Categories
ASEAN

[1889] Of two too different interpretations

Amid the noise that is Perak,[1] other equally if not more important things are creeping under the carpet. One of them is about Sabah.

In Malaysiakini:

The Philippine government has recognised Sulu Sultan Esmail Dalus II’s announcement over the weekend that he will ‘drop’ the suzerainty claim to Sabah since it is ‘complicated’. [Sulu sultan ‘drops’ Sabah suzerainty claim. Joe Fernandez. Malaysiakini. February 2 2009]

But in Philippine Daily Inquirer:

The Sultanate of Sulu on Saturday declared it would assert its property rights over Sabah (formerly North Borneo) regardless of the unresolved territorial dispute between the Philippines and Malaysia. [Sulu sultan asserts rights over Sabah. Erika Sauler. Philippine Daily Inquirer via Asia News Network. February 1 2009]

Honestly, what did the man really say?

I eagerly await for response from the Foreign Ministry.

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

[1] — Perak’s problem over political defections is stirring up a huge debate on constitutional law in Malaysia among its experts.

Several lawyers and election veterans have expressed differing opinions on whether or not Perak State Legislative Assembly Speaker V Sivakumar, has the right to force by-elections in Behrang and Changkat Jering, the two state seats said to have been vacated by their incumbent assemblymen while locked in a public dispute that puts the state government at risk of collapse.

The argument hangs on the validity of the undated and pre-signed letters of resignation from the state’s two PKR assemblymen. [Perak’s headache turning into a constitutional nightmare. Debra Chong. Shannon Teoh. The Malaysian Insider. February 2 2009]

Categories
History & heritage Society

[1888] Of Islamic art, architecture and literature I

Art, architecture and literature are important in history because only by observing works of past civilizations that we can somehow comprehend its culture further. Not only it provides us with precious records but as Walter Denny stated, it also gives us a feeling on how past societies lived. True to it, art, architecture and literature have become few of the most fundamental aspect of history. This is true for all civilizations including Islamic civilizations especially so when it is common for Muslims to consider the religion not as mere religion but instead a way of life. As a way of life, everything is governed by the Islamic law. Therefore, an inspection of Islamic art, architecture and literature offers a path to understanding Islam.

Islam is a monotheistic religion. The first pillar of Islam is to acknowledge the oneness of god and Mohamed is the prophet of god. Islam is particular about the oneness of god and is very strict in its punishment for the sin of syirik, the act of acknowledging the existence of any other god than Allah. In sura 6 ‘The Cattle’, verse 74, the Koran says, “And when Ibrahim said to his sire, Azar: Do you take idols for gods? Surely I see you and your people in manifest error.” There are a few other places where the Koran asserts similar wrongness of worshiping idols and other gods.

To prevent idol worshiping especially, the Koran even disallows any figurative representation of living things. In sura 16 ‘The Bee’, verse 74, “So coins not similitudes for Allah. Surely Allah knows and ye known not”. Therefore, there is a lack of figurative sculpture or painting in Islamic art. The destruction of a Buddhas of Bamyam in Afghanistan by the Taliban reinforced the fact that Muslims do adhere to the ban in one way or another.[1] Nevertheless, Islam “does not forbid representation of humans, animals and birds in secular context.”[2]

Since Muslim artists had limited options, they had to find another way to express themselves and they did this by concentrating on calligraphy and decoration. As we observe in history, they have truly mastered these arts.

Of all art forms they excelled in, they take pride and cherish their mastery in calligraphy which is called khat in Arabic. That is so because “calligraphy is one art form in Islam explicitly and positively sanctioned by God.”[3] Oftentimes, calligraphic activities decorate Koranic verses.

Arabic calligraphy is identified by two main features. First, “slant-clipped reed pen” is used in order to write or rather draw the words. Secondly, there are rules to be adhered to and each style has its own rule. These rules are the ones that made each calligraphic style differ from one another.[4]

During the reign of Caliph Uthman (644 — 656 CE), he ordered the gathering of Koranic verses into an official text that we know today. When the gathering of verses finally completed, calligraphy was used as “a form of decoration for the greater glory of Allah’s words.”[5]

While breath of calligraphy was greatly expanded under Islam, it began with the development of the Arabic language during pre-Islamic period. Arabic letters were derived from Semitic scripts.[6] It has 28 letters with 18 basic forms.[7] It was later further developed by the Nabataean, an Arabic tribe originating from northern Arabian Peninsula and adopted by other literate Arabic tribe including the Quraisy. It was around this time that a writing system style called Jazm was popular among the Arabs. Jazm was an advanced version of the scripts.[8]

There were two forms of scripts that were used in those times. The first type was “dry writing” and the other was “soft writing”.

The first type was later known as the kufic style. As the name suggests, the style “received its name from the town in which it was first put into official use”, which was Kufa, located in modern day Iraq.[9] The form can be identified easily by its ”angular and sober” style. Kufic characters also seem to have “geometrical intricacies”.[10] The other type was less angular and thus making it distinctly different from kufic. The soft writing style was more practical than its counterpart and later became the foundation for modern styles.[11]

As Islam spread during its golden age, so did the Arabic language and the art of khat. Societies of newly conquered areas especially Persia and to some extend Anatolia absorbed the language and its arts. Although local language was still used, Arabic characters managed to slip into local writing system. As this happened, local experts in calligraphy came into existence and further revolutionized it. In fact, one of the most important styles in calligraphy the naskh was invented by a Persian calligrapher named Mir Ali Sultan al-Tabrizi. In Turkey, Arif Hikmet created the Sunbuli style, “which had a short vogue.”[12]

Apart from the practice of calligraphy as a work of art, Muslim artists also pursued other areas that do not go against Islam. One of the areas is the art of decoration.

Islamic decoration is unique compared to other cultures and this is simply because of the same reason why calligraphy is pursued by Muslims. This resulted in the rareness of sculpture and painting that were prevalent in Greek and Roman civilizations. However, “this deficit is compensated with a richness in ornamentation on the lavish carved plaster paneling, wall tiling and glazed mosaics.”[13] The main themes used in the decorative art are mainly centered on nature and geometry.

Muslim artisans so frequently used geometry in their works that we now called such work as arabesque. Arabesque is simply a collection of a single geometrical pattern repeated on and on until simple shapes became a complex design. Sometimes, the design is “so complicated that they rarely call to mind their sources of origin.”[14]

Both calligraphy and arabesque were prominently used in Islamic architecture. Walls of all prominent buildings Muslims built are covered with them to no end.

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

[1] — [Taliban Show Off Remains of Ancient Buddha Statues. Kathy Gannon. The Independent via National Geographic. March 27 2001]

[2] — [Islamic Art. Detroit Institute of Art. April 1 2003]

[3] — [The Islamic Impact. Page 141. Yvonne Haddad. Byron Haines. Ellison Findly. New York. Syracuse University Press. 1984]

[4] — [The Calligraphy of Islam: The Reflections of the State of the Art. Page 6. Mohamed U. Zakariya. Washington D.C. Georgetown University. 1983]

[5] — [The Spread of Islam. Page 119. Information missing]

[6] — [Islamic Arts. Islamic Arts and Architecture Organization. April 1 2003]

[7] — [The Calligraphy of Islam: The Reflections of the State of the Art. Page 2. Mohamed U. Zakariya. Washington D.C. Georgetown University. 1983]

[8] — [Islamic Arts. Islamic Arts and Architecture Organization. April 1 2003]

[9] — [Arabic Writing. B. Moritz. Encyclopedia of Islam. 1913]

[10] — [The Spread of Islam. Page 120. Information missing]

[11] — [The Calligraphy of Islam: The Reflections of the State of the Art. Page 2. Mohamed U. Zakariya. Washington D.C. Georgetown University. 1983]

[12] — [Ibid. Page 29]

[13] — [The Umayyad Page 17. Information missing]

[14] — [Ibid]

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

I recently rediscovered a box full of short papers I worked on while in Michigan. This is part 1 of a sophomore paper I wrote in 2003. I place it here out of concern these papers might one day lost to harsh elements. For this particular paper, several pages of citation are already lost due to mishandling and my own irreverence for my own work.

At the moment, I am praying to find papers that I vividly remember: econometric paper on foreign exchange, the politics of climate change (this is probably the thickest paper that I remember; the research to produce this paper took months to complete! That is crazy considering it was just a junior paper) and I think, economic model on climate change.

Categories
Photography Society

[1887] Of move over

In Malaysia, traffic regulations are meant to be broken.

Some rights reserved. By Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams

Categories
Earthly Strip Economics

[1886] Of Earthly Strip: Who needs more toilet bowls?

Some right reserved.

For our joint sake, please do not send our money down the hole.

Categories
Economics Liberty

[1885] Of freer market to save Zimbabwe

After millions of percent of inflation[0], Zimbabwe finally gets on the path of freer market as well as dollarization to fight inflation:

Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — Zimbabweans will be able to trade in any currency they choose and the government will abandon price controls with immediate effect, acting finance minister Patrick Chinamasa said today.

Chinamasa, from President Robert Mugabe’s Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front party, told parliament that price controls would be abandoned because they had ”unintentionally’’ harmed businesses and added to Zimbabwe’s hyperinflation. [Zimbabwe Abandons Price Controls, Promotes Currency Trading. Brian Latham. Bloomberg. January 29 2009]

This is progress, amid horrible set of statist policies practiced by the tyrant Mugabe.

Previously, Zimbabwe passed an idiotic policy making inflation illegal as inflation shot through the roof and upward beyond the sky . That is as stupid as making dying illegal. On top of that, Mugabe administration ordered prices to be reduced, figuring that once inflation was illegal, there would be no more inflation. Right? Wrong.

Even the uneducated traders in Zimbabwe knows this and many violated that ban in the name of practicality. There was risk to that: those who refused to cut prices as sanctioned by the autocratic economic-illiterate government were beaten by pro-Mugabe groups.[1] Meanwhile, Zimbabwe kept printing money, adding fuel to the inflationary fire.

Needless to say, the policies did not stop inflation from increasing exponentially to make the Zimbabwean dollar more worthless than worthless. When inflation was about 10,000% in 2007, it was the world’s highest at that time.[2] With inflation at many sextillion (how many zeroes are there in a sextillion?) percent on annual basis now, it is probably the highest in whole history of human kind.[2a]

In fact, they printed so much money, Zimbabwe ran out of paper to print more money![3] It became so bad that selling the money as paper might worth more than having the paper functioning as money.

But Zimbabweans could give a sigh of relief now. With freer policies, they lives are going to get slightly better.

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

[0] — The country is in the grip of world-record hyperinflation which has left the Zimbabwean dollar virtually worthless – 231,000,000% in July 2008, the most recent figure released. [Zimbabwe abandons its currency . BBC News. January 29 2009]

[1] — JOHANNESBURG, July 3 — Zimbabwe’s week-old campaign to quell its rampant inflation by physically forcing merchants to lower prices is edging the nation close to chaos, according to some economists and merchants.

As the police and a pro-government youth militia swept into shops and factories, threatening arrest and worse unless prices were rolled back, staple foods vanished from store shelves and some merchants reported huge losses. News reports stated that some shopkeepers who refused to lower prices were beaten by the youth militia, known as the ”Green Bombers” after the color of their fatigues. [Zimbabwe Price Controls Cause Chaos. Michael Wines. New York Times. July 3 2007]

[2] —”People are losing millions and millions and millions of dollars,” said one Bulawayo merchant, referring to the Zimbabwean currency, which has been rendered increasingly worthless given the nation’s inflation, the world’s highest. ”Everyone is now running out of stock and not being able to replace it.” [Zimbabwe Price Controls Cause Chaos. Michael Wines. New York Times. July 3 2007]

[2a] —”People are losing millions and millions and millions of dollars,” said one Bulawayo merchant, referring to the Zimbabwean currency, which has been rendered increasingly worthless given the nation’s inflation, the world’s highest. ”Everyone is now running out of stock and not being able to replace it.” [New Hyperinflation Index (HHIZ) Puts Zimbabwe Inflation at 89.7 Sextillion Percent. Steve H. Hanke. Cato Institute. November 14 2008]

[3] — Zimbabwe is experiencing a shortage of paper needed to print local currency banknotes, the newspaper said. [Zimbabwe Debates Using Dollar, Rand for Budget, Herald Reports. Brian Latham. Bloomberg. January 27 2009]