Khutbah Jumat Jawi - Patani

" Kita ni, duduk di Patani. Bumi ni bukan bumi asing. Bumi ni bumi perjuangan. Bukan perjuangan dengan pedang saja, tapi perjuangan dengan sabar. Setitik getah yang kau tuai, Pak Mat, itu satu doa. Sekerat ikan yang kau jala, Wak Ngah, itu satu pahala. Kita hidup bukan untuk lawan manusia. Kita hidup untuk lawan nafsu sendiri. "

A soft sob escaped from a woman in the back—Mak Som, whose son was in a detention centre across the border. She clutched her telekung .

Usop cleared his throat. He began in formal Arabic, the words crisp and correct. "Innal hamda lillah…" khutbah jumat jawi patani

As Usop walked out of the mosque, the sun broke fully through the clouds. The muddy water in the ditches sparkled like scattered silver. And from the loudspeaker, still warm, the echo of the khutbah lingered in the air—not in the language of books, but in the language of the heart. Bahasa Jawi Patani .

He leaned into the microphone, and his voice changed. It softened. It became basi —like old rice porridge, warm and familiar. " Kita ni, duduk di Patani

" Tuan Guru Haji Awang selalu cakap: 'Jangan kau tengok besar atau kecilnya amal. Tapi tengok pada hati. Di Patani ni, hati kita pernah dibakar, pernah direndam air banjir. Tapi masih hidup. Sebab Allah jaga. '"

After the prayer, Pak Mat shook Usop's hand. He didn't say much. He just held the young man's fingers and pressed them to his own forehead—a gesture of deep, wordless respect. Bukan perjuangan dengan pedang saja, tapi perjuangan dengan

In his place stood his grandson, Usop. At twenty-three, Usop had returned from a university in the west, his mind full of algorithms and crisp, formal Arabic. He had memorized the khutbah text perfectly. But he had never felt the wood of the mimbar beneath his palms.

The sky over Patani was the colour of overripe mangoes—heavy, gold, and about to burst. For three weeks, the monsoon had held the town in its jaws, but this Friday, the rain had finally retreated. Men in kopiah and sarung splashed through the muddy lanes of Kampung Tani, their sandals squelching, their hearts light. Today was the first Jumat of Syawal, and Masjid Al-Istiqamah would be full.

And for that one Friday, the world felt just.

When he finally recited the dua , the amin that rose from the 1,000 men was not a whisper. It was a thunderclap. It shook the dust from the ceiling fans. It was the sound of a people recognising themselves in the mirror of their own language.