CAIRO,
February 3 (IslamOnline.net) – Helpless and stricken by sadness over
the loss of their fellows and fear of a recurrence of the killer
waves, children in the tsunami-hit Indonesian province of Aceh wrote
poems, praying to Allah.
Oh
Allah, the most compassionate and merciful
We are subservient to You and we are weak
Don't bequeath this ordeal anymore
Don't deal out this suffering again
As we know the blame is ours
Oh
Allah, You have put us to the test
We don't want to see our people cry anymore
And the cries of our little brothers and sisters
Oh Allah, will You forgive us
Only to You can we plead and only to You can we pray
Amin Ya Rabbal Alamin
Acehnese
children used such a simple way to express their sympathy with their
mates who lost their families, friends and homes in their ravaged town
of Meulaboh, hoping that poems would inspire the stricken children to
look for a better future, according to Indonesian daily, The
Jakarta Post Thursday, February 3.
Praying
to Allah
Reading
the poem, titled “Our Prayer”, with her soft voice, Cut
Nurfajria, a 13-year-old student in the eighth grade at SMP 3 junior
high school -- also writer of the poem -- said the poem was a prayer
to Allah that no more tsunamis would occur, not only in Aceh, but also
everywhere around the world, according to the daily.
“I'm
sad as many of my friends were victims of the tsunami,” said Cut
after reading the poem.
Cut
and her family were lucky to survive the monstrous tidal waves as her
house in Lapang village was located far enough from the beach,
however, she can feel the pain that her schoolmates and their families
went through.
Cut
was not the only Indonesian student who wrote poems to express grief
and sadness over the impact of the disaster, the paper said.
With
horrible experiences of the devastating disaster still fresh in their
minds, other children diligently wrote poems to express their
feelings.
Among
those children was Hendri Rizky, a 13-year-old student, who wrote a
poem titled The Cries of My Relatives.
More
than 200,000 people were killed, over half of them from Indonesia, and
millions were rendered homeless in southern Asian countries following
monstrous tidal waves spawned by a killer 9.0 magnitude earthquake.
Back
to School
After
a one month off after the tsunami disaster, students in the Meulaboh
town were happy to go back to school, showing a growing interest in
continuing their studies, the daily said.
“I'm
glad to return to school and get back together again with my friends
here,” Furqon Muttaqin, an Acehnese student in the seventh grade,
told the paper.
The
students were studying under the trees around the school compound as a
section of the school has been used as a relief post by the French
military for the past week.
Students
formed circles and some also sat in lines facing each other, while
teachers sat on one side.
“Come,
let's sit in a cooler place, or you'll be sick,” a teacher told some
students who were sitting in the sun.
Meulaboh
was chosen as the place to announce Education Awakening Day in Aceh
and Nias, North Sumatra, after twelve teachers were killed in the area
by the tidal waves.
Some
99 schools were also damaged in the West Aceh area.