BAGKER

a personal digital diary

Sekitar jam 9 baru pulang dari Ponorogo untuk urusan outbound. Ternyata, Ponorogo kulinernya enak-enak :D
Pak Budi ngajak beli dawet, sm sate kambing yg kecapnya mereka bikin sendiri. Seruuu! Kotanya kecil hampir kaya Metro.
Pulangnya dibawain sate ayam. Sampe rumah aku hampir muntah karena kekenyangan :|

FPI tidak mewakilkan siapapun

—Inestjokro

allcreatures:

Partially blind dog Milo is helped around by his personal guide dog and companion Bella, in Melbourne, Australia. Bella guides Milo along on a lead and also barks warnings to him.
Picture: Manuela Cifra/Newspix / Rex Features (via Pictures of the day: 9 May 2012 - Telegraph)

allcreatures:

Partially blind dog Milo is helped around by his personal guide dog and companion Bella, in Melbourne, Australia. Bella guides Milo along on a lead and also barks warnings to him.

Picture: Manuela Cifra/Newspix / Rex Features (via Pictures of the day: 9 May 2012 - Telegraph)

I challenge anyone to understand Islam, its spirit, and not to love it. It is a beautiful religion of brotherhood and devotion.

— Yann Martel (Life of Pi)

(Source: rumiandshit, via thebeautyofislam)

heavenlyhaya:

‎”Don’t marry a man unless you would be proud to have a son exactly like him.”


Whatta lovely view :)

heavenlyhaya:

‎”Don’t marry a man unless you would be proud to have a son exactly like him.”

Whatta lovely view :)

(via thebeautyofislam)

beautiful-phrases:

Subhanallaah !!
zikrayat:

farhaaan:

This is Rachid Nekkaz, the French businessman who announced he will pay all fines for women who are charged with wearing the niqab — not just in France but “in whatever country in the world that bans women from doing so”. 
The niqab is a filmy cloth attached to the headscarf that covers all but the eyes. Any woman found to be wearing the niqab in France in public can be fined upto €150 ($200) and ordered to attend ‘re-education classes’. Belgium, Italy, Denmark, Austria, the Netherlands and Switzerland all have — or are planning — similar legislation.
The businessman has already paid fines for women in both France and Belgium where wearing the piece of cloth is outlawed. He said: 

I’m in favour of a law to convict a husband who forces a women to wear the niqab and who forces her to stay at home. But I’m also for a law that lets these women move freely in the streets, because freedom of movement, just like any freedom, is the most fundamental thing in a democracy. 

 He is pictured above with Kenza Drider, the longshot “freedom candidate” for French presidency, after accompanying her to a police tribunal in Paris where she appeared for violating France’s niqab ban. Drider told The Associated Press in an interview: 

When a woman wants to maintain her freedom, she must be bold. I have the ambition today to serve all women who are the object of stigmatization or social, economic or political discrimination. It is important that we show that we are here, we are French citizens and that we, as well, can bring solutions to French citizens.

Nekkaz put up a €2m ($2.5m) property to fund his campaign. 
Photo credit: Getty

beautiful-phrases:

Subhanallaah !!

zikrayat:

farhaaan:

This is Rachid Nekkaz, the French businessman who announced he will pay all fines for women who are charged with wearing the niqab — not just in France but “in whatever country in the world that bans women from doing so”. 

The niqab is a filmy cloth attached to the headscarf that covers all but the eyes. Any woman found to be wearing the niqab in France in public can be fined upto €150 ($200) and ordered to attend ‘re-education classes’. Belgium, Italy, Denmark, Austria, the Netherlands and Switzerland all have — or are planning — similar legislation.

The businessman has already paid fines for women in both France and Belgium where wearing the piece of cloth is outlawed. He said

I’m in favour of a law to convict a husband who forces a women to wear the niqab and who forces her to stay at home. But I’m also for a law that lets these women move freely in the streets, because freedom of movement, just like any freedom, is the most fundamental thing in a democracy. 

 He is pictured above with Kenza Drider, the longshot “freedom candidate” for French presidency, after accompanying her to a police tribunal in Paris where she appeared for violating France’s niqab ban. Drider told The Associated Press in an interview

When a woman wants to maintain her freedom, she must be bold. I have the ambition today to serve all women who are the object of stigmatization or social, economic or political discrimination. It is important that we show that we are here, we are French citizens and that we, as well, can bring solutions to French citizens.

Nekkaz put up a €2m ($2.5m) property to fund his campaign. 

Photo credit: Getty