Sabtu, 12 November 2011

Kita ini PEMIMPIN !


Pemimpin itu bukan orang yang serba super,tapi diciptakan untuk menjadi super oleh dirinya sendiri. Apapun organisasi yang kita pimpin, kita harus memiliki karakter yang kuat. Ciri yang khas, akan dilihat oleh pengikut kita, jika malas, ya siap-siap pengikut kita bodoh, tidak kreatif ya siap-siap pengikut kita mati kreatifitas, sering melakukan pembiaran ya siap-siap pengikut kita asal kerja. 

Sudah banyak didunia ini pemimpin-pemimpin hebat. Sudah bosan juga jika saya mengutarakan mereka satu persatu, jangan jauh-jauh melihat didunia orang lain, lihat saja dunia kita, dilingkungan kita ( jika anda bergaul). Lihat sosok ketua RT/RW kita yang bersahaja. Atau pimpinan sebuah kelompok keamanan dilingkungan kita, atau lihat cara kepemimpinan yang lainnya.

Seorang pemimpin juga harus bias meng-explore setiap kemampuan para anggotanya, jika dia memang pemimpin sesungguhnya. Setiap karakter pengikut kita berbeda beda, ada yang setia, temperamental, terlalu egois, penyayang, selalu mendahulukan kawan, dan sebagainya. Nah itu menjadi daya tarik unik yang bisa kita olah. Bukannya kita menyalahkan mereka, menasihatinya lebih tepat. Dan tunggulah kehebatan team anda jika anda bisa “mengendalikan” mereka.

Seorang pemimpin juga bisa memetakan kemampuan tiap individu anggotanya. Setiap anggota pasti memiliki kemampuan yang beraneka ragam. Maka dari itu tempatkanlah mereka sesuai bidangnya/keahliannya. Salah menempatkan orang berarti anda juga ikut berperan aktif “membunuh” kemampuannya.

Seorang pemimpin juga harus bisa berkomunikasi dengan mahir, jelas dalam menyampaikan apa yang diinginkan team, tidak ngalorngidul berbicara, bicara untuk makhluk bumi, bukan untuk makhluk dewa.

Seorang pemimpin juga harus memiliki konsep yang jelas, tau aturan main, jika tau aturan main, berarti harus di dukung dengan peraturan organisasi yang jelas. Jangan sampai ada pemimpin yang belajar dari kesalahan. Maksudnya,,, seorang pemimpin cerdas membaca lingkungan dan belajar dari kesalahan yang ada dilingkungan sekitarnya. Pengenalan medan tempur juga mutlak dilakukan, bukan membabibuta apa yang ada didepan kita guna mencapai hasil yang diinginkan. Bukan pula kita melakukan sesuatu tanpa ada rencana yang baik dan matang. Kembali lagi ke peraturan. Segala apapun hal sampai terkecil kalau perlu diatur dalam peraturan, agar rule permainanya jelas.

Dan yang terakhir, seorang pemimpin itu juga harus dekat dengan Tuhan yang menciptakannya, agar segala penyimpangannya selalu diingatkan oleh-Nya. Harus rajin beribadah, dan sifat pendukungnya harus rendah hati, sering melihat orang-orang yang dibawah kita, jangan sombong arogan, dan segala hal-hal yang buruk harus dibuang.

Kamis, 21 April 2011

Copa del Rey Dilindas Bus


MADRID, KOMPAS.com — Tragis! Selagi euforia merayakan sukses menjuarai Copa del Rey, Real Madrid harus bersedih. Sebab, trofi yang diraih pertama kalinya sejak 1993 itu dijatuhkan defender Sergio Ramos hingga terlindas bus dan patah.
Real Madrid memang haus gelar. Mereka terakhir menjuarai Copa del Rey tahun 1993. Gelar terakhir yang diraih adalah Divisi Primera La Liga (sekarang Liga BBVA) pada musim 2007-08.
Rabu atau Kamis (21/4/2011), Madrid meledak dalam suka. Sebab, Cristiano Ronaldo mencetak gol kemenangan 1-0 atas rival abadi, Barcelona, di final Copa del Rey.
Pesta pun langsung digelar. Rabu malam, Madrid menggelar pesta di Plaza de Cibeles. Para pemain diangkut dengan bus dan memamerkan trofi Copa del Rey, yang disambut sekitar 150.000 pendukung. Guyuran hujan seolah menambah semarak perayaan tersebut.
Sergio Ramos pun sangat gembira. Saat mendapat giliran memegang trofi dan memamerkan kepada fans, dia mengangkatnya tinggi-tinggi.
Entah karena guyuran hujan, kelelahan, atau karena euforia, tiba-tiba trofi itu terlepas dari tangan Ramos. Dia gagal menangkapnya dan trofi jatuh di depan bus. Trofi itu sempat dilewati bus tersebut dan setelah muncul di belakangnya sudah dalam kondisi rusak dan patah.
Rasa suka seluruh publik Madrid pun seolah tertampar dan menjadi duka. Sebab, trofi kebanggaan yang sangat bersejarah itu rusak. Sudah 8 tahun tak dirasakan Madrid, begitu diraih, justru terjatuh dan patah.

Sabtu, 16 April 2011

Vittorio Arrigoni: Dante’s Hell is Alive and Well in Gaza

ps. Olmert is Pinocchio,
h 2.10am in Gaza city, apaches are bombing with phospore
….
By Vittorio Arrigoni
16 January 2009
Israeli forces fired at the U.N. school in Gaza, where civilians took shelter
Dante Alighieri could never have imagined circles as hellish as the wards of the damned in Jabalia’s hospitals. The laws of divine justice are turned on their head around here: the more innocent the victim, the less likely that they’ll be spared martyrdom through bombing. At Kamal Adwan and Al Auda hospitals, the ceramic tiles in the first aid units are always shiny. The cleaners are permanently busy wiping away the blood dripping copiously from the stretchers constantly carrying in the massacred bodies. Iyad Mutawwaq was walking in the street when a bomb tore open a building not far from him. He and other passers-by rushed over to try and bring some aid when a second bomb was dropped on the same building. It killed a father of 9, two brothers and another passer-by who had rushed over to help. The same story could be told over ten, or one hundred times. The perfect terrorist technique is being immaculately carried out by the Israeli army. You drop a bomb, wait for the first-aiders, then drop another bomb on the wounded and the first-aiders.
In Iyad’s eyes, those were American bombs, but they also carry the stamp of Mubarak, the Egyptian dictator who rivals Olmert here in Gaza when it comes to provoking hatred. Behind Iyad’s bed, an elderly man with both his arms in plasters is lying staring at the ceiling, and I’m told he’s lost everything: his family and his home. He stares at the cracks in the falling plaster, as if seeking an answer to the sheer destruction of his existence.
A controlled explosion by the Israeli army demolishes a Palestinian home in the Gaza Strip on 16 January 2009 on the 21st day of the war, as Israeli tanks and vehicles stand by, deployed in positions overlooking a neighborhood of Gaza where many of the buildings have suffered extreme damage.
Khaled worked in Israel for 25 years, prior to the first Intifada. In recognition, Tel Aviv hasn’t even granted him a pension, only a series of missiles from land and air onto his house. He suffers from shrapnel wounds all over his body. I ask him where he plans to go after he’s been discharged from hospital. He says he’ll join his family, out in the streets. Not unlike Khaled’s, many families don’t know where to find shelter. The most fortunate were offered hospitality by relatives and acquaintances, but can you really say that one hundred people crammed into two apartments counting three rooms each is really a life? Two bombs were dropped onto Ahmed Jaber’s home and though his family fled, for some of them it was too late. A third explosion buried 7 of his relatives under the rubble, including two children aged 8 and 9 – his neighbour’s children. He says: “They made us leap back in time, back to 1948. This is their punishment for our attachment to our country. They can tear my arms and legs off from my body, but they won’t make me leave my land.” A doctor takes me aside and tells me that Ahmed’s 7-year-old daughter, or what was left of her, was just brought in inside a tiny cardboard box. They don’t have the heart to tell him and make his already precarious health condition any worse. In the evening they took the phone away from Iyad as well, to prevent him from receiving any more bad news. A tank had hit his sister’s house full in the middle, beheading her in the process.
In the end, our Free Gaza Movement boat never got to the port in Gaza. About 100 miles from their designated destination, in international waters, they were intercepted by 4 Israeli war ships poised to open fire and kill its cargo of doctors, nurses and human rights activists. No one must dare to obstruct the massacre of civilians now in full swing for the last 3 weeks.
East of Jabalia, in front of the border, eyewitnesses speak of numerous decaying bodies in the streets. Their rotting meat is being eaten by the dogs. There are also hundreds of people unable to go anywhere, many of whom are injured. The ambulances simply cannot get anywhere near, with the trigger-happy snipers all over the place. Palestinians are sick of languishing in the midst of this general indifference, and many even accuse the international Red Cross and the UN of not doing enough, including not fulfilling their duties, nor risking their lives to save hundreds. We ISMers will thus equip ourselves with some stretchers and proceed on foot to the areas where humanity has surpassed all boundaries, eclipsing itself in the process.
The heavy-bottomed settlers sitting in the pristine lounges of armchair politics harp on about military strategies against Hamas, while we’re being literally massacred out here. They bomb hospitals, and yet there are some who still champion Israel’s right to self-defense. In any self-styled civilised country, self-defense is proportionate to the attack.
In these 20 days we’ve counted 1,075 dead Palestinians, 85% of whom were civilians, and over 5,000 injured, of whom half were under 18 years old. 303 children were atrociously massacred. It’s equivalent to saying that for Israel, butchering at least 250 Palestinians is a justified blood-bath in avenging each dead civilian on its own side. How can this lop-sided reaction not take one back to some of modern European history’s darkest pages?
Let’s get straight to the point: are we seriously talking about self-defense? For journalists like Marco Travaglio, Piero Ostellino, Pierluigi Battista and Angelo Panebianco, who harp on with the refrain of Hamas having full responsibility for this genocide as well as for breaking the truce between Israel and Palestine, I would like to remind them of the United Nation’s position on the matter. Professor Richard Falk, special rapporteur for human rights with the United Nations, has clearly expressed his views: it was in fact Israel that broken the truce in November, by blatantly exterminating 17 Palestinians. In the same month zero Israeli victims had been recorded, zero in October and likewise in the previous month, as well as the one prior to it. We were also recently reminded of this by Nobel prize winner and ex US President Jimmy Carter. It really is a crying shame that a journalist like Travaglio, who’s earned our admiration as a proud upholder of freedom of the press, is now sporting an IDF helmet and entertaining the masses on TV while amusing himself with the pastime most in vogue at the moment – infant-shooting in Gaza.
An Israeli army officer (L) grabs a video camera from Reuters cameraman Yusri al-Jamal as he prevents him from covering news events in the West Bank city of Hebron.

As I tap on my keyboard in the Ramattan press agency office, all the Palestinian reporters around me are wearing bullet-proof vests and helmets. They haven’t come straight from riding in a tank – they’re simply sitting in front of their computers. Two floors above, the Reuters offices were recently struck by a rocket, which seriously injured two. Almost all the floors in the building are empty at the moment, and only the most heroic of journalists are still around. The story of this hell must somehow continue to be told. And yet earlier this week, the Israeli army had assured Reuters it wouldn’t need to evacuate, as staying in their offices would be safe. This morning many casualties were also caused by the bombing of the United Nations building, built among others with money from the Italian government. Berlusconi, where are you?
John Ging, chief of the UNRWA, UN agency for Palestinian refugees and eye witness, clearly spoke of white phosphorous bombs. In the Tal el Hawa neighbourhood in Gaza city, a whole wing of Al Quds hospital is presently in flames, and Leila, an ISM colleague is also trapped inside it along with forty doctors and nurses, and one hundred patients. She describes these last dramatic hours to us via phone. A tank stands in front of the hospital. There are snipers everywhere, ready to shoot at anything that moves. All around is destruction. At night, from their windows, they could observe a building going on fire after having been struck by a bomb. They heard the cries of whole families with children, imploring help. They were impotent to help as they watched the bodies devoured by the flames, running into the street and then be reduced to ashes. Hell has switched places and come to the centre of Gaza, and we are the damned designated by an inhuman hatred.
Stay human
Vittorio Arrigoni