Blog Archive

Thursday, May 28, 2026

Journey of the Heart: The Path We Ask For

KOPITALK JIWA

Every day we recite Ihdinas Siratal Mustaqim — guide us to the straight path. But are we willing to be straightened? A reflection on what Al-Fatihah really asks of the heart, and why guidance rarely arrives dressed in comfort. 


What Al-Fatihah Teaches Us About Guidance, Ego and the Road Home

Malai Hassan Othman

There is one memory of my late brother, Malai Haji Abdullah, the founder of SMARTER Brunei, that came back to me as I continued reflecting on Surah Al-Fatihah.

He was speaking to a group of young people under Program Khidmat Bakti Negara (PKBN), Brunei’s voluntary national service programme for youth citizens.

It was not a formal religious lecture. He never claimed to be an ustaz or a qualified religious scholar. He was speaking in his own way — simple, direct and practical — trying to make young people think about life, discipline and the meaning of the words many of us recite every day.

He spoke about Surah Al-Fatihah.

The surah we recite in our prayers.

The surah we recite when beginning meetings.

The surah we recite at formal gatherings, family occasions, moments of remembrance, and many other openings in life.

It is so familiar to us that sometimes the tongue moves faster than the heart.

And inside that surah, we ask Allah for something very serious.

Ihdinas Siratal Mustaqim.

Guide us to the straight path.

My late brother raised a simple point.

Every day, we ask Allah to guide us to the right path. But when someone tells us that something is not quite right, we often feel offended.

When someone says our proposal needs to be improved, we become defensive.
When someone points out a mistake, we feel embarrassed.

When someone reminds us to do things properly, we may take it personally.

Yet is that not one possible form of guidance?

That thought stayed with me. Because it is painfully human.

We ask for guidance, but sometimes we only want guidance that feels pleasant. We want guidance that confirms us, comforts us, agrees with us, and makes us feel good.

But guidance does not always arrive that way.

Sometimes it comes as advice. Sometimes as correction. Sometimes as a painful lesson. Sometimes as a delay. Sometimes as a closed door. Sometimes as a person brave enough to tell us what we do not want to hear.

This does not mean every criticism is right. It does not mean every person who corrects us is sincere. It does not mean every harsh word should be accepted as truth.

But it does mean we should be careful before rejecting guidance simply because it hurts the ego.

That, to me, is one of the quiet lessons of Al-Fatihah.

It does not only comforts the tired heart.

It also disciplines the proud one.

A few days ago, in a taddabur class on Surah Al-Fatihah, this reflection became wider.

We were discussing the meaning of Siratal Mustaqim, the straight path. Not just as a phrase we recite, but as a direction for life.

The straight path is not merely a road that looks straight from the outside. It is a path that leads to the right destination. It is the path of those blessed by Allah — the Prophets, the truthful, the righteous, the people who walked with faith, humility and obedience.

But the class also reminded me of something practical.

A path is not meaningful only because we are moving. We must also ask where we are moving towards.

In life, a person may be busy, disciplined, organised and consistent, yet still be heading in the wrong direction.

A department may have procedures. A business may have targets. A leader may have confidence. A student may have ambition. A family may have plans.

But the deeper question remains: are we moving towards what is right?

The taddabur class touched on the idea of reliability and validity.

A thing may be reliable because it is consistent. It keeps producing the same result. But is it valid? Does it reach the right target?

That simple idea stayed with me. Because in life, many people are reliable in doing the same thing again and again. The question is whether what they are doing is truly right.

A compass may be steady, but if it points in the wrong direction, steadiness alone will not save the traveller.

A car may run smoothly, but if the destination entered into the GPS is wrong, the journey will still end in the wrong place.

A person may work very hard, but if the purpose is confused, the effort may only carry him further away.

Perhaps this is why we ask Allah not only to make us active, productive, clever or successful.

We ask Him to guide us.

Because not every movement is progress. Not every confidence is wisdom. Not every achievement means we are on the straight path.

This is where Al-Fatihah becomes deeply personal.

When we say Ihdinas Siratal Mustaqim, we are admitting that we do not fully know the way by ourselves.

We may have knowledge, but still need guidance.

We may have experience, but still need correction.

We may have status, but still need humility.

We may have good intentions, but still need Allah to straighten our steps.

That is not a weakness. That is honesty.

The human heart is easily distracted. Sometimes by fear. Sometimes by anger.

Sometimes by pride. Sometimes by desire. Sometimes by the need to look right in front of others.

And sometimes, the hardest thing is not to know the truth, but to accept it when it exposes something in us.

This is why my late brother’s reminder to the youths was powerful. He was not asking them to become religious speakers. He was asking them to understand the meaning of what they already recite.

If we ask Allah for the straight path, then we must be willing to be straightened.

That is not always comfortable.

A crooked line does not become straight without adjustment. A wrong habit does not become right without correction. A mistaken view does not improve unless we are willing to listen. A proud heart does not soften unless it learns to pause before defending itself.

In families, workplaces, organisations and public life, we see this often.

People say they want improvement, but resist feedback. They say they want the right way, but treat honest advice as an insult.

It happens to all of us in different ways. Sometimes we are the one giving advice. Sometimes we are the one receiving it. Sometimes we do both badly.

That is why Al-Fatihah is not merely a recitation of the tongue. It is a training of the heart.

The class also discussed how hidayah, or guidance, may come in different ways.

Sometimes guidance comes through explanation — through learning, listening, reading, reflecting and being taught.

Sometimes it comes through life itself — through mistakes, hardship, disappointment, illness, loss, or a moment that forces us to stop and rethink.

Sometimes it comes through the teachings of the Prophets and Messengers, and through the Qur’an that keeps bringing the heart back to what is true.

Not all guidance feels like light at first.

Some guidance feels like being stopped. Some feel like being humbled. Some feel like being redirected from something we wanted badly. Some feel like losing, only to realise later that we were being protected.

This is why we should not rush to judge every discomfort as punishment, or every delay as failure.

Sometimes what feels like an obstacle is actually a signpost.

Sometimes what feels like rejection is actually redirection.

Sometimes what feels like embarrassment is Allah saving us from a greater mistake.

The heart does not always understand this immediately. It takes time, and sabr, and the humility to remain open even when the lesson arrives in a form we resisted.

The taddabur class also reminded us that the people we walk with affect the path we take.

A good companion may not always entertain us. Sometimes a good companion reminds us. Sometimes he tells us the truth gently. Sometimes he pulls us back from something harmful.

A bad companion may flatter us all the way to the wrong road.

That is one of life’s quiet dangers.

Not everyone who praises us is helping us. Not everyone who corrects us is against us.

The straight path is not walked alone. We are shaped by voices around us — the people we sit with, the friends we trust, the leaders we follow, the advice we accept, and the reminders we ignore.

This is why guidance is not only about direction. It is also about environment.

A heart that wants the straight path must also be careful about the company that makes crookedness feel normal.

The final verses of Al-Fatihah remind us that there are different directions a person can take.

There is the path of those who are blessed — the ones who walk with faith, humility and obedience, and are guided by Allah’s favour.

There is the path of those who know, but resist. Not ignorance. Not open defiance. Just the quiet drift of a person who understands what is right, but finds it easier not to change.

There is the path of those who are lost because they do not see, or do not seek, or drift without light.

The middle path may be the most familiar of the three. Many of us will recognise it — not in others, but in moments of our own life. The moments when we knew, but hesitated. When we understood, but delayed. When the truth was available, but convenience was closer.

For me, the most useful way to sit with this is not to point fingers at others. It is to look inward.

Where am I in this?

Do I ask for guidance but resist correction?

Do I know something is right, but avoid it because it is inconvenient?

Do I know something is wrong, but excuse it because it benefits me?

Do I drift because I have stopped reflecting?

Do I surround myself with voices that only confirm what I already want to hear?

These are uncomfortable questions.

But perhaps Al-Fatihah is meant to make us honest before Allah. Not to crush us. Not to shame us. But to bring us back.

Because the straight path is not only about belief in the abstract. It is also about conduct.

How we respond when corrected.

How we behave when no one is watching.

How we treat people when we have power.

How we listen when we are challenged.

How we admit mistakes.

How we choose friends.

How we receive truth when it arrives in a form that bruises the ego.

That is where religion becomes life.

Not only in ceremonies. Not only in openings of meetings. Not only in the beautiful sound of recitation.

But in the small moment when someone says, “Maybe this is not the right way,” and the heart chooses not to explode.

In the moment when pride wants to defend, but humility asks, “Is there something for me to learn?”

In the moment when we realise that being guided is more important than being seen as right.

Perhaps that is why we recite Al-Fatihah again and again.

Because we forget again and again.

We forget that guidance must be asked for.

We forget that guidance must be recognised.

We forget that guidance must be accepted.

We forget that guidance must be lived.

We walked into childhood examination halls with Al-Fatihah on our lips, hoping Allah would help us answer the questions on paper.

Now, as adults, we walk into other examination halls.

Meetings. Families. Responsibilities. Public life. Workplaces. Old age. Illness. Loss. Success. Power. Comfort. Disappointment.

Each comes with its own paper. Each tests something different in the heart.

And still, the prayer remains the same.

Ihdinas Siratal Mustaqim.
Guide us to the straight path.

Not only the path that is easy. Not only the path that protects our pride.

But the path that is true — the path that teaches us to be grateful when blessed, patient when tested, humble when corrected, and honest when shown the truth.

My late brother never claimed to know all of this. He was simply a man who thought carefully about the words we use, and what they ask of us.

His message to the youths was simple. And simple things often stay because they carry truth.

Do not recite words without asking what they are doing to your life.

Do not ask Allah for the straight path, then become angry when something tries to straighten you.

Because guidance does not always arrive dressed in comfort.

Sometimes it arrives as a reminder. Sometimes as a mistake. Sometimes as a sentence that hurts at first, but heals later.

And sometimes — quietly, in a taddabur class after Subuh, through the memory of a voice we can no longer hear — as an old ayat finally touching an old place in the heart.

Perhaps that is what Al-Fatihah has been teaching us all along.

Not just how to begin a prayer.

But how to walk through life.


— KopiTalk Jiwa


BND 500 for Whom? The Pension Question Brunei Still Has to Answer

The BND 500 debate is really a question about precision. Brunei’s old-age support already has a two-layer structure — but it only reaches those whom the system finds. For those still outside it, generosity alone is not enough. The help must become smarter. — KopiTalk with MHO

By Malai Hassan Othman | KopiTalk with MHO

A few days after my earlier piece went out, a reader sent me a note that stopped me mid-coffee.

He was not disputing the argument. He was pushing past it.

If Brunei wants to close the welfare gap, he asked, where does the money come from? And is the state still spending public money on people who no longer need the same level of protection?

That is a harder question. It deserves a straight answer.

The first essay made one point clearly. The BND 500 retirement floor already exists for those properly covered under the Skim Persaraan Kebangsaan, or SPK. But it does not stand under everyone equally.

That is where the public debate must become clearer.

Brunei’s old-age support is not a single pension. It is a two-layer system.

The first layer is the Old Age Pension — pencen tua. This is the universal, non-contributory state pension of BND 250 a month for eligible Brunei citizens and stateless permanent residents aged 60 and above.

The second layer is SPK, the national retirement scheme managed by TAP. For those properly covered, the SPK annuity can add another layer of support. Put together, the Old Age Pension and the SPK annuity can create a basic retirement floor of BND 500 a month for eligible members.

But that is exactly where the policy question begins.

What happens to those who reach 60 with only the first layer beneath them?

The informal worker. The home-based earner. The petty trader. The odd-job worker. The small stall operator. The caregiver. The person who spent much of life outside formal employment and arrived at old age without a retirement account behind them.

For them, BND 250 may be the only anchor they have.

That gap is real. And it is the right problem to fix.

But fixing it costs money.

In the 2020/21 financial year, the Ministry of Culture, Youth and Sports spent BND 117.15 million on old-age pension for 39,890 recipients. By 2025, Brunei Darussalam Key Indicators recorded 46,186 old-age pension recipients — an increase of more than 6,000 since the 2020/21 figure. At BND 250 a month, the implied annual commitment had risen to roughly BND 138.6 million, before disability allowances, caregiver support and related welfare programmes are counted.

A blanket doubling of the universal pension is not a small adjustment. It would become a permanent addition to recurrent expenditure at a time when the public purse is already under structural pressure.

Those who read the first essay and started doing the arithmetic were not being heartless. They were being honest.

Affordability, however, cannot become a reason to look away. The question is not whether Brunei can afford to help those who truly need help. The better question is whether the country is spending precisely enough to ensure that help reaches the right people.

That is where the real problem lies.

Brunei’s welfare model was built for a different set of conditions. When the population was smaller and oil and gas revenue was stronger, the state could afford to keep the cost of living low for almost everyone.

Fuel. Electricity. Water. Healthcare. Food. Housing.

The model worked. It brought comfort, stability and social peace. It also built expectations that have lasted across generations.

But universal support has one quiet flaw. It treats unequal households equally.

The elderly widow living on BND 250 a month and the financially comfortable retiree drawing a pension and earning private income still pay the same subsidised utility rates. The low-income gig worker and the double-income professional household fill their tanks at the same price. The struggling family and the well-off household are both cushioned by the same broad system of support.

That may feel fair on the surface. In practice, it may no longer be fair at all.

The honest reckoning is this. Public money is not unlimited. A state working within real fiscal limits must eventually direct its protection toward those standing below the basic floor — not spread it equally regardless of need.

This is an argument for honesty, not punishment. The goal is not to strip support from those who have earned it. But the direction must change.

In online discussions, the anxiety is not only about today’s elderly. Younger Bruneians are already asking whether SPK will be enough when their own generation reaches 60. Others speak openly about wages around BND 450 to BND 500, before deductions, while still managing food, fuel, rent, utilities and family obligations.

That is where the pension debate becomes bigger than pension.

A worker who cannot build security at 30 may become the retiree who needs rescue at 60. A country that cannot lift wages today may find itself carrying a heavier welfare burden tomorrow.

This is why BND 250 carries so much weight in the public conversation. On paper, it is a universal pension. In real life, many households know how quickly that number disappears into groceries, petrol, electricity, medicine and the quiet costs of old age.

When people say BND 250 is no longer enough, they are not merely complaining. They are describing what the number feels like on the ground.

The response cannot be only emotional. It must also be responsible.

Maqasid Syariah gives us a clear moral lens here. The protection of life and the protection of wealth are not abstract obligations. They are part of the duty to preserve human dignity and social justice. But protection must begin with those most exposed — the widow, the informal worker, the elderly person outside SPK, the low-income household, the family carrying ageing parents and growing children at the same time.

When public resources are spread too widely regardless of need, the most vulnerable are not always protected first. They are simply placed in the same queue as everyone else.

The answer is to make the welfare system sharper, not smaller.

Public support should become more targeted. Those who genuinely need the floor raised should receive stronger protection. Those who are financially comfortable should, over time, carry more of the real cost of living. The savings should be redirected to close the gaps that matter most.

But targeted welfare is also harder welfare to deliver.

It requires reliable data — household income, pension receipts, secondary earnings, employment status, asset ownership, family dependency. It requires government agencies that share information properly, not in silos, not through fragmented records, not through systems that look modern on the surface but still leave citizens moving from counter to counter.

Brunei has already taken steps in this direction. The National Welfare System, or SKN, was introduced to centralise welfare applications and avoid duplication of benefits. That was the right direction. But welfare precision cannot stop at digital application forms. It must become a whole-of-government ability to know who is genuinely vulnerable, who is already supported, who holds multiple income streams, and who is quietly falling through the cracks.

Without that capability, targeted welfare will remain a good phrase rather than a working reality.

And without careful public communication, reform can be easily misread. For generations, many Bruneians have come to see broad state support as part of the country’s settled way of life. Any shift toward more targeted provision must therefore be explained honestly — not as a withdrawal of care, but as a redirection of it toward those who need it most.

That conversation cannot wait much longer.

The old model was built on abundance. The model ahead must be built on precision.

For a long time, Brunei measured its generosity by how widely it could spread support. That was the right instinct for its time. The right instinct for what comes next is different — not how widely the help is spread, but whether it lands where it is needed most, before a generous system becomes too blunt to protect the people it was always meant to serve.


Source note: Figures on old-age pension spending and recipients are based on the Ministry of Culture, Youth and Sports welfare spending data for FY2020/21 and Brunei Darussalam Key Indicators 2025.



Saturday, May 23, 2026

KopiTalk with MHO | Wawasan 2035: What the Numbers Don't Say — Part Four of Four

 

THE RECKONING WE CANNOT DEFER


Three columns have named the problem. This final one asks what can still be done — specifically, practically, in the nine years that remain.

The answer is not more planning. Brunei does not lack plans. It lacks the machinery that turns plans into outcomes — and the accountability that makes someone answer when outcomes fall short.

Four proposals. Not aspirations. Things that can be started now.

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1. GIVE THE VISION A SCOREBOARD

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Publish sector-by-sector targets for 2030 and 2035. Make them public. Check them every year. Tie performance to outcomes, not activity.

This does not require legislation. It requires a decision.

The BEO 2026 records domestic rice production at 7.6 percent of national requirements. A formal ambition existed. Without a scoreboard and a named owner, there was no mechanism to force a reckoning — until the numbers appeared in an official report, quietly, years later.

That is what happens when targets exist without accountability. They drift.

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2. BUILD A DELIVERY UNIT THAT CAN ACTUALLY DELIVER

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Fragmentation cannot be resolved by adding another committee. It requires a different kind of institution — small, empowered, reporting directly to the highest level of government, with one job: convert decisions into implementation.

Malaysia's PEMANDU (2009) is one documented example. It published performance data publicly, held agencies to deadlines, and unblocked what individual ministries could not resolve alone.

The model can be adapted. What cannot be adapted away: real authority, public reporting, a mandate tied to the sector targets in proposal one.

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3. START SUBSIDY REFORM WHILE THERE IS ROOM TO MOVE

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At the time of writing, oil prices have moved above the fiscal breakeven of USD 75.60 per barrel identified in the BEO 2026. That creates a window — not a solution, but a window.

The BEO 2026 is clear: use it to rebuild fiscal buffers, not expand spending.

The basics that families depend on can be protected. What changes is what businesses and heavy users pay — gradually, transparently, with those who need protection shielded before any adjustment begins. The technology to do this carefully already exists.

The window will not stay open.

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4. PUT RESOURCES WHERE THE EVIDENCE POINTS

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The BEO 2026 rates the sectors: Downstream O&G — very high viability. Services — high. Food and ICT — moderate. Tourism — low.

These are not permanent verdicts. But they should help determine where the final decade's limited attention and money go.

▸ LOGISTICS — Muara Port expansion: concrete, time-bound, already underway. Fast-track it.

▸ AQUACULTURE — Premium halal seafood exports align Brunei's strengths with genuine demand. Investment is arriving. The regulatory framework must not become the bottleneck.

▸ ICT — The opportunity is in exports: data services, cybersecurity, digital processing. Reliability and skills, not new infrastructure.

▸ TOURISM — The regenerative model is right. But it requires a product that justifies the premium: Temburong eco-infrastructure, ground transport, hotel inventory, air connectivity. The strategy is credible. The product still needs to be built.

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THE CAREER CALCULUS

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Every proposal above will underperform if the talent it needs continues to flow toward the civil service.

The pull is not about pay. It is about security and social expectation built across two generations. Changing it does not require dismantling public sector employment. It requires building private sector careers in the four priority sectors that are genuinely worth choosing — as a rational decision, not a patriotic act.

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BUAT TIA

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There is a phrase circulating in Brunei right now, in the conversations that happen away from the official rooms.

Tahu. Mahu. Buat tia.
Know. Want. Just do it.

Brunei is no longer short of knowing. The diagnosis is documented. Nor is there a shortage of wanting. Most people want diversification to work.

The gap is between wanting and doing.

The Islamic tradition has always understood this. Tawakal comes at the end, after the effort. Tie the camel first. Then place your trust. Doa. Usaha. Ikhtiar. Tawakal. In that order.

A nation cannot tawakal its way to 2035 without first doing the work.

The data in this series does not condemn the vision. It asks whether what has been built to deliver it is equal to what the vision requires.

For eighteen of Wawasan 2035's twenty-eight years, the answer has been that it is not.

Nine years remain to change that.

The data is not an indictment. It is an invitation. Nine years remain to accept it.

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This concludes the four-part series: Wawasan 2035 — What the Numbers Don't Say.

Part One — The Clock Is Running | Part Two — The One-Company Story | Part Three — What Nobody Wants to Say | Part Four — The Reckoning We Cannot Defer

Read the full series: kopitalkmho.blogspot.com

Data sources: Brunei Economic Outlook 2026 (CSPS, April 2026); AMRO 2025 Annual Consultation Report on Brunei Darussalam; DEPS quarterly reports 2024–2025; BEO 2026 Trade and Labour Force Survey data; Malaysia PEMANDU Annual Reports 2010–2018.

Journey of the Heart: When Time Is Not Ours

 KopiTalk Jiwa




What Māliki Yawmid-Dīn Taught Me About Accountability

 

There are certain phrases from childhood that never quite leave the mind.

 

Jangan buang masa. Masa itu emas. Jangan lalai.

 

Do not waste time. Time is gold. Do not be negligent.

 

I heard these words more times than I can count. They came from my parents with the persistence that only parents can sustain — repeated at the breakfast table, after school, during school holidays when I had too much freedom and too little discipline.

 

They were not shouted. They were delivered in that steady, tired, knowing tone that parents use when they have already said something many times and know they will say it many more.

 

I heard them. I nodded. I continued wasting time.

 

Then came my late brother.

 

He was a psychiatric nurse in the earlier part of his career — a man who understood, professionally, how the human mind works, how behaviour forms, how discipline either anchors or abandons a person. He used to sit us down and explain time management with the patience of someone trained to reach resistant minds.

 

He spoke with clarity and structure. He gave examples. He made it practical.

It did not register. Not properly. Not in the way it should have.

 

I heard him the way a younger sibling hears an older one — with a kind of selective attention that absorbs tone more than content. I knew he was right. I simply did not yet understand what being right about time actually meant.

 

The third voice came from a different direction entirely.

 

Since the age of six, I attended religious classes. My teacher — patient, consistent, committed — taught us that everything we do in this life is recorded. Every action, every word, every moment of negligence and every moment of effort.

 

And on the Day of Judgement, Allah will present it all back to us. A complete accounting. Nothing omitted.

 

As a child, I understood this the way children understand large things — with a kind of surface seriousness that does not yet reach the deeper layers of the heart. I believed it. I just did not yet feel it.

 

Three voices. Three registers — parental wisdom, professional knowledge, religious instruction. All pointing at the same truth.

 

None of them fully landed.

 

Looking back now, I can see two honest reasons for that.

 

The first is that I was simply not ready. There is a kind of understanding that only comes with time — and that particular irony is not lost on me. Some truths wait patiently in the mind, filed away, until the heart is finally prepared to receive them.

 

My parents, my brother, my teacher planted what they planted. The season for it had not yet arrived.

 

The second is that even the most sincere messenger can only give what their understanding allows. My parents carried the wisdom of lived experience and Malay tradition. My brother carried professional training in human behaviour. My teacher carried scripture.

 

But none of them had the tools, the time, or the framework to fully unfold the divine message behind what they were saying.

 

They were pointing at something real. They simply could not take me all the way inside it.

 

That journey required something else.

 

It was in a recent tadabbur class — a structured session of deep reflection on the Quran — that three lifetime messages finally arrived at their proper destination.

 

We were sitting with Surah Al-Fatihah. Specifically, the fourth verse.

 

مَالِكِ يَوْمِ الدِّينِ

Māliki Yawmid-Dīn.

 

Master of the Day of Judgement. Owner of the Day of Accountability. The One to whom all recompense belongs.

 

The teacher paused on the word Mālik.

 

Not merely King, he explained, but Owner.

 

There is a difference that matters.

 

A king rules within limits — he may be challenged, overthrown, forgotten, replaced. 

 

An Owner possesses absolutely. Whatever falls within His ownership belongs to Him completely, on His terms, answerable to no one above Him.

 

Allah is Mālik.

 

And one of the things He owns, completely and without exception, is time.

 

That was the moment my parents’ voices, my brother’s patient lectures, and my childhood teacher’s words about the great accounting all came back — differently.

 

Not as instructions I had filed away, but as truths I was only now beginning to understand from the inside.

 

Jangan buang masa.

 

They were not simply talking about productivity. They were, perhaps without knowing how to say it in these words, pointing at a divine reality.

 

Time is not ours.

 

We do not own it.

 

We are given it — as a trust, as an amanah — and we will be asked, with complete precision, what we did with what we were given.

 

My brother, who understood the architecture of human behaviour, was trying to tell me something that required a theological framework to fully explain. He had the professional language, but not the divine one.

 

The lesson was always larger than time management.

 

It was always about accountability before Allah.

 

My religious teacher was closest to the core. The playback he described — every action recorded, nothing omitted — is not a metaphor. It is the reality of Yawmid-Dīn. The Day when everything returns to its Owner.

 

But here is what the tadabbur class added that none of the three voices had quite reached.

 

Accountability is not only about the large things.

 

We tend to think of divine accountability in dramatic terms — the major sins, the great failures, the visible wrongdoings. We imagine Yawmid-Dīn as the day when only the serious matters are settled.

 

But Māliki Yawmid-Dīn does not specify scale.

 

It does not say the Day of accounting for the big things.

 

It says the Day of Dīn — of recompense, of judgement, of complete reckoning.

Everything.

 

Including the small things.

 

Including the hour that slipped by without purpose.

 

Including the meeting that drifted because no one had the discipline to keep it focused.

 

Including the task done carelessly because it seemed too minor to deserve full attention.

 

Including the prayer rushed through because the mind was already somewhere else.

 

Including the small kindness that was available and not given.

 

Including the small effort that was possible and not made.

 

No matter how small.

 

No matter how little.

 

This is where Māliki Yawmid-Dīn becomes not merely a statement about the afterlife, but a living principle for how we move through every domain of our days.

 

In our personal lives, the hours we are given are not ours to drift through. They belong to the relationships we invest in or neglect, the knowledge we seek or ignore, the worship we give full attention to or rush past.

 

Time is the currency of everything we call amal.

 

And no amal is too small to be recorded.

 

In our work, the hours we are employed to give are not ours to waste. They belong to those we serve — our organisations, our communities, the people who depend on what we produce.

 

A person who lets the morning disappear into distraction is not simply being unproductive.

 

He is being unfaithful to a trust.

 

And that trust has a divine dimension.

 

In leadership, the accountability multiplies. A leader who wastes time does not waste only his own hours. He wastes the hours of everyone under his care — the team waiting for direction, the institution waiting for decisions, the people who trusted that authority would be used wisely.

 

The Quran’s concept of khalifah — stewardship — applies here with full force.

 

No earthly leader owns the authority he holds.

 

He is a steward.

 

And stewards are asked, eventually, how the trust was kept.

 

In business, every commitment carries a timestamp that will be accounted for. 

 

Every agreement made and not honoured, every deliverable promised and not delivered, every opportunity given and wasted — these are not merely commercial failures.

 

They are broken amanah.

 

Time is woven through all of it.

 

And across all of it — in life, work, leadership and enterprise — the thread of amal runs beneath everything.

 

What we do matters.

 

What we leave undone also matters.

 

Māliki Yawmid-Dīn sees both.

 

What the tadabbur class made plain is something that every position of authority in this world needs to hear.

 

Every human being who holds power — the ruler, the minister, the manager, the parent, the employer, the teacher — holds it on borrowed terms.

 

Allah is Mālik.

 

We are not.

 

Whatever power, time, position or resource we carry in this life has been lent to us.

 

The One who lent it will ask for an accounting.

 

This is not a threat.

 

It is a clarification.

 

And it is, strangely, honestly, a relief.

 

Because it means that what we do with our ordinary hours matters.

 

The quiet effort made when no one is watching.

 

The task completed with full attention even when it is small.

 

The care taken in a decision that affects other people’s time as well as our own.

 

The meeting run with discipline.

 

The promise kept on time.

 

None of it is invisible.

 

None of it is wasted in the divine record.

 

The same is true of its opposite.

 

I think of my parents now differently.

 

Masa itu emas was not merely a parenting phrase. It carried the echo of a revealed truth, expressed in the everyday language of a Malay household, passed down by people who lived it without always knowing the full theological weight of what they were saying.

 

They were right in ways that went far beyond what they could articulate.

 

My brother, whose professional life was built around understanding human minds, gave me the practical case. I was not ready for it then. I understand it now not only as psychology, but as theology.

 

My religious teacher gave me the image of the great accounting — everything recorded, everything presented.

 

As a child, it was an idea.

 

As an adult sitting in a tadabbur class with the words Māliki Yawmid-Dīn settling into the room, it became something I could feel.

 

The journey from not knowing to beginning to understand is rarely dramatic.

 

It does not arrive in a single flash.

 

It comes in layers, each one requiring the layer before it to already be in place.

 

Three voices planted what they planted across a lifetime.

 

The tadabbur class gave it its proper ground.

 

The heart that understands Māliki Yawmid-Dīn does not live differently because it is afraid.

 

It lives differently because it understands something simple and immense at the same time:

 

 

Time is not ours.

 

It never was.

 

Every hour is borrowed from an Owner who keeps a perfect account.

 

And a person who truly holds that — in work, in leadership, in business, in every quiet amal of an ordinary day — carries within them the beginning of something the world calls integrity and the Quran calls amanah.

 

That understanding, arriving as late as it has for many of us, is perhaps itself an act of mercy.

 

The Owner of time gave us enough of it to finally understand what time is for.

— KopiTalk Jiwa