Hanjakal lain urang sunda nya mang?
Hehehe

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-----Original Message-----
From: Ki Hasan <[email protected]>
Sender: [email protected]
Date: Thu, 25 Aug 2011 21:49:41 
To: Ki Sunda<[email protected]>
Reply-To: [email protected]
Cc: Baraya Sunda<[email protected]>; Urang 
Sunda<[email protected]>
Subject: [Urang Sunda] Tokoh - Tuan Guru Haji Hasanain Juaini

Tah geuning, aya oge tokoh pasantren nu nembus ka dunya global.

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 The 2011 Ramon Magsaysay Awardee

CITATION for Hasanain Juaini
Ramon Magsaysay Award Presentation Ceremonies
31 August 2011, Manila, Philippines





Islamic education is perceived by many, often in ignorance, as narrowly
traditionalist and even reactionary. What is ignored is that, over the past
century, traditional Islamic schools have responded to modernizing
influences in many positive ways. This is shown in Indonesia where such
changes are of enormous consequence--Indonesia is not only the world's
largest Muslim country, it is one where over fifty thousand Islamic schools
are a major stream of the national educational system.

A sterling example of a modern, socially-innovative Islamic school is Nurul
Haramain Putri Narmada in West Lombok, a peripheral region where a
conservative Islam is dominant and deforestation and poverty are a major
challenge. A pesantren, the oldest type of school in Indonesia, Nurul
Haramain was established in 1996 by a young, progressive Muslim cleric named
Hasanain Juaini. The son of a religious teacher who ran a pesantren for
boys, Hasanain opened his own pesantren after completing his university
studies.

Against a tradition that reserves education for boys, Hasanain decided to
open a girls' school. Starting with fifty girls, he evolved a
learner-centered program aimed at developing each student's full potential.
Now a pesantren of five hundred students and sixty teachers (half of them
women), Hasanain's school offers a government-accredited five-year secondary
education program. It is the first in Lombok to achieve 100 percent
computer-based learning, where students are provided with personal computers
and teaching assistants, even at night. While religion is at the core of its
program, as in the traditional pesantren, the school is pluralist in
orientation and stresses secular subjects like the sciences. Students are
exposed to diverse learning opportunities, encouraged to think critically,
and motivated to pursue higher studies. It is not surprising that the school
ranks No. 9 nationwide in university entrance examinations. Yet Hasanain
says, "To be No. 9 is not the target, but how we have developed all the
capabilities of the student."

It is not just academic excellence that makes Hasanain's school a different
kind of school. Responding to criticism that boarding schools are "ivory
towers" isolated from society, Hasanain has deliberately integrated school
learning into the life of the community. While the pesantren is
traditionally controlled by a single teacher, Hasanain has built a model of
community ownership through a membership system. Moreover, he has turned his
school into an axis for community development. His integrated approach to
education gets students and teachers involved in issues of environmental
quality, livelihood enhancement, and good governance.

He initiated a social forestry project that involves the community in
conserving the environment while increasing their household incomes. The
project has successfully reforested a once-barren thirty-one hectare tract
through a scheme in which families, motivated by a grant of livestock for
short-term needs, are allotted a hectare each for them to plant, nurture,
and eventually harvest trees according to a clear business plan. Hasanain
further believes that schools have a role in promoting citizen participation
in local governance. Thus, he organized representatives from 130 pesantrens
in his district into a Coalition of Pesantrens against Corruption, to lobby
for reforms and hold public officials accountable. He has himself been a
vocal advocate on issues pertaining to elections and the management of
public funds. In his combined roles as cleric, teacher, community worker,
and social entrepreneur, Hasanain is a living example of the kind of
education he preaches.

His modernizing innovations have been criticized by some. But for Hasanain,
there is no divide between teaching religion and calling public officials to
account, or between running a school and getting the community to plant
trees. One who teaches by his work and not just by his words, Hasanain
speaks of what he does in terms homely but wise: "Everything starts with a
seed." "Those who take must give. It's a big sin if you take and not give."

In electing Hasanain Juaini to receive the 2011 Ramon Magsaysay Award, the
board of trustees recognizes his holistic, community-based approach to
pesantren education in Indonesia, creatively promoting values of gender
equality, religious harmony, environmental preservation, individual
achievement, and civic engagement among young students and their
communities.

http://www.rmaf.org.ph/Awardees/Citation/CitationJuainiHas.htm

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