Showing posts with label zakat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label zakat. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 14, 2020

Muslim generosity in the age of the Pandemic and Panic buying. Crescent International 6 April 2020 SMY1R221


Muslim generosity in the age of the Pandemic and Panic buying.   Crescent International 6 April 2020 SMY1R221

;The corona virus pandemic has led many people in the West to rush and buy food items, disinfectants and toilet paper—yes toilet paper—for fear that these will run out.Why this obsession with the toilet paper? True, people want to clean themselves but it is a lot more hygienic to wash after using the toilet.
Muslims have been washing themselves for more than 1500 years. By all means use the toilet paper but then wash yourself as well. And washing hands thoroughly with warm water and soap is important for good health. Again, this is a long-established Muslim practice that the West is just beginning to learn because of the pandemic.
But let us move on from the toilet paper. Fearing that they will run out of food, many people rushed to buy huge amounts of food, stacking their trolleys sky high, especially of dry food items and canned vegetables. There are others—the Muslims—that have done the exact opposite. Both in the West and in societies where they are a majority, Muslims have gone out of their way to help the needy and poor.
Through mosques and other outlets including restaurants, individual Muslims as well as Muslim charities have organized food distribution and food baskets handing them to families that are facing economic hardship in these difficult times. In the US, Canada, UK and Europe, the much-vilified Muslims have also stepped forward to help others without distinction of religion or race. Muslim youth in parts of Canada have set up volunteer groups to help the vulnerable and the elderly to purchase groceries or get medicines.

In the U.S. Americans have been buying guns. Even before the pandemic, there were already more than 393 million guns owned by individuals in the US. Gun owners have made clear they intend to use their weapons to get what they want if there is a run on food items. Muslims are not buying weapons. Instead of fighting to get food for themselves, they have gone about preparing food packages to distribute among the needy. In Spain where the country is under complete lock down,Muslim taxi drivers have volunteered to take people to hospital. without charging them. In Muslim majority countries, especially in Bangladesh, Pakistan and Iran, commendable efforts are underway to help the needy.

Even in India where Muslim persecution is part of the ruling party agenda and many have been hacked to death, Muslims have gone into poor neighbor hoods and provided food to needy families. They make no distinction between Muslims and Hindus. The food distribution campaigns are organized through mosques in each locality .
Pakistan and Iran also face serious economic challenges. Pakistan’s economy has been ruined by successive governments in the past pilfering billions out of the country. Iran has been under severe US-imposed sanctions that have seriously undermined its economy. Sanctions have also prevented other countries from doing business with Tehran for fear of being punished by the US. Iran is even prevented from importing desperately needed medicines.The pandemic has further strained Iran’s economic resources. Despite these challenges both Muslim countries and others have come through to help the needy and poor. The Iranian government announced plans to give one-time cash payment of 10 million rials (nearly $240 at official currency rate) to more than 23 million households in the country. This is part of government efforts to help people cope with the economic impact of the pandemic. There are also private foundations in Iran that provide help to the poor. Among "Shia" Muslims, the concept of Khums is well established. They give their Khums (one-fifth of income) to their Marja (religious leader they follow, and there are many maraje in Iran and Iraq) whose office in turn distributes this money among the deserving.
Lock downs imposed as part of containing the pandemic have put daily wage earners at serious risk. In the absence of governmental safety nets like those in the West, individuals have stepped forward as part of their responsibility, to fill the vacuum. The Qur’an emphasizes this repeatedly both through giving Zakat as well as other charitable donations (2:03; 2:177; 9:60 and other ayat in the noble Qur'an).
Most Muslims give Zakat donations in the month of Ramadan. There are nearly 25 million people living below the poverty line in Pakistan. They are helped by the generous donations of other people in Pakistan that give Zakat either directly to the poor or through institutional arrangements.The people of Pakistan are among the most charitable in the world. A government-sponsored volunteer effort is also underway in Pakistan to mitigate the disastrous impact of the pandemic. Led by concerned citizens that have organized food drives, and protective gear donations, the effort has been recognized even internationally. Similarly, on March 27, Prime Minister Imran Khan announced the creation of a special fund for laborers and daily wage earners that would provide Rs. 3,000 to each person per month for four months. More than 12 million vulnerable people have already been registered and another 3.5 million are being added to the list.There are similar databases available at the provincial level to help track the most vulnerable. The public-private sector combination may just allow Pakistan to weather the pandemic without leaving the most vulnerable to fall through the cracks as is happening in neighboring India. Prime Minister Khan has also opened a new bank account named ‘Prime Minister’s COVID-19 Relief Fund’ at the National Bank of Pakistan in Karachi. He has appealed to overseas Pakistanis to deposit funds directly into the account to boost the country’s foreign currency reserves hit hard by the cancellation of orders for Pakistani goods, mainly textiles from abroad. In these troubled times, most Muslims have shown a remarkable sense of compassion to help others.

This is the true spirit of Islam.



Tuesday, December 11, 2018

Why Should I Be Hungry BY ZEENAT IQBAL HAKIMJEE (JR94SS05)






 

Why Should I Be Hungry BY ZEENAT IQBAL HAKIMJEE (JR94SS05)


Salman come and have your lunch” shouted his mom from the door of their hut in the Katchi abadi. He was playing marbles with his friends of adversary. His mother was thin, a widow who lived in a slum of Karachi. Her husband died when Salman was 6 years of age. He was 10 now in the adolescent phase. She worked hard as a domestic servant in the city. Their slum was outside the city. Salman knew that she always kept the meat for him. If Salman asked her to have it she would say she had eaten at Begum Saheba’s. But Salman, although not so old, knew in his heart of hearts that his mom was laying.  He knew that she saved as  much food as she could for him, of the little that they had. He entered his hut with his friend; his mom looked up as if to say, there is not enough for the both of us. But she told Rahman to come in. So Rahman and Salman sat together and ate the dried bread with curry.

            One day Rahman told Salman that a guest to the slum whom he called, Ustadji, had given him 5 rupees, which was a lot of money for Rahman. He asked Salman to come with him to meet Ustadji. Ustadji seemed to be a nice person. He gave Salman Rs. 5; only nice persons gave money, just like that, thought Salman.

            Upon enquiring Salman found out that Ustadji lived in the city. He told Salman that he had a big house and he, Salman could come and stay with him. He would receive Rs. 500 per month. Salman convinced his mom to let him go. He wanted to help his mom by earning some money to give her.

            They sat in a taxi, which wound through roads that Salman had not seen in a lifetime. After an hour or so, the taxi stopped outside a building. Ustadji stepped outside and asked Salman to follow. A boy about 14 years of age came to Ustadji. He enquired about who Salman was. Ustadji asked him to take Salman to his room.

            There Salman saw a quilted robe and Kashkoll A pair of crutches were propped up against the wall.  Many cases of children being deliberately mutilated and disabled by their inhuman Ustadji’s for the purpose of beggary have been reported. A substantial amount of takings from these poor and innocent child-beggars fill the purses of their cruel tormentors.

            After a couple of days, Salman found himself on the streets with the boy who shared his room, begging for money. He had to report to Ustadji in the evening, declaring the amount of money he had collected to him.

            It is facts that a vast majority of beggars are able bodied and have taken to this lucrative profession as a means of making some easy money. Well, meaning people give alms to them on Fridays in particular and during Ramazan. But they don’t realize that by doing so, they are not really implementing the spirit behind the concept of charity. No doubt, some of the destitute need our help, but by giving alms to them we are really encouraging them to become lazy and to harass people.

            Salman hated this job, but what could he do. He missed his mom and Rahman very much. But what could he do. Ustadji kept giving excuses for not sending him home. Salman did not know how to find his way home. At night he cried himself to sleep. Take this money. Ustadji gave him Rs. 10 as a bonus whenever he was in a good mood.

            One day, Salman set out early. In the midst of the crowd, he thought he saw Begum Saheba. She lived in the city. He ran like a bullet towards her. With wet eyes he told her his story. She said she would take him to his mom. She gave him some clothes to wear and made sure he had a bath.

            He hugged his mom and would not leave her. He hugged Rahman and thanked Begum Saheba, profoundly. He would skip a meal, even three and live on an empty stomach as long as he could be with his mom and Rahman.

            One wonders where the crores of rupees which the government annually collects as zakat goes. Of course the bulk of the amount should be given as annual aid to the poor whether they live in slums or are beggars.