ZAKAT
AL FITR
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Paying
Zakat with Dinar & Dirham
"Islam
is based on five: testifying that there is no god but Allah
and that Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah, establishing
the prayer, paying the Zakat, the Hajj and the fast of Ramadan."
Zakat cannot be paid with a promise of payment
Zakat can only be paid with tangible merchandise, called in
Arabic 'ain. It cannot be paid with a promise to pay or a
debt, called in Arabic dayn.
From the beginning the zakat was paid with dinars and dirhams.
Most significant is that the payment of zakat was never
allowed in paper money during all the ottoman period right
until the fall of the Khalifate.
Shaykh Muhammad Alish (1802-1881), the great Maliki
Qadi, said that if you were to pay zakat with paper-money
only its value as merchandise ('ayn), that is, its value as
paper can be accepted. Therefore, its nominal value is irrelevant
as payment of zakat.
"If the Zakat was obligatory by considering its substance
as a merchandise, then the nisab would not be stipulated according
to its value but according to its substance and its quantity,
as is the case with silver, gold, grain or fruits. Since its
substance [paper] is irrelevant [in value] in respect to the
Zakat, then it should be treated as the copper, iron or other
similar substances."
Fatwa of Shaykh Alish
Payment of Zakat is perfectly explained and regulated in the
Islamic jurisprudence. For centuries when Islamic Law was
enforced by a Caliph or an Amir, the Zakat was collected in
gold and silver. When paper-money was being first introduced,
during the last century by the colonial powers the traditional
ulema rejected it as being opposed to Islamic Law. According
to them paper money was to be treated as fulus or lower category
of currency with limited used, basically just as small change.
It is, for example, not allowed to make a qirad with fulus.
Among those ulema, stands out the famous scholar of magrebi
ascendance, Shaykh Muhammad Alish (1802-1881) who was the
Shaykh of the Shaykhs of Maliki fiqh in the University of
Al-Azhar in Egypt. He wrote in his Fatwa.
"What is your judgement in respect to the paper with
the stamp of the Sultan that circulates like the dinars and
the dirhams? Is it obligatory to pay Zakat as if it was a
coin of gold or silver, or merchandise, or not?"
I responded exactly in the following way:
"Praise belongs to Allah and blessing and peace upon
our Master Muhammad, the Messenger of Allah."
"Zakat is not to be paid for it, because Zakat is
restricted to the flocks, certain type of grains and fruits,
gold and silver, the value of rotational merchandise and the
price of the goods withheld. What is referred previously does
not belong to any of these categories."
You will find an explanation by comparison with the copper
coin or fulus with the stamp of the Sultan which is in circulation
and for which no Zakat is paid since it does not belong to
any of the categories mentioned. It says in the "Mudawwana":
"Those who posses fulus for over a year for a value of
200 dirhams does not need to pay Zakat unless is used as a
rotational merchandise. Then, it should be treated as if it
was a merchandise."
In the "At-Tiraz", after mentioning that Abu Hanifa
and Ash-Shafi'i obliged to pay Zakat for the fulus, [is stated
that] since both affirm that the payment of Zakat is from
value, and considering that Shafi'i has two contradictory
opinions about the subject, the opinion of the school is that
there is no obligation to pay Zakat for the fulus since there
is no discrepancies about the fact that what counts with respect
to the fulus is not its weight or its quantity but only its
given value. If the Zakat was obligatory by considering its
substance as a merchandise, then the nisab would not be stipulated
according to its value but according to its substance and
its quantity, as is the case with silver, gold, grain or fruits.
Since its substance [paper] is irrelevant [in value] in respect
to the Zakat, then it should be treated as the copper, iron
or other similar substances.
And Allah, ta'ala, is the Wisest. And may Allah bless and
give peace to our Master Muhammad and his family.
(Translated from the "Al-Fath Al-'Ali Al-Maliki"
pp. 164-165).
This Fatwa considers paper-money to be fulus, because it only
represents money and does not have value as merchandise. It
follows that since Zakat cannot be paid in fulus, which has
no value as merchandise, it cannot be paid in paper-money,
which value as weight of paper is null. On this basis, it
becomes clear the urgent need to restore the use of the Dinar
and the Dirham as payment of Zakat. If the millions of Muslims
who now make their payment of Zakat in paper money would do
it in newly minted Dinars and Dirhams, they will put in circulation
millions of gold and silver coins into the mainstream of daily
commercial activities of our communities. That single act
will became the most important political act of the century,
opening the path towards the establishment our own halal free
currency breaking away from the usurious financial system.
The return to the payment of zakat in gold and silver is
an essential part of the reestablishment of Islam.
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