Zakat
August 14, 2012 2 Comments
For Whom Wealth Matters
July 26, 2012 Leave a comment
An excellent idea indeed!
A lot of people think that they can live forever and they are so worry and try their best to avoid the topic of Death.
Life is so fragile. We don’t when is our turn but for sure the day will come.
Have you ever contemplate on your death?
What can you bring when you die,
car?
House?
Jewelry?
Luxury watch?
Cash?
Credit card?
Fame?
Power?
Beautiful clothes & shoes?
Expensive furnitures?
NOTHING!
How about your body?
Do you think you own your body?
How to handle your dead body?
Normally, there are 2 ways, Burial and dissolved in the soil or cremation.
Think about if you are able to offer the last gift of life to others the Organ Donation.
Organ and tissue donation is the ultimate humanitarian act of charity and benevolence.
The commonly transported organs are kidneys, heart, liver, lungs and pancreas while the transplantable tissues…
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July 26, 2012 1 Comment
Thank you Shafiqah1.Powerful words indeed and a spur to action.
Let us all try to provide one meal a day to a person in need.A packet of biscuits a day is a good way to start.Start carrying one in your handbag or briefcase.Keep some in your car.
And do take a look at these 2 links.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hare_Krishna_Food_for_Life
July 25, 2012 34 Comments
Obtaining wealth in immoral ways and using it to harmful ends are two evils associated with wealth. A third is hoarding wealth — refusing to either share one’s wealth or put it to good use. In this story, the Buddha recounts the evils of miserliness:
Once, King Pasenadi of Kosala visited the Buddha. The King told the Buddha that a rich old miser had recently died leaving no heir to his huge fortune, and the King had gone to oversee the transfer of the miser’s wealth into the kingdom’s treasury.
King Pasenadi described the amount of wealth he had to haul away: eight million gold coins, not to mention the silver ones, which were innumerable. And, he said, when the old miser was alive he had lived on broken rice and vinegar, dressed in three coarse cloths sewn together, used a broken-down chariot for transport and shaded himself with a sunshade made of leaves.
The Buddha remarked:”That is how it is, Your Majesty. The foolish man, obtaining fine requisites, supports neither himself nor his dependents, his father and mother, wife and children, his servants and employees, his friends and associates, in comfort. He does not make offerings, which are of great fruit, and which are conducive to mental well-being, happiness and heaven to religious mendicants. Read more of this post