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Zakah(charity)
Charity is an act common to all divinely revealed
religions. Even people with no religion at all
recognize generosity as an admirable quality. The
desire to possess is a natural, inborn urge. It is not
in itself a bad thing. It is the basis of
self-preservation. It leads parents to provide homes,
food, clothing and other needs for their children. It
also leads people to provide goods and services for
each other. But the urge to possess needs to be
controlled and balanced with generosity; otherwise it
becomes dangerous. Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) pointed out
this tendency when he said, “If a descendant of
Adam possessed a valley of gold, he would crave
another one. And nothing will fill his mouth but the
dust [of the grave]. But God will accept the penance
of one who repents.” Generosity requires a
struggle against the inborn tendency to be selfish. To
provide the setting where generosity can be exercised,
God created some people poor and some people rich. Not
only that, but He takes some people from lavish wealth
to grinding poverty and vice-versa. The realization
that even if you have money now, you may lose it all
at any moment is a great leverage by which Satan
influences people to be stingy. The Qur’an says,
“Satan threatens you with poverty and enjoins you
with lewdness.”
God,
on the other hand, has promised that wealth will never
be decreased by charity. “Whatever you spend [for
good] He replaces it, and He is the best of
Providers.”
One
who gives charity affirms his faith in God’s promise.
That is why charity is called sadaqah in
Arabic. It is related to the word for ‘truthfulness’
and the word for ‘belief.’
The
Islamic concept of charity is based on the Islamic
concept of wealth. Wealth is considered a trust placed
in one’s hands by God. A person who believes he owns
more money than another because he is smarter or
worked harder than him has a deficient understanding.
How many people are hard working and smart yet poor?
And how many people of mediocre ability and energy are
rich? God is the ultimate provider of wealth and he is
its actual owner. Prophet Muhammad observed, “The
son of Adam claims, ‘My wealth, my wealth.’ But, O son
of Adam, was any of your property really yours, except
what you consumed and destroyed, or wore until it wore
out, or gave as charity and sent ahead [for yourself]?”
Because wealth ultimately belongs to God, its
temporary possessor does not have a blanket right to
do whatever he or she wants with it. It is unlawful to
waste wealth. It is also unlawful to use wealth to buy
substances prohibited in Islam. Also, the poor have a
due right on a portion of the wealth placed in one’s
possession. Giving them their due right is not doing
them a favor, because that portion of one’s wealth is
actually for them. A person who doesn’t give it has,
in reality, confiscated something that does not belong
to him.
Zakaah is an obligatory form of charity on
savings. It is not an income tax, but a savings tax.
Its major recipients are the working poor, who cannot
meet all of their needs without some additional help,
and the destitute, who cannot even meet their basic
needs. It is also used to pay off the debts of those
who are unable to pay off their own debts, to free
slaves and ransom prisoners of war and to reconcile
the hearts of new Muslims who may not yet have a firm
foundation of faith. Other lawful recipients are
stranded travelers, those engaged in jihad and
employees of the state working to collect and
distribute zakaah. Their wages come from it.
Zakaah is due on the
following forms of wealth:
Gold and
silver (this includes paper money)
The amount due is 2.5%
of savings when it reaches the equivalent value of
85 grams (approximately three ounces) of gold. This
minimum amount on which zakaah is due is
called the nisaab. Although some
scholars say that money should be pegged to the
nisaab of silver, i.e., 595 grams, the
majority considers gold to be a more reasonable peg
for developed economies. Consider the difference in
value between the two nisaabs: If gold
is worth $300 per ounce, the nisaab is
equal to $900. If silver is worth $8 an ounce, the
nisaab is equal to approximately $167.
In most cities of the Western world, $167 would not
be enough to rent a room for a month, much less an
apartment. The principle behind zakaah is
that the rich should pay it to the poor. A person
with only $167 in savings would be more likely to
need zakaah than be in a position to pay it.
Zakaah is due on savings of gold and silver
one year after the nisaab has been
reached.
Business
inventory
This includes all goods
acquired or held with the intent of selling them. It
would include store merchandise, land bought for
resale, stocks bought for resale, etc. Zakaah
is not due on factories, machinery being used to
produce goods, or property being held for rental
income. However, zakaah would be due on the
income generated by such properties if it is saved
for a year. The retail value of business inventory
is calculated then added to the savings of gold,
silver, and currency. 2.5% of the total is due.
Livestock
Such as cows,
sheep and camels. There is a different nisaab
for each type of animal and a rather detailed
and complicated table of how much is due for
different amounts of each type. Any fiqh book
can be consulted for the details. Fiqh as-Sunnah
is one of the better books available in English.
Agricultural produce
The nisaab
is five wasqs, which is equivalent to 825
liters. 10% of the harvest is due if the land is
watered by rainfall. 5% is due on land irrigated by
wells, canals or mechanical systems.
Buried
treasure
According to some
scholars, this applies to all mineral wealth
extracted from land. This is more relevant than the
explanation that it refers only to valuables buried
by non-Muslims before Islam. One-fifth is due as
zakaah.
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