Jumaat, 3 Jun 2011

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

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The Malaysian Insider :: Food


Hitting the right notes with comfort food

Posted: 03 Jun 2011 05:32 PM PDT

Sweet and Spicy Crabs... you will want some mantou to soak up the sauce.

The Peking Bone has tender chunks of meat in a dark sweet sauce.

SHAH ALAM, June 4 — It's a new restaurant in a growing suburb, trying to find the right formula for success as it dishes out goodies to regular diners who live or work here.

Restoran KK Ocean Sky in Kota Kemuning, Shah Alam, has somewhat succeeded, not only in the wide range of dishes on its menu, but also its reasonable price point.  On a weekend you would find families dining there.

It's comfort food you get here: Peking Bone (braised pork), Claypot Brinjal with Salted Fish, Spicy Sweet and Sour Crab, Penang Curry Fishhead, Fei Choi Tofu and Twin Style Prawns, and Traditional Style Steamed Garoupa among others.

The Claypot Brinjal with Salted Fish is a winner here.

The Peking Bone is like a Tung Por Yook. It's pork belly attached to a prime rib. The rib is roasted, then braised till the meat is tender and succulent. The fatty meat glistens, doused in the dark sweet sauce, and make flavourful bites.

The Claypot Brinjal with Salted Fish was a hit all round. You could get the stirring aroma of the salted fish in the braised creamy brinjal with minced pork and mushrooms, with chilli and spring onions. Truly a home-style dish, this went so well with rice.

The Penang Curry Fishhead had a meaty garoupa fishhead in a curry with all the right nuances.  The fragrance of the spices came through in this curry rich with coconut milk. For me the best part of a good fish curry is not only the fish but also the vegetables — eggplant, tomato, long beans and ladies fingers. These had soaked in all the flavours of the scrumptious curry that also had lots of Indian curry leaves in it.

Creamy and luscious... the Penang Fish Head Curry.

If you have children eating with you, the Fei Choi Tofu is a good choice. It has fish paste blended with tofu, shaped up, fried and finished with an eggy sauce with crabmeat, chopped prawns and baby bok choi. The tofu patties were rather bland but they had a smooth and bouncy texture.

The Traditional Steamed Garoupa has crispy ginger shreds and garlic to give it a lift.

We were told that the Traditional Style Steamed Garoupa has found favour with the regulars, because of its sauce. It's a lightly sweet one, tasting all the better because of the crispy fried ginger shreds and garlic on top of the fish.

Twin Style Prawns presented large prawns cooked Indonesian style in a sweet curry sauce on one side, and a Kam Sar one with the prawns deepfried, finished in a butter sauce and coated with chicken floss. Of the two I preferred the Kam Sar one — the prawns had a rich aroma and the sticky creamy sauce coating them was delicious.

Twin Style Prawns... done perfectly.

The Spicy Sweet and Sour Crabs would have tasted better if the sauce had been less sweet. It needed a tart lift from perhaps a little vinegar. Still, the thick sauce, with lots of ginger and chilli spicing it up, had those at our table asking for fried mantou to mop it up.

The prices: The Peking Bone is RM20, Claypot Brinjal RM12, Fei Choi Tofu RM12, Curry Fishhead RM25, Crabs RM42 a kg and Steamed Garoupa RM6 per 100g.

At lunch time, you can choose from a menu of 100 dishes, with each priced at RM10. You can get Pork with Salted Fish, Mantis Shrimps with ginger and spring onion, Golden Spicy Venison, Mango Chicken Chop and Marmite Sparerib, among others.

Restoran KK Ocean Sky is located at 29 Jalan Anggerik Vanilla, AB31/AB, Kota Kemuning, tel 03-5122 8559, 016 562 2891.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports


Monte Carlo Rally returns to world championship

Posted: 03 Jun 2011 08:49 AM PDT

BARCELONA, June 3 — The Monte Carlo Rally will return to the world championship calendar next year for the first time since 2008, the governing International Automobile Federation (FIA) said on Friday.

However Abu Dhabi's expected debut has been deferred for at least a year.

"Abu Dhabi, previously published on the calendar subject to approval of the Event Business Plan, has been removed from the 2012 calendar," the FIA said.

"The organiser is invited to submit a proposal to run a candidate event for possible future inclusion in the series."

Monte Carlo, the most prestigious and historic event in rallying, returns to its traditional season—opening slot with a Jan 22 date.

The rally, first run in 1911, has been part of the FIA—sanctioned Intercontinental Rally Challenge series for the past three years.

2012 calendar:

January 22 — Monte Carlo

February 12 — Sweden

March 11 — Mexico

April 1 — Portugal

April 29 — Argentina

May 27 — Greece*

June 24 — New Zealand

August 5 — Finland

August 26 — Germany

September 16 — Britain

October 7 — France

October — Italy*

* Date subject to confirmation. Greece could be June 3. — Reuters

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Sri Lanka strike early in second test at Lord’s

Posted: 03 Jun 2011 06:41 AM PDT

England's Alastair Cook hits a four during the second cricket test match against Sri Lanka at Lord's in London on June 3, 2011. — Reuters pic

LONDON, June 3 — Sri Lanka dismissed the top three England batsmen within half an hour today to fully justify their decision to field first on the opening day of the second test at Lord's.

Captain Andrew Strauss (4), Jonathan Trott (2) and Kevin Pietersen (2) were all back in the pavilion on a gloriously sunny morning before the first drinks break.

At lunch, England had rallied to 75 for three with Alastair Cook and Ian Bell both on 32. The early honours, though, went to Sri Lanka with Suranga Lakmal regularly beating the bat during a lengthy opening spell.

Sri Lanka, beaten by an innings in the first test in Cardiff after a dismal collapse on Monday, responded by picking four pace bowlers and dropping spinner Ajantha Mendis, who no longer mystifies the England batsmen.

Tillakaratne Dilshan then backed his bowlers to exploit any early life in the pitch by asking England to bat after winning the toss.

After a cautious start, both the first two wickets fell to lbw decisions.

Strauss missed a ball from Chanaka Welegedara, bowling lively left-arm from the Pavilion End, playing across the line to a ball which would have struck his leg stump.

Trott, who scored a double century in Cardiff, propped forward to a full-length delivery from Lakmal without moving his feet and was beaten by another ball destined to hit leg stump. The batsman asked for a referral but the replay showed umpire Billy Doctrove had made the correct call.

Pietersen then reached for a ball from Lakmal wide of the off-stump and sliced it to gully where Dilshan gratefully seized a tumbling catch.

Bell confidently hooked his first delivery from Lakmal to the boundary but he, too, was troubled by the late movement and was lucky two edges off the same bowler went to the boundary and not to hand.

He played two more authentic shots for off-side boundaries while Cook concentrated on survival at the other end. — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features

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New York neighbourhood first to go wireless

Posted: 03 Jun 2011 08:23 AM PDT

NEW YORK, June 3 — A waterfront area in the New York borough of Brooklyn has become the first city neighbourhood to feature free wireless service on streets and in parks and plazas.

DUMBO, short for Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass, already has a reputation for innovative projects. Several formerly abandoned and neglected structures there have been transformed into eco-friendly offices and apartment buildings.

"We are encouraging people to step out of their offices and homes and engage with one another and the neighborhood in new and different ways," said Alexandria Sica, the executive director of the DUMBO Business Improvement District (BIB).

"Creativity can literally flow into the streets. Businesses will be born in Brooklyn Bridge Park."

DUMBO went wireless through a joint project by BID, NYCwireless, a nonprofit organisation which helps install free wireless service, and property broker Two Trees Management Co.

Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz said that he had high hopes for the area.

"One day, mark my words, this area will rival Silicon Valley in terms of high tech ingenuity," he said in a statement. "It's only natural that DUMBO is the first neighborhood to be truly connected 24/7."

The DUMBO neighborhood is well known to tourists and locals who visit the neighborhood after crossing the Manhattan Bridge. — Reuters

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BMW i3 set for September debut

Posted: 03 Jun 2011 06:52 AM PDT

The first two vehicles from BMW I — AFP pic

FRANKFURT, June 3 — BMW is gearing up to unveil its first electric car under the new BMW i brand, according to reports from Germany.

The Munich-based automaker is set to unveil the i3, the first of two initial all-electric models, this September at the Frankfurt Motor Show, writes German motoring blog Auto Motor and Sport.

The new model will feature a 100kW electric motor and a range of 160km, says the blog, with an expected market launch in 2013.

The BMW i sub-brand was launched earlier this year by the premium German manufacturer, promising to put two electric vehicles on the road in the shape of the i3 and the larger i8.

Despite not releasing more than design sketches to date, the sub-brand has already made a name for itself, with over 200,000 fans on Facebook and a high-profile sponsorship of technology blog Mashable's Global Innovation Series.

It announced via Twitter this week that the first plant for carbon fiber production was ready and that test production of the materials used in the lightweight i3 and i8 models was set to begin.

This could be an important step — unlike other electric models such as the Ford Focus Electric and Mitsubishi i-MiEV, the i3 will be built ground-up as an electric vehicle, allowing BMW engineers to experiment with the electric concept.

However, it does mean that the design could change dramatically from the Mega City Vehicle, upon which the i3 is reportedly based, and even the car which is presented in Frankfurt, before 2013.

The 64th Frankfurt Motor Show runs September 15-25 in Frankfurt, Germany.

For a look at some of the first design concepts, see http://youtu.be/L7Z9j07uSyI

http://www.iaa.de/en/visitors/. — AFP-Relaxnews

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

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John Malkovich robbed in Prague

Posted: 03 Jun 2011 06:31 AM PDT

Malkovich was in Prague to attend the Spring music festival. — Reuters pic

PRAGUE, June 3 — Being John Malkovich proved to be rather less fun than the eponymous comedy movie today after the American actor found out his Prague hotel room had been burgled.

The theft was an embarrassment to the historic Czech capital, a popular European tourist destination that still struggles with a post-communist legacy of taxi drivers and waiters fleecing foreign visitors.

"We can confirm than an investigation is under way in the case of the disappearance of Mr Malkovich's personal belongings," said a spokeswoman for the Mandarin Oriental hotel.

Malkovich, 57, performed in the murder melodrama "Infernal Comedy," based on a real Austrian serial killer, at the Prague Spring music festival yesterday, and was due to fly to Poland today.

News website dnes.cz quoted the festival's director as saying the thief took two mobile phones.

Malkovich starred in the 1999 comedy "Being John Malkovich" where a puppeteer finds a passage into the mind of Malkovich.

He was nominated for best supporting actor Oscar for "In the Line of Fire" and "Places in the Heart." — Reuters

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TV execs confirm Hollywood’s liberal agenda

Posted: 03 Jun 2011 04:50 AM PDT

Right-wingers such as former Alaska governor Sarah Palin are often targeted by Hollywood. — Reuters pic

LOS ANGELES, June 3 — In clips that will hit the Internet to promote a new book, producers including "Friends" co-creator Marta Kauffman and "House" creator David Shore say Hollywood discriminates against and belittles conservatives.

Some of TV's top executives from the past four decades may have gotten more than they bargained for when they agreed to be interviewed for a politically charged book that was released Tuesday, because video of their controversial remarks will soon be hitting the Internet.

The book makes the case that TV industry executives, writers and producers use their clout to advance a liberal political agenda. The author bases his thesis on, among other things, 39 taped interviews that he'll roll out piecemeal during the next three weeks.

The Hollywood Reporter obtained several of the not-yet-released clips. Each contains a snippet of an interview, usually some historical footage of the TV shows the interviewee was responsible for and, naturally, a plea to purchase the book, "Primetime Propaganda" by Ben Shapiro and published by Broad Side, an imprint of HarperCollins.

In one video, Kauffman says that when she cast Candace Gingrich-Jones, half-sister of Republican former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, as the minister of a lesbian wedding in a "Friends" episode, "There was a bit of 'f*** you' in it to the right wing."

Harris believes Obama's election was proof Hollywood's agenda was working. — Reuters pic

Kauffman also acknowledges she "put together a staff of mostly liberal people," which is another major point of Shapiro's book: that conservatives aren't welcome in Hollywood.

Maybe that's because they're "idiots" and have "medieval minds." At least that's what "Soap" and "Golden Girls" creator Susan Harris thinks of TV's conservative critics.

However, the ranks of dumb right-wingers has dwindled, according to Harris, whose video has her saying: "At least, you know, we put Obama in office, and so people, I think, are getting — have gotten — a little bit smarter."

Some of the videos have executives making rather obvious revelations, such as Larry Gelbart and Gene Reynolds talking about pacifist messages in "M*A*S*H" or "MacGyver" producer Vin Di Bona saying anti-gun messages were a recurring theme in that show.

But an additional video has Di Bona, who also created "America's Funniest Home Videos," bluntly approving a lack of political diversity in Hollywood. When Shapiro asks what he thinks of conservative critics who say everyone in Hollywood is liberal, Di Bona responds: "I think it's probably accurate, and I'm happy about it."

Another video has Leonard Goldberg — who executive produces "Blue Bloods" for CBS and a few decades ago executive produced such hits as "Fantasy Island," "Charlie's Angels" and "Starsky and Hutch" — saying that liberalism in the TV industry is "100 per cent dominant, and anyone who denies it is kidding, or not telling the truth."

Shapiro asks if politics are a barrier to entry. "Absolutely," Goldberg says.

When Shapiro tells Fred Pierce, the president of ABC in the 1980s who was instrumental in Disney's acquisition of ESPN, that "It's very difficult for people who are politically conservative to break in" to television, he responds: "I can't argue that point." Those who don't lean left, he says, "don't promote it. It stays underground."

Another video rolling out soon has "House" creator David Shore acknowledging that "there is an assumption in this town that everybody is on the left side of the spectrum, and that the few people on the right side, I think people look at them somewhat aghast, and I'm sure it doesn't help them."

In the book, subtitled "The true Hollywood story of how the left took over your TV," Shapiro also tells anecdotes of bias against conservatives. One example is Dwight Schultz, best known for his roles as Murdock in "The A-Team" and Barclay in "Star Trek: The Next Generation."

The late Bruce Paltrow knew that Schultz was a fan of President Ronald Reagan. When Schultz showed up to audition for "St Elsewhere," a show Paltrow produced, to read for the part of Fiscus, Paltrow told him: "There's not going to be a Reagan a—hole on this show!" The part went to Howie Mandel.

"Most nepotism in Hollywood isn't familial, it's ideological," Shapiro writes in the book. "Friends hire friends. And those friends just happen to share their politics."

Another video Shapiro will release shortly has producer-director Nicholas Meyer being asked point-blank whether conservatives are discriminated against in Hollywood. "Well, I hope so," he answers. Meyer also admits his political agenda for "The Day After," a TV movie he directed for ABC that was seen by 100 million people when it aired in 1983.

"My private, grandiose notion was that this movie would unseat Ronald Reagan when he ran for re-election," Meyer says.

Even seemingly harmless shows like "Happy Days" and "Sesame Street" have been used to advance a progressive agenda, according to Shapiro.

For example, William Bickley, a writer on "The Partridge Family" and a producer on "Happy Days," says he infused Vietnam War protest messages into the latter. "I was into all that kind of masturbation," he says in a soon-to-be-released video.

"Television has been perhaps the most impressive weapon in the left's political arsenal," Shapiro argues in the book.

Other upcoming videos include: "Family Ties" creator Gary David Goldberg explaining how he tried to make Republican character Alex Keaton the bad guy but that actor Michael J. Fox was too darn lovable; and president of MTV Networks Entertainment Group Doug Herzog talking about his network having "superpowers" when it comes to its influence over young people.

The advancement of a gay and lesbian political agenda is mentioned by multiple executives, including Marcy Carsey, a producer of "Soap" and "Roseanne," and Desperate Housewives producer Marc Cherry, who is a rarity in Hollywood: a gay Republican.

In her video, Carsey also says she insisted on portraying characters smoking marijuana in "That '70s Show." "If this is a problem for you, we certainly understand, and we just won't do the show," she told executives at Fox.

Shapiro released two videos Tuesday, one featuring COPS creator John Langley saying he's partial to segments where white people are the criminals, and the other has Fred Silverman, the former head of ABC and later NBC, saying "there's only one perspective, and it's a very progressive perspective" in TV comedy today.

Shapiro said the executives felt comfortable talking about politics with him because they assumed, incorrectly, that he is on the left.

"I played on their stereotypes. When I showed up for the interviews, I wore my Harvard Law baseball cap — my name is Ben Shapiro and I attended Harvard, so there's a 98.7 per cent chance I'm a liberal. Except I happen not to be."

"My whole book is a plea for openness in the industry," he added. "Hire people from the other side of the aisle once in a while, or at least stop mocking them." — Reuters pic

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion


The 100 apologies that immortalised Blu Inc

Posted: 02 Jun 2011 05:01 PM PDT

JUNE 3 — Malaysia makes the big news: "Social activist forced to tweet apology to corporation 100 times."

I think that's up there with the other international coverage we get — churches burned down, detaining parliamentarians without trial and banning yoga.

What actually happened

So this all began with a tweet by Fahmi Fadzil dated January 25: "My friend's wife, who works at Female magazine, has tendered her resignation because they're giving her so much shit because she's pregnant."

Female magazine is owned by Blu Inc Media and Magazines, who apparently got their knickers all in a twist upon learning of this tweet.

It sounds like some pressure was applied to all the parties involved, resulting in a follow-up tweet from Fahmi that very same day: "I would like to formally & unequivocally apologise to Blu Inc and Female mag for my tweets earlier today. All inconveniences are regretted."

That's quite a retraction — the likes of which you'd never see someone in, say, government making.

Was it convincing? Do we think that Blu Inc really mistreats its pregnant employees? Did Fahmi make a mistake, or was there overwhelming pressure on the various people involved to silence the controversy?

To be perfectly honest, I don't know. I'm not in a position to comment about whether or not Blu Inc is a bad employer. I won't pretend, however, not to be a bit suspicious, given the circumstances.

I can say that as dorky coincidence would have it, I have known Fahmi longer than most. He was a year my junior in high school, and as the incoming head prefect, I remember ceremoniously handing over my tie to him the day I took my last SPM paper (I was an emo 17-year -old). I have known him to be a man of integrity and, more importantly, a man of good intentions.

So, that's how things stood at the end of January 25. So how did it end up with Fahmi having to tweet an apology 100 times?

Apparently Blu Inc threatened to take Fahmi to court and bring against him a defamation suit. The 100 tweets were apparently a compromise settlement.

Textbook PR disaster

As I and others have tweeted, this is clearly turning out to be a PR nightmare for Blu Inc — I would imagine the worst it has ever faced.

They have gone from a company most of us have probably never heard of, to the company credited with replacing "Mind Your Language's" Indian "1,000 apologies sir" with a uniquely Malaysian "#100 apologies!"

Do they deserve all this bad press? I don't know for sure, but being something of a practitioner in this industry as well, I can tell you — it doesn't matter.

I don't mean this in moral terms, but in practical ones — as in, justly or unjustly, they have pretty much been crucified in public opinion, and there may not be a whole lot they can do about it.

Remember that "cross" on Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah's head-dress? You'd be amazed what people will believe.

The Internet, for better or for worse (probably the latter), has this tendency to sometimes exaggerate the worst excess of mob mentality. I say this while admitting fully to being guilty of having fanned some flames myself.

The case of the 100-storey megatower is the other classic example — once the great ball of hate and resentment starts rolling, things like facts and figures start to wield only the smallest influence, if that.

Indignation spreads like fire, and is amplified in ways and at speeds almost impossible prior to the invention of platforms such as Twitter.

The sad truth is, once it reaches a certain point, a negative image is anywhere from difficult to impossible to undo. After all, you don't see any government officials trying to sell us on what a good idea the 100-storey megatower is, do you?

This very visible buzz soon finds its way to the press — print, broadcast, international — and it is soon on everyone's lips.

Once again, I'm not really making any normative value judgments here — only making an observation about the way public perception works online.

This affair may not bring down Blu Inc (imagine, what must advertisers be thinking right now?), but I can't say I would be 100 per cent surprised if the company is affected. Hard to sell magazines and advertising space with this kind of reputation.

Perhaps they'll be best remembered as a cautionary tale in PR textbooks: "Chapter 3: How not to engage with social media."

Conspiracy theorists even suggest that Fahmi and/or his avid tweeter lawyer Syahredzan Johan may have concocted this settlement with this end game in mind (I am reminded of Admiral Ackbar's infamous "It's a trap!") but I for one certainly have no proof of that.

Take-home lessons

So what's the takeaway lesson here? Twitter user though I may be, I shall shy away from excessive grandstanding and chest thumping along the lines of "Don't mess with us, mofos!"

I think politicians, corporations and other entities that rely on good public relations should however take heed, and take some time to think through the consequences of their actions.

If social media is not something one understands, it's perhaps best to consult with people a little more familiar with the landscape (mercenaries like me are always happy to help for a fee).

In Blu Inc's case, in forcing Fahmi down this path, they've succeeded in portraying themselves as the Mercedes that ran over the kapchai motorbike. No matter whose fault the accident was, let's just say it's not looking so hot for the Mercedes.

What they can do now is come up with a full accounting of the case involving the pregnant employee, so that we can at least hear their version (it would be nice to hear from said employee and her husband as well, but that's their choice I guess), and — unless they truly are gluttons for punishment — cease this bizarre insistence on the mimicry of Bart Simpson's famous opening credits blackboard scribbling.

The court of public opinion is a truly fickle, dangerous thing — if you want to survive it, plan ahead and navigate it with great care.

As for Fahmi? At time of writing, it's 18/100 and counting.

* The views expressed here are the personal opinion of the columnist.

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I’m no expert in Islam but…

Posted: 02 Jun 2011 04:46 PM PDT

JUNE 3 — Religion seems to be quite a hot topic whenever it is discussed. This is especially so when it comes to Islam. And even more so when it challenges conventional thought.

I've learnt this over the course of writing my thoughts and opinions openly and frankly all this while and receiving the opinions and thoughts of the readers as well.

Sometimes the comments that I get are just okay and sometimes, they can be quite passionate. The latter is when I feel obligated to respond.

My column last week received quite a range of comments that I felt warranted a proper response from me this week.

There were many that concurred with my thoughts, but no point responding to them. That would just be preaching to the converted.

What I really want to do is to respond to those who disagreed with me. Everyone is definitely entitled to his or her opinion, but right now I have the pen in hand!

Among them were those who raised the fact that I am not credible enough to comment on Islam since I did not take courses on the Quran and Sunnah at University of Malaya.

Someone even accused me of not attending religious talks at the mosque outside of the regular Friday prayers. This must be someone who goes to the same mosque I do. How else would he know?

Apparently, only those who have the right academic qualifications are allowed to comment on Islam. And me, with my odd combination of accounting and journalism degrees, just am not part of that elite group.

This is what has been holding the Muslim community back. People who think that only an elite few should have the right to discuss the religion.

And I wonder if they are referring to the same elite few who ridiculously declared that yoga and poco-poco dancing are haram and need to be banned!

Correct me if I'm wrong, but that sounds very much like a Christian clergyman to me. And even then, the concept of that clergy died long ago together with the Dark Ages in Europe.

In fact, even the Hindu community, with their strict caste system, have changed for the better. Now, religious leaders do not have to be a Brahmin.

My Indian friend (who suffers terribly from all my Indian jokes!), who happens to be from the Kaunder caste, is a Hindu priest at a temple his grandfather founded in Klang.

It's true that the Quran states that scholars should be held with high regard. But it never said that only a select few could be scholars. In fact, everyone is encouraged to be one.

I believe that Islam is a very democratic religion and everyone has a say in it. That's where the concept of consensus came about in the religion.

We the people need to discuss, critique and have dialogue for a better understanding and also for the sake of progression and advancement of Islam.

We the people cannot leave it to the self-proclaimed religious intellectuals to dictate what is to be done, and we to just follow blindly.

With the almost limitless amount of resources we have these days, knowledge can easily be obtained to equip ourselves for discussion and dialogue.

With that being said, we are all human beings and human beings are far from perfect. I am definitely not perfect. And neither are the religious scholars.

Of course, I rightfully admit that I am no religious expert. But I do read, and sometimes, I even think. And the last I checked, I didn't need to enrol at the International Islamic University or Al-Azhar University to do that.

I believe that everyone, lay people and religious scholars included, should actively participate in discussion, debate and interaction for the betterment of the religion and society.

Although I started last week's column by expressing doubt at the Malaysian Muslim's openness to dialogue, I was extremely happy with the comments and opinions that I received due to it.

It proved that although we have differing views, we choose to fight with words and thoughts to prove our points rather than with sticks, stones and guns.

* The views expressed here are the personal opinion of the columnist.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa

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The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa


Isu RHB Bank: Jangan abai nasib pekerja, kata Pemuda Umno

Posted: 03 Jun 2011 01:43 AM PDT

[unable to retrieve full-text content]KUALA LUMPUR, 3 Jun — Pemuda Umno khuatir akan nasib dan kebajikan pekerja-pekerja RHB Bank Bhd ekoran laporan media berhubung persaingan antara Maybank Banking Bhd dan CIMB Group Holdings Bhd untuk mengambil alih RHB Capital Bhd, syarikat induk RHB Bank. Ketuanya Khairy Jamaluddin (gambar) berkata, pihaknya bimbang kerana setiap transaksi ...


Perwakilan PAS mula undi, diramal saji barisan kanan kuat

Posted: 03 Jun 2011 01:30 AM PDT

[unable to retrieve full-text content]ANALISIS, 3 Jun — Sejurus selepas menyampaikan ucapan dasar Presiden, Datuk Seri Abdul Hadi Awang menegaskan berlainan jurusan antara kepimpinan ulama dengan kepimpinan profesional tidak bermakna PAS dikatakan sudah berpecah. Menurut presiden PAS itu, pertembungan antara kumpulan ulama atau profesional bukan perkara baru dalam parti. “Istilah ...


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