivational camps, giving talks on religion and faithfully updating his blog, the youthful ustaz (Islamic scholar) is in a constant buzz of activity.

The most striking thing about Hasrizal however, is that under his cheerful smile and easy-going persona, lies a steely commitment to his beliefs.

As he writes on his blog: “Some might find my posts controversial, but I’m not interested in being popular. I’d rather be accurate in interpreting my faith.”

My job involves …

… offering people spiritual and moral guidance.

This includes encouraging people to live according to their faith’s teachings, explaining the meanings of religious scriptures, and conducting religious ceremonies.

However, being an ustaz is not as clear cut as simply teaching people how to pray.

It is about how you apply yourself in accordance with your faith’s teachings.

In my case, I found that being attached to a religious institution did not fit with my idea of being a leader.

Thus, I chose to carry out training and motivational activities to encourage people to adopt Islamic values in their everyday lives.

My morning starts with …

… prayers, and then on to chores and studying.

When I was working in Ireland, I would be preparing sermons, leading prayers and welcoming visitors to the mosque.

I also found myself organising dialogue sessions with the community so that they could learn more about Islam.

I do much of the same these days, except that I am not limited to one particular centre or mosque.

To qualify, you need …

… to have a strong belief in your faith.

In Malaysia, the typical perception of an imam (Islamic cleric) is that he is a trusted figure, who has a sound knowledge of religion as compared to the rest of his congregation.

Increasingly, the common practice these days is that the person should also hold a degree in any field related to Islamic Studies, and have good Quranic recitation and memorisation skills.

The best person for the job …

… is someone who has a burning desire to give of himself and his knowledge, and is interested in humanity.

You need to have good communication skills and be prepared to work with all levels of society. It helps if you can converse in more than one language.

On a personal note, I will add that you must be free of intolerance and aggressiveness.

I love my job because …

… I get to empower people with knowledge. Religion is meant to be the ultimate definition of how we can connect to God and other beings.

I enjoy helping people work out their questions about God and find meaning in their lives.

I have the opportunity to meet all types of people through my profession, and this shapes my own empathy towards others. It serves to keep me grounded and balanced between being idealistic and realistic.

Also, the process of teaching helps me to continuously develop my own knowledge and skills. The more you want to give, the more you need to have.

What I dislike most …

… is dealing with the stigma of being a religious leader.

Many assume that my only concern is the afterlife, when I am more interested in improving people’s worldly lives based on values derived from religious thought.

This may be a personal grouse, but dealing with unnecessary bureaucracy imposed by religious authorities can be disheartening.

Prospects for the future …

… are optimistic, if the role of a religious leader is properly defined in society.

Based on the wide roles played by Islamic centres all over the world, there is a significant need for officers to deal with religious rituals, charity, education, coaching, administration and counselling.

Being one in the Malaysian paradigm can be limiting in a sense, but it will definitely be a staple job.

Religion has always been a mainstay of civilised societies, as it is a source of identity.

A millionaire by 30?

Almost impossible. It may sound cliche, but financial gain is definitely not a motivation to be in this position.

While the salary may be moderate, one can earn extra income through other channels, such as having a business or producing books and CDs of lectures.

But then, you will have to deal with criticism, as the popular perception is that spiritual leaders should not be out to make money.

http://thestar.com.my/education/story.asp?file=/2010/1/10/education/5416750&sec=education

NOTE: COPYRIGHT IS SOLELY BELONG TO THE STAR ONLINE: EDUCATION

Ingin berkongsi usaha menggerakkan server Saifulislam.Com? Perkongsian anda kami dahulukan dengan ucapan jazakumulaahu khair al-jazaa'

 





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23 comments

  1. ami says:

    salam…tahniah…dan sekalung penghargaan…jazakallahukhair

  2. med says:

    Salaam..
    Tahniah Ust..Selama saya dok baca newspaper The Star dari dulu, esp bhgn education(Column job perspective hanya ada time2 lepas SPM, around bulan 1 mcm ni),ni 1st time rasanya saya tgk seorang Ust di’interview’ utk column ni.
    Moga persepsi masyarakat terhadap pelajar2 yang ambil bidang agama berubah kpd sesuatu yang lebih baik.

    Mabruk!

    • Abu Saif says:

      Wsalam wbt.

      Saya tidak begitu mengharapkan ramai lepasan spm yang nak ambil Syariah akan baca The Star. Tapi artikel tu diharapkan dapat mencipta satu kelompok baru yang nak buat Syariah, daripada kalangan English spoken Malay society kat KL supaya boleh cater dakwah kelompok tu efficiently, mudah-mudahannya.

      Juga untuk non Muslim.

      By the way, hari ni banyak pula saya dapat friend request di Facebook kesan artikel itu di The Star. Hebat pengaruh surat khabar tebal ni… :)

  3. Saya Yakin says:

    Salamualaikum ya Ustaz…

    MasyaAllah.. a very good example of Ustaz, visible in the middle of people’s life..

    “The more you want to give.. the more you need to have..” Agreed..

    I want to be a leader in my place, so i have to fullfill myself with knowlwedge especially things that related to religion and morals.

    to be a leader, ones must have optimal qualifications.

    Hemm.. actually Ustaz, i dont have much idea to write out here.. huhu.. Just want to wish you lucK..

    i enjoy your blog. Keep it up yaa Ustaz.. :-)

    May Allah bless us All.. Ameen..

    Waiting for your nexT posT.. WallahuA’lam..

  4. Assalamualaikum ustaz;

    Just want to share Prof Muhammad Kamal Hassan poem titled “SMS to Sir Muhammad Iqbal”..

    O Iqbal!
    The spring of 2002 beckoned my soul and body;
    to witness the Muslim remains of Alhambra, Cordova and Sevilla,
    to retrace your noble steps and feel the vibrations of your ecstasy,
    to feast my aging vision on the haunting grandeur of Alhambra and relish the marchless beauty of Moorish art…

    I glided through the cold ruins,
    searching for the secrets of the humiliating downfall of Al-Andalus…
    The flowing fountains of Jannat’ul-Arif (Generalife) continue to narrate the melancholy of Muslim follies…
    How, they succumbed to the same diseases which brought down the mighty Roman Empire
    They wrote all over Al-Andalus “La-Ghaliba Illa’Llah”
    (There is no vanquisher except Allah)
    but they began to worship the mata ad-dunya (pleasures of the world)
    and traded their souls for gold, glory, women and wine,
    only to end like stray donkeys,
    kicked around by the boots of Ferdinand and Isabella
    Today, pigeons nestle and make love in the ruins,
    their droppings strewn all over the walls,
    Western tourists pour out buses and planes,
    frolicking in romance, obliterating all pains
    while Muslim architectural glory continues to boost the coffers of Catholic Spain

    I stood, O Iqbal,
    on the hill of Alhambra,
    “a stranger, gazing at things gone by, dreams of another age”.

    O Iqbal!
    Your dreams of Islamic renaissance are in tatters,
    In your time the tyrant was Frankish colonization,
    Today the Slave Master dons the cloak of globalization,
    Piercing through the iron curtain, the bamboo curtain, the sahara and the tropical jungles carrying a civilization of McDonalds, KFC’s and Coca Colas,
    While eight hundred million people languish in famine and squalor,
    You predicted the collapse of godless and materialistic Europe,
    But today she is more united and mightier than the Muslim world.

    Today, O Iqbal!
    The West is supreme and capitalism triumphantly arrogant,
    Islam is the new enemy; in your time it was Bolshevism,
    and today every Muslim is a potential terrorist,
    You are either with the West or you are against it.
    If you conform, the Slave Master’s mercy will descend upon you,
    offering bread and dust and blankets
    (lest you shiver in the thunderstorm of the New Alliance rage)
    Today Musulman is languishing
    in the trap of the New World Disorder,
    a New Slavery in a Boardless Prison.

    O Iqbal!
    I wish you have heard the guns of Israel,
    the cries from Deir Yassin, Shabra, Shatilla and Jenin,
    the savage rumblings of Sharon’s tanks,
    the merciless bull-dozers tearing into Palestinians homes,
    the explosions of teenage suicide bombers,
    the ruthless retaliations of Zionist terrorism
    (no, no, no, you cannot call it a terrorist state!)

    O Iqbal!
    You would weep if you know that Pakistan is now bleeding,
    Kashmir is bleeding, Chechnya is bleeding, Moroland is bleeding,
    And Acheh is bleeding!
    And Indian Muslims are burned alive!
    A Muslim holocaust is in the making!
    Do you know that you cannot call the Slave Master and his friends terrorists?
    Only the victims who fight back are terrorists,
    Never mind if the Zionist media terrorizes truth or Palestinians or Muslims.
    Do you know that
    Those who preach pluralism cannot give space to the Din of Islam?
    Those who preach democracy in Europe cannot accomodate it in Indonesia, Algeria and Turkey lest would be liberated.

    O Iqbal!
    Do you know that Islam is to be tolerated by the New Slave Master only if it is Protestantized, Liberalized, Secularized or Westernized?
    Only if it is confined to the mosque, to mysticism,
    Only if it preaches that all religions are the same.

    O Iqbal!
    Have you heard what George Tenet said other day:
    “The United States is mightier than the Roman Empire and Israel is our friend.”
    If you want “peace” you have to lick our shoes,
    or else you will be terrorized in the name of peace,
    Or else, we will send the thugs and robbers to loot your banks
    And they blame you
    for “lack of transparency” and “poor corporate governance”.

    O Iqbal!
    Sixty four years after you returned to the Mercy of Ar-Rahman
    The world of the Musulman is still in disarray
    As beggars, we wait for crumbs to fall from the Slave Master’s plate
    Like hungry wolves, we bark and bite one another and plunge at one another’s throat in the name of Jihad
    Killing more of our kind than the real enemy,
    Kafirizing more than we can Islamize,
    Monopolizing the Paradise of Al-Rahman to one’s own Jama’ah
    While the Slave Master and his friends rejoice at the Muslim tragedy,
    acting their script.

    O Iqbal!
    Don’t turn in your grave if I tell you
    that the Muslim world is the champion today in corruption and illiteracy
    Or, that our rulers are among the smartest in deceiving the masses,
    Having mastered the art from Machiavelli’s Prince.
    Or, that some of our elites are the greatest drinkers of the wine of Kafirun,
    intoxicated, they try to sell cheap versions of it in their stores,
    beguiling the local youth as they deconstruct the blessed Zam-Zam to make it taste like beer and wine,
    and succeeding in making the young worship celebrities as divine.
    Or, that the Muslim Malay community excels in fitnah menfitnah
    pouring the poison of hatred where love once stood.

    O Iqbal!
    Where is the ishq that used to drive you to divine ecstasy?
    Where is the nur that illumines the heart and obliterates man’s egoism?
    Where is the mahabbah and rahmah that forge the bonds of love and salam?
    Where is the hidayah that destroys insincerity, hypocrisy and greed?
    Where is the ‘ilm that elevates the soul to its True Master?
    Where is the taqwa that imbues thought and action with righteosness?
    Where is the bal-i-jibrail that will deliver us from this earthly misery?…
    Can the Khairu Ummatin ever emerge from robots, rubbles and bubbles?

    O Iqbal!
    Behind this veil of melancholy, I see an array of hope,
    In the places of today’s Pharaoh, many Moses are being born,
    Out of the gospel of Trinity into the glad of Tawhid,
    Among the ruins of Cordoba, I met Sister Tamara,
    a blend of the tulip of the Occident and the rose of the Orient.
    Many more Tamaras are blossoming
    in the wasteland of modernity and post-modernism,
    lighting candles in the dungeons and hedonism.
    Many more Bilals are growing up in Harlem
    to proclaim the rise of Isa, son of Maryam.
    From the minarets of New York, London and Paris,
    He will preach the true meaning of “La ilaha illa’Llah, Muhammad Rasulu’Llah”.

    Yes, O Iqbal, the sun will rise in the West
    As Musa (alaihi’s s-salam) rose in the palace of Firaun.

    Muhammad Kamal Hassan
    I.I.U.M. Gombak, 3rd July 2002.

    • Abu Saif says:

      waalaikum al-salam wbt ya akhi al-aziz.

      thanks for sharing. I wrote read this poem once but feel like reading it for the first time, again..

  5. 'Afifah Azam says:

    after all, life is t00 short to be anything but happy….with Islamic envir0nment :)

    c0ngrats ustaz, spreading the da’wah everywhere, everyone, insha allah ameen~~

  6. Anonymous says:

    tahniah ustaz

    i enjoy your blog

    always encourage me

  7. hazmer says:

    cantik blog baru ustaz…..mkin sedap mata memandang…

  8. nurulhidayah says:

    salam ustaz….
    tahniah.suka sgt dgn imej baru blog ustaz ni.sgt friendly….hehe.dlu kurang ckit ke?xbmksud cmtu.

  9. Me says:

    Assalamualaikum ustaz,

    Tahniah ustaz, semoga apa yang ustaz ingin sampaikan dapat disebarkan dengan lebih meluas.

    p/s nampak ust kat kenduri kawin sedara di Gombak semalam, tapi segan nak tegur sebab Dr. tak ada. Kita sempat berkenalan dalam program di Putrajaya..

  10. abu saif fan says:

    Assalamualaikum ustaz,

    I became your fan because I read your post on Lebih Irish Dari Irish. That made me curious and been visitng your blog.

    Saya kagum dgn Ustaz sebab tak banyak blog Ustaz2 lain. Saya bercita cita agar anak saya dapat ikut jejak Ustaz, jadi scholar with strong Islamic foundation and knowledge.

    Saya juga harap agar masyarakat lebih sedar bahawa Islamic studies bukan last option atau untuk anak anak yang “hopeless in mainstream academic” & nakal. Semoga artikle The Star ti dapat diterjemah dan di siar untuk para ibu bapa, terutamanya yang tak mengunjung blog Ustaz.

    Salam Ustaz.

  11. Hello Ustaz,

    Rasa accomplished juga nampak respons untuk artikel tu :) Terutamanya dengan drama kat Malaysia s’krang ni.

    Harap-harap lbh ramai yg akan mengunjungi blog ni, esp non-Muslims who want to learn more about Islam.

    • Abu Saif says:

      @penulis surat khabar tebal,

      Hi there Priya,

      Many thanks… nak ucapkan terima kasih pun, rasanya tak terucap. Terima kasih kerana mengolah dengan begitu baik artikel semalam. Politic can sometimes disappointed us, but never with education.

      Saya harap artikel semalam boleh sejukkan sedikit kepanasan isu semasa sekarang ini dan again, thanks a million, friend.

  12. sharifah says:

    salam warahmatullah

    before, i was thinking the same. i thought Islamic studies are like the second option after you ineligible to further your studies in academic mainstream.

    until i have been approached by a person who studied Syariah in Al Azhar University. i thought of rejecting him. but somehow i accepted him for the support i received from my families.

    what amazed me the most was, he was a top student in his secondary school. ‘A’ for all the pure science subjects-people might be thinking of why he didnt pursue his study in medicine or engineering or architecture.

    when i asked him why he didnt choose medicine, he replied.. ” i follow my heart based on the guidance from Allah”..

    i inspired by him. to do the very best in whatever field you take. he said.. you don’t have to be genius or intelligent.. but you have to let the sweat shed naturally~ :)

  13. penulisan ustaz memang best..=)

  14. ummiZahraa says:

    Salam ustaz,

    Insya Allah, saya akan uar-uarkan blog ini kepada pelajar non-muslim saya.

  15. nabil says:

    ???? ????!!!

  16. dr.radzi says:

    aslmkum ustaz….

    congratulations… u have started a good example. i wish i can follow your steps.=)
    im trying to write more English article after this so that i can attract non muslim readers to know about Islam. sharing is caring, right ustaz? hehe…
    wassalam.

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