Indonesia memiliki perjalanan sejarah panjang dalam perkembangan agama - agama, dimana didalamnya juga terdapat warisan peninggalan sejarah dan budaya nusantara.
Saat ini kami memiliki paket - paket wisata rohani Islam yang dapat dijadikan wacana dan wawasan pengetahuan dan pendalaman keimanan peserta wisata paket rohani ini.
Walisongo
Walisongo dikenal sebagai penyebar agama Islam di tanah Jawa pada abad ke 15 dan 16. Mereka tinggal di tiga wilayah penting pantai utara Pulau Jawa, yaitu Surabaya-Gresik-Lamongan di Jawa Timur, Demak-Kudus-Muria di Jawa Tengah, dan Cirebon di Jawa Barat. Yakni Surabaya-Gresik-Lamongan di Jawa Timur, Demak-Kudus-Muria di Jawa Tengah, serta Cirebon di Jawa Barat. Mereka adalah para intelektual yang menjadi pembaharu masyarakat pada masanya.
Mereka mengenalkan berbagai bentuk peradaban baru: mulai dari kesehatan, bercocok tanam, niaga, kebudayaan dan kesenian, kemasyarakatan hingga pemerintahan. Era Walisongo adalah era berakhirnya dominasi Hindu-Budha dalam budaya Nusantara untuk digantikan dengan kebudayaan Islam. Mereka adalah simbol penyebaran Islam di Indonesia, disamping tokoh - tokoh terkemuka penyebaran Islam khususnya di tanah Jawa. Namun peranan mereka yang sangat besar dalam mendirikan Kerajaan Islam di Jawa, juga pengaruhnya terhadap kebudayaan masyarakat secara luas serta dakwah secara langsung, membuat para Walisongo ini lebih banyak disebut dibanding yang lain.
Berwisata rohani dengan melakukan napak tilas, mengunjungi makam mereka (ziarah makam walisongo) merupakan satu bentuk wisata rohani yang banyak dilakukan oleh wisatawan lokal, dan banyak juga wisatawan asing yang berkunjung dan berziarah ke makam para wali songo ini.
Ziarah wali songo banyak dilakukan juga oleh rombongan kelompok pengajian yang ingin mengenal lebih dekat para wali songo melalui ziarah makam para wali songo (wali songo) ini, untuk meningkatkan pengetahuan dan keimanan islam yang sedang didalami / dipelajari.
Paket wisata ziarah walisongo / ziarah wali songo ini dapat dipilih per - masing - masing wali, beberapa wali atau ke-sembilan wali tersebut.
Paket Wisata Ziarah Wali Songo juga menyajikan akomodasi dan aneka keperluan wisata ziarah wali songo; konsumsi, transportasi, bakar kambing, door prize dll.
Banten Lama
Banten memiliki sejarah panjang sebagai satu bagian dari jejak perkembangan islam & perlawanan terhadap penjajahan Belanda di tanah air. Sejarah Sunda Lama - Kerajaan Mataram - merupakan bagian dari histori Banten.
Ternyata memang sejarah Kerajaan Islam Banten sejak abad ke-16 hingga abad ke-19 belum terkuak secara detail hingga saat ini. Potongan-potongan sejarah Kerajaan Islam Banten masih ditelusuri dan dikumpulkan oleh para sejarawan sampai detik ini.
Terdapat Situs Keraton Surosowan (pada tahun 1552), Keraton Kaibon (Ratu Aisyah - Ibunda Sultan Maulana Hasanudin), Masjid Agung (Masjid Agung Tanara - peninggalan Kesultanan Banten dibawah Sultan Maulana Hasanudin 1552 - 1570), Masjid Kasunyatan (terdapat makam syeikh Abdul Syukur Sepuh, Syeikh Abdul Syukur Putra - sejaman dengan wali songo), Kompleks pemakaman Sultan Maulana Yusuf
Dipandu oleh Tour Guide yang sangat memahami obyek wisata rohani tersebut, serta dapat memandu ritual ibadah yang tidak menyimpang dan tidak menyalahi kaidah - kaidah dalam islam.
Sumber : http://www.bandungtourtravel.com
Baca Artikel Lainnya : HAKEKAT WISATA ISLAM
PAKET WISATA ROHANI
From sea to shining sea, or at least from one side of the Hudson to the other, politicians you have barely heard of are being accused of wrongdoing. There were so many court proceedings involving public officials on Monday that it was hard to keep up.
In Newark, two underlings of Gov. Chris Christie were arraigned on charges that they were in on the truly deranged plot to block traffic leading onto the George Washington Bridge.
Ten miles away, in Lower Manhattan, Dean G. Skelos, the leader of the New York State Senate, and his son, Adam B. Skelos, were arrested by the Federal Bureau of Investigation on accusations of far more conventional political larceny, involving a job with a sewer company for the son and commissions on title insurance and bond work.
The younger man managed to receive a 150 percent pay increase from the sewer company even though, as he said on tape, he “literally knew nothing about water or, you know, any of that stuff,” according to a criminal complaint the United States attorney’s office filed.
The success of Adam Skelos, 32, was attributed by prosecutors to his father’s influence as the leader of the Senate and as a potentate among state Republicans. The indictment can also be read as one of those unfailingly sad tales of a father who cannot stop indulging a grown son. The senator himself is not alleged to have profited from the schemes, except by being relieved of the burden of underwriting Adam.
The bridge traffic caper is its own species of crazy; what distinguishes the charges against the two Skeloses is the apparent absence of a survival instinct. It is one thing not to know anything about water or that stuff. More remarkable, if true, is the fact that the sewer machinations continued even after the former New York Assembly speaker, Sheldon Silver, was charged in January with taking bribes disguised as fees.
It was by then common gossip in political and news media circles that Senator Skelos, a Republican, the counterpart in the Senate to Mr. Silver, a Democrat, in the Assembly, could be next in line for the criminal dock. “Stay tuned,” the United States attorney, Preet Bharara said, leaving not much to the imagination.
Even though the cat had been unmistakably belled, Skelos father and son continued to talk about how to advance the interests of the sewer company, though the son did begin to use a burner cellphone, the kind people pay for in cash, with no traceable contracts.
That was indeed prudent, as prosecutors had been wiretapping the cellphones of both men. But it would seem that the burner was of limited value, because by then the prosecutors had managed to secure the help of a business executive who agreed to record calls with the Skeloses. It would further seem that the business executive was more attentive to the perils of pending investigations than the politician.
Through the end of the New York State budget negotiations in March, the hopes of the younger Skelos rested on his father’s ability to devise legislation that would benefit the sewer company. That did not pan out. But Senator Skelos did boast that he had haggled with Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, a Democrat, in a successful effort to raise a $150 million allocation for Long Island to $550 million, for what the budget called “transformative economic development projects.” It included money for the kind of work done by the sewer company.
The lawyer for Adam Skelos said he was not guilty and would win in court. Senator Skelos issued a ringing declaration that he was unequivocally innocent.
THIS was also the approach taken in New Jersey by Bill Baroni, a man of great presence and eloquence who stopped outside the federal courthouse to note that he had taken risks as a Republican by bucking his party to support paid family leave, medical marijuana and marriage equality. “I would never risk my career, my job, my reputation for something like this,” Mr. Baroni said. “I am an innocent man.”
The lawyer for his co-defendant, Bridget Anne Kelly, the former deputy chief of staff to Mr. Christie, a Republican, said that she would strongly rebut the charges.
Perhaps they had nothing to do with the lane closings. But neither Mr. Baroni nor Ms. Kelly addressed the question of why they did not return repeated calls from the mayor of Fort Lee, N.J., begging them to stop the traffic tie-ups, over three days.
That silence was a low moment. But perhaps New York hit bottom faster. Senator Skelos, the prosecutors charged, arranged to meet Long Island politicians at the wake of Wenjian Liu, a New York City police officer shot dead in December, to press for payments to the company employing his son.
Sometimes it seems as though for some people, the only thing to be ashamed of is shame itself.
Finding Scandal in New York and New Jersey, but No Shame