Arman smiled. “That’s why the kyai made it. So Lirboyo’s voice never fades — even in a city girl’s phone.”
“You’re using a PDF for tahlil ? That feels… strange,” she said. “Grandma would have wanted the old booklet.”
That night, Arman opened the PDF on his phone. It was beautifully formatted: Javanese-Arabic script, Latin transliteration, and a soft green border — the signature color of Lirboyo. But as he scrolled, he realized his little sister Nina, home from her international school in Surabaya, was watching him. Tahlil Lirboyo Pdf
The PDF never glitched. The prayers were complete.
Pesantren Lirboyo, Kediri, East Java; a small, dusty computer lab on a rainy afternoon. Arman smiled
After the ceremony, Nina asked, “Can you send me that PDF? I want to learn the prayers too.”
Kyai Faiz smiled slowly, pulled out a laptop older than Arman himself, and opened a folder. “Look here, child. A student from Jakarta digitized our Tahlil Lirboyo years ago. It is a PDF — complete with the niyyah (intention), the surat Yasin , the tahlil sequence, and the doa arwah (prayer for the souls).” That feels… strange,” she said
Arman had a problem. Tomorrow was the 40th day of his grandmother’s passing, and he was chosen to lead the tahlil — the recitation of verses from the Qur’an and zikr to bless the deceased. But he had lost his small, worn-out booklet of Tahlil and Yasin .
He handed Arman a USB drive labeled “Tahlil Lirboyo – Official” .
The next day, during the tahlil , Arman placed his phone on a small wooden stand. The mourners — uncles, aunts, and neighbors — glanced curiously but said nothing. As he recited, his voice flowed through the Yasin , the Sholawat , and the 33 repetitions of Subhanallah, Alhamdulillah, Allahu Akbar .