*Ini pidatonya* : *https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9RUc7nb2Auw
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9RUc7nb2Auw>*

On Mon, Sep 14, 2020 at 11:53 AM 'Lusi D.' [email protected] [GELORA45] <
[email protected]> wrote:

>
>
> Kontradiksi internnya makin nampak, makin mudah analisis latar
> belakangnya dan pidato Dien Samsudin di PBB. Lusi.-
>
> 1.:
>
> BERANDA • BERITA • CORONAVIRUS • UTAMA
>
> PSBB Anies: Diprotes Menterinya Jokowi, Dipuji Satgas Covid-19
>
> JAKARTA, hajinews.id – Langkah Gubernur DKI Jakarta Anies Baswedan
> memperketat pembatasan sosial berskala besar (PSBB) mulai Senin ini
> (14/9/2020), menuai pujian dari Ketua Satuan Tugas Penanganan Covid-19
> Letnan Jenderal TNI Doni Monardo.
>
> Doni menilai kebijakan menerapkan PSBB secara ketat di wilayah ibu kota
> adalah langkah tepat yang telah dipertimbangkan oleh Anies. “Kami
> memberikan apresiasi kepada Gubernur DKI Bapak Anies Taswedan yang
> telah bijaksana memilih opsi tetap kesehatan tetapi juga
> mempertimbangkan masyarakat yang memang memerlukan aktivitas
> sehari-hari untuk mendapatkan penghasilan untuk kebutuhan sehari-hari,”
> ujarnya dalam talkshow yang disiarkan Youtube BNPB, Ahad (13/9/2020).
>
> Doni menegaskan, sebelum Anies memutuskan untuk memperketat PSBB juga
> sudah berkonsultasi dengan pihaknya. “Sebelum ada keputusan yang
> diambil oleh bapak gubernur DKI, beliau juga konsultasi kepada saya.
> Bagaimana kira-kira pendapat Pak Doni? Saya bilang ‘Pak gubernur
> statusnya masih merah, artinya merah ini adalah risiko tinggi, jadi
> jangan dikendorkan’,” tutur Doni.
>
> Eks Danpaspampres itu menjelaskan bahwa sejak awal Pemprov DKI Jakarta
> belum pernah mencabut PSBB. “Jadi, sepanjang waktu sampai dengan
> sekarang ini adalah ya PSBB. Dan PSBB ya PSBB. Nggak ada istilah lain
> selain PSBB,” terang Doni.
>
> Sebelumnya, langkah Anies menerapkan PSBB secara ketat diprotes oleh
> Menteri Koordinator Bidang Perekonomian Airlangga Hartarto. Politisi
> Partai Golkar itu menyebut jebloknya indeks harga saham gabungan (IHSG)
> akibat adanya kebijakan PSBB total yang diumumkan Anies.
>
> Airlangga pun meminta Anies untuk menerapkan jam kerja yang fleksibel
> selama kebijakan PSBB. Selain itu, Airlangga juga turut mempersoalkan
> kebijakan Anies terkait diberlakukannya kembali sistem ganjil genap.
>
> Anies memutuskan menarik rem darurat untuk kembali memberlakukan PSBB
> secara ketat di DKI Jakarta mulai Senin ini (14/9/2020), untuk menekan
> tingginya angka kasus positif Covid-19.
>
> Sementara itu, pada Ahad (13/9/2020), kasus baru Covid-19 harian di
> Jakarta sebanyak 1.492 kasus, yang merupakan gabungan dari beberapa
> haris hasil pemeriksaan. Dengan angka tersebut, jumlah total kasus
> akibat paparan virus corona jenis baru ini adalah 54.864 kasus,
> bertambah signifikan dari sebelumnya sejumlah 53.761. (rah/berbagai
> sumber)
>
> 2.:
>
> BERANDA • BERITA • UTAMA
>
> Heboh di Medsos, Video Pidato Tokoh KAMI Dien Syamsuddin di Markas
> Besar PBB
>
> HAJINEWS.ID – Video tokoh Koalisi Aksi Menyelamatkan Indonesia (KAMI)
> Din Syamsuddin di markas besar Perserikatan Bangsa-Bangsa (PBB) di New
> York, Amerika Serikat belakangan ini menghebohkan jagad media sosial.
>
> Sejatinya, video itu adalah video yang cukup lama, tepatnya pada tahun
> 2012 lalu. Saat pria bernama lengkap Prof. Dr. Muhammad Sirajuddin
> Syamsuddin, MA itu menjabat sebagai Ketua Umum PP Muhammadiyah.
>
> Din saat itu berpidato dalam acara peringatan World Interfaith Harmony
> Week 2012 di New York, AS, pada Selasa (07/02/2012). Din Syamsuddin
> diundang Pimpinan Sidang Umum untuk mewakili Islam dari seluruh dunia.
>
> Memang, Din Syamsudin dikenal sebagai sosok pemimpin umat Islam, bukan
> karena jabatannya sebagai Ketua Umum Muhammadiyah saat itu, melainkan
> karena kemampuan berdialog yang ia miliki dengan seluruh umat beragama,
> baik dengan sesama umat Islam maupun umat beragama lainnya di seluruh
> dunia.
>
> Dalam pidato yang mendapatkan aplaus berulang kali itu, Din Syamsuddin
> menyampaikan bahwa konflik di tahun 2012 menjadi karakteristik dunia
> saat itu.
>
> Perang, katanya, tetap menjadi instrument sejumlah negara di dunia
> dalam menyelesaikan perbedaan di antara mereka.
>
> “Untuk itu, kita harus melakukan hal yang terbaik untuk meninggalkan
> penggunaan kekerasan dan perang sebagai resolusi konflik,” kata Din
> Syamsuddin dalam pidatonya dengan topik Mediation of Conflict through
> Interfaith Dialogues.
>
> Di forum yang luar biasa itu, Din Syamsuddin juga menekankan pentingnya
> untuk mengedepankan mediasi dan dialog dalam memecahkan masalah atas
> kepentingan sejumlah negara yang bertikai.
>
> Dia juga menginginkan adanya penguatan peran agama dalam menyampaikan
> pesan perdamaian.
>
> “Perbedaan baik dalam agama, etnis, budaya dan bahkan peradaban, akan
> terus menjadi fakta kehidupan, akan tetapi perbedaan tersebut bukan
> berarti menjadi alasan bahwa manusia tidak bisa hidup berdampingan,”
> katanya.
>
> Pada even tahunan berdasarkan resolusi PBB tersebut, Din juga
> menyampaikan mengenai masih besarnya angka kemiskinan, buta huruf,
> penyakit mematikan, dan juga kasus-kasus ketidakadilan menjadi
> tantangan yang sulit bagi kerja-kerja kemanusiaan, ditambah dengan
> koflik kekerasan dan perang yang selalu menghantui dunia.
>
> “Tugas kita adalah menjaga perdamaian, dan memastikan bahwa agama tetap
> menjadi dasar perdamaian. Kami akan terus bekerja untuk memastikan
> bahwa agama tidak disalahgunakan untuk membenarkan tindakan kekerasan
> dalam bentuk apapun,” jelasnya.
>
> Alquran, menurut Din, juga telah mengingatkan, bahwa barangsiapa yang
> membunuh seorang manusia, bukan karena orang itu (membunuh) orang lain,
> atau bukan karena membuat kerusakan di muka bumi, maka seakan-akan dia
> telah membunuh manusia seluruhnya. (Alquran 5: 32).
>
> Berikut kutipan selengkapnya pidato Din Syamsuddin dalam bahasa Inggris:
>
> PEACEFUL RESOLUTION OF CONFLICT:
>
> MEDIATION THROUGH INTERFAITH DIALOGUES
>
> United Nations, 7 February 2012
>
> M. Din Syamsuddin
>
> Chairman, Muhammadiyah
>
> Indonesia
>
> _______________________
>
> Excellencies,
>
> Ladies and Gentlemen,
>
> Assalamualaikum,
>
> Peace be Upon All of Us,
>
> First of all, I would like to express my gratitude to the President of
> the United Nations General Assembly and congratulate the United Nations
> for organizing this timely and urgent event. In that respect, my
> appreciation goes to His Majesty King Abdullah of Jordan for taking the
> initiative. I do believe that the commencement of the World Interfaith
> Harmony Week would strengthen our determination to keep working
> together, based on common ground, for the common good.
>
> I would like also to convey the message of peace from Indonesia, the
> largest archipelago in the world with 17.000 islands, the most populous
> Muslim country, and the pluralistic nation with about 500 ethnic groups
> and languages, yet its people live in a peaceful co-existence and
> harmony, based on the Five Principles of Pancasila, and the national
> motto of Bhineka Tunggal Ika, or Unity in Diversity.
>
> It is indeed a great honor for me to be here today, to share my
> experience and thought, through my organization, Muhammadiyah, on the
> topic of mediation of conflict. At the time when differences often lead
> to frictions, and frictions lead to conflicts, the search for peaceful
> ways of resolving differences and conflicts becomes imperative. In this
> regards, the significance of mediation as an instrument to resolve
> differences and to find common ground cannot be overstated.
>
> Excellencies,
>
> Ladies and Gentlemen,
>
> The importance of peaceful resolution of differences and disputes
> becomes even more evident when we look at the reality of the world
> where we live in today. While poverty, illiteracy, disease, and
> injustice still present the most difficult challenges to humanity, we
> are also presented with the fact that violent conflicts and even wars
> continue to be the most devastating source of human suffering. Indeed,
> history has shown us that violent conflict and war becomes the worst
> enemy of mankind. History also teaches us how violent conflict and war
> could destroy not only communities and nations, but also civilization.
>
> It is indeed disheartening to see that conflicts remain a defining
> characteristic of today’s world. War, which we thought to be obsolete,
> continues to serve as an instrument by which nations resolve their
> differences. Thus, we should do our best to renounce the use of force
> and war as a means of conflict-resolution. Through war, human kind
> would not accomplish anything but misery. The use of forces will never
> resolve differences, and the use of violence will only breed more
> violence.
>
> Differences, be it in religious, ethnic, cultural and even
> civilizational terms, would continue to be a fact of life. But, these
> differences should by no means become a reason why we cannot live in
> harmony and peace. In fact, Islam reminds us that God made us into
> different nations and tribes so that we might come to enhance mutual
> understanding, mutual respect, and cooperation (The Quran, 49: 13).
> Therefore perpetuating those differences in order to foment conflict is
> certainly against God’s Law of Nature.
>
> Excellencies,
>
> Ladies and Gentlemen,
>
> Our main task is therefore to ensure that religion continues to serve
> as the basis of peace. We continue to work to ensure that religion will
> not be used, misused, and abused to justify act of violence in any
> forms. The Holy Qur’an strongly reminds us that whosoever killed a
> person without justified reason is that if he has killed all mankind
> and humanity (The Qur’an 5: 32).
>
> When conflicts do occur, it is our task also to ensure that those
> conflicts are resolved peacefully, not through the use of violence.
> Here, we believe in the power of dialogue, and that interfaith dialogue
> could take the form of mediation between conflicting parties. It is
> true that sometimes conflicts have no religious motive, as religion is
> only used as a mean of justification, yet religious approach in
> conflict resolution is often fruitful.
>
> It is my belief that more of these dialogues are needed. More exchanges
> of views and discussions among civilizations should be encouraged.
> Therefore, we should continue to make the dialogue among civilizations
> useful both at the elite and grass roots level. We should ensure that
> various activities to bridge the gap among civilizations would
> contribute to the enhancement of mutual understanding and respect in a
> concrete way.
>
> Excellencies,
>
> Ladies and Gentlemen,
>
> Mediation through interfaith dialogues would not be meaningful unless
> parties to such dialogues are able to articulate their point of views
> in a frank and candid manner. Dialogues would quickly turn into a
> political theater if we cannot be honest with each other. Fruitful
> dialogues could only be achieved in an environment that promotes
> candidness and honesty within a spirit of togetherness and brotherhood.
>
> Faith-based organizations, like Muhammadiyah, whenever possible, can
> and should play a role in mediation effort to resolve conflict. We have
> played, and will continue to play, that role at community level. We
> have also played that role in order to bridge differences among
> communities at national level.
>
> The challenge we are now facing is how to continue emphasizing the
> value of mediation through interfaith dialogues and cooperation as an
> instrument to bridge civilizational divides and conflicts at global
> level. Various initiatives in this area remind us that religion and
> religious leaders do have a positive role to play in international
> relations. Religion does serve as a source of values and norms that
> could provide guidance for a healthy inter-state relations based on
> mutual understanding, mutual respects, and equality. Those dialogues
> also serve as a venue for religious leaders to articulate their
> aspiration for a peaceful and just world. At grass-root level,
> inter-faith dialogues and cooperation can provide the basis for peace
> among people of different faiths. Dialogues could remove mutual
> suspicions, which often result from ignorance, lack of knowledge about
> each other, and the absence of mutual respect.
>
> Finally, it is my hope that the 2012 World Interfaith Harmony Week
> would serve as an integral part of our effort to bridge divides among
> civilizations, among states, among nations, and among communities. It
> is also the hope of all of us who are here today that our relentless
> efforts will in the end yield to a peaceful, just, prosperous, and
> harmonious world.
>
> Thank you.
> 
>

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