What is Zakah ?
- Categories: Fiqh of Zakah -
Zakah is the third obligation of Islam, every Muslim whose finances are above a certain specified minimum must pay 2.5 per cent of his cash balance annually to a deserving fellow-being, a new convert to Islam, a traveler or a person with debts. This is the minimum. The more you pay, the greater the reward that Allah will bestow on you. The money that we pay as Zakah is not something Allah needs or receives. He is above any want and desire. He, in His benign Mercy, promises us manifold rewards if we help our brethren. But there is one basic condition for being thus rewarded: when we pay in the name of Allah, we shall neither expect nor demand any worldly gains from the beneficiaries nor aim at becoming known as philanthropists.
Zakah is as basic
to Islam as other forms of 'Ibadah: Salah (prayer) and Sawm
(fasting). Its fundamental importance lies in the fact that it
fosters in us the quality of sacrifice and rids us of selfishness.
Islam accepts within its fold only those who are ready to give away
in God's way some of their hard-earned wealth willingly and without
any temporal or personal gain. It has nothing to do with misers. A
true Muslim will, when the call comes, sacrifice all his belongings
in the way of Allah, for Zakah has already trained him to do
so.
Muslim society
has much to gain from the institution of Zakah. It is the bounden
duty of every well-to-do Muslim to help his lowly-placed, poor
brethren. His wealth is not to be spent solely for his own comfort
and luxury -there are rightful claimants on his wealth, and they
are the nation's widows and orphans, the poor and the invalid;
those who have the ability but lack the means to get useful
employment and those who have the talent but not the money to
acquire knowledge and become useful members of the community. He
who does not recognize the call on his wealth of such members of
his own community is indeed cruel. For there could be no greater
cruelty than to fill one's own coffers while others die of hunger
or suffer the agonies of unemployment. Islam is a sworn enemy of
selfishness, greed and acquisitiveness. Disbelievers, devoid of
sentiments of universal love, know only how to preserve wealth and
to add to it by lending it out on interest. Islam's teachings are
the antithesis of this attitude. Here one shares one's wealth with
others and helps them stand on their own feet and become productive
members of society.
Source : Fundamentals of Islam by
Al-Mawdudi