Muslim's Character
CHAPTER 15
PHILANTHROPY AND BENEVOLENCE
Generosity-An Essential Part of a Muslim's Conduct
Islam is a religion whose
foundation has
been kept on charity, generosity, and philanthropy. Narrow mindedness,
greed
and miserliness are evils that shake its edifice. Therefore Islam likes
that
its followers should be generous and charitable. It has advised them to
treat
others kindly, to act righteously, to help their kinsmen and to do all
kinds of
good and virtuous deeds. It has stressed on its followers to make
righteous
living a permanent policy:
"Those who spend (in charity)
their
wealth by night and by day; in secret and in public, have their reward
with
their Lord " there is no fear for them, nor shall they grieve.
( Baqarah: 274)
It
is the responsibility of every Muslim that in meeting his needs
he should act in a balanced way, so that he may not spend all his
wealth on his
personal needs only, but that it is his duty that he should let others
also
partake of the blessings which Allah has bestowed on him, and that he
should
allot a part of his wealth for the help and assistance of the poor and
needy
persons. Allah's Messenger has said:
"O
Adam's son ! Spend your wealth, it is good for you. And do
not block it, it is bad for you, and the wealth according to the need
cannot be
reproached. Spend first for your family and dependents, and the raised
hand is
better than the lowered hand."
(Muslim)
Quran has very clearly hinted
at this
subject when it has commanded the Muslims to spend for their kinsmen
and the
needy persons and prevented wasteful spending. A spendthrift wastes his
wealth
and indulges in foolishness. He spends his excess wealth for his
personal
pleasures, then what can remain with him for payment of the rights of
others
and the necessary assistance to the needy persons?
Allah has commanded:
"And render to the kindred
their due
rights, as ( also) to those in want. and to the wayfarer.. but squander
not
(your wealth) in the ,manner of a spendthrift. Verily, spendthrifts are
the
brothers of Satans, and the Satan is to his Lord ungrateful."
(Bani Israil: 26,
27)
And after this, advice is
given to be
mindful of the sentiments of the needy and the people in want, and
their
feelings should not be hurt. If there is nothing that can be given to
them,
they should be refused softly and in a decent way:
"And even if you have to turn
away
from them in pursuit of the Mercy of your Lord which you do expect,
speak to
them a word of easy kindness."
( Bani Israil:
28)
Islam's call to its followers
to spend in
the cause of Allah and for charity is famous and well known. Similarly
its war
against miserliness, greed and narrow-mindedness is as clear as the
day.
One hadith has it :
“
A giver of charity is near to Allah, is near to humans, and is near to
Paradise
and away from hell. And a miser is away from Allah, is away from
humans, away
from the Paradise and is near to hell. An uneducated giver of charity
is liked
more by Allah than a miserly worshipper."
(Tirmizi)
There does not exist any
system in this
world, and there is also no possibility of its existence, in which all
the
people may be indifferent to and not in need of mutual co-operation. As
long as
there are power and weakness, wealth and poverty side by side in the
human
society, it is necessary for achieving peace and satisfaction and for
ensuring
the success and security of the society that the strong should be kind
to the
weak, and that wealthy should favor the poor and needy with gifts and
donations.
If wealth and property are
amassed as a
result of the capabilities and striving of the people, then some people
amass
lot of riches and some people get only the bare necessities. And this
cannot be
objected to. The question regarding misfortune and ungratefulness arise
when
these people live a life away from the society, when they are concerned
only
with meeting their own personal needs and for providing for their own
pleasures
and luxuries, when Allah has caused the people to live together, and
has
declared this togetherness of theirs, instead of differences in their
circumstances, a severe trial for them. This provides a test for their
faith
and an opportunity for proving their worth.
“ We have made some of you
as trials
for others. Will you have patience? For Allah is One Who see" (all
things)."
(Furqan .. 20)
A community can be successful
in this
field of life only when the relationship among its individuals is
strong and
firm. No individual of the community should be so deprived that he may
be
facing a life of starvation and no wealthy man of the community should
be so
greedy that he may be spending his wealth only for his own personal
pleasures
and luxuries.
To achieve this high
objectives Islam has
framed very strong laws. Peoples'
hearts have been prepared to indulge in righteous and virtuous deeds,
and they
have been tempted to co-operate with each other, help each other and
act
righteously. It explained to them that the benefit of spending in the
cause of
Allah is not only derived by the poor and needy persons but the givers
of
charity also achieve the invaluable riches of peace and satisfaction;
their
hearts are protected from the earthquakes of rancor and jealousy, and
they are
saved from the adverse consequences of selfishness and narrow-
mindedness :
“ Behold, you are those
invited to
spend in the way of Allah.. but among you are some that are niggardly.
But any
who are niggardly are so at the expense of their own souls. But Allah
is free
of all wants, and it is you that are needy."
(Muhammed: 38)
Poverty destroys all Charm
Poverty and want is a
condition which
causes a lot of trouble for men. It throws him down from the position
which
Allah had given him, and there is always a lurking fear that it may
deprive him
from that nobleness for which Allah has declared him the best of all
the
creatures.
Human nature does not like to
see any
person in dirty, torn and tattered clothes, that would expose a man's
defects;
there should be no footwear to cover his feet, or his heels and fingers
are
dragging on the road, or he is hungry for a number of days; he may be
looking
greedily at tasty and luscious food and be unable to taste it.
Those who see such sad and
sorrowful
scenes and are not moved by them at alt, they are not humans; they are
not
Muslims. To feel disturbed and sorry by seeing the plight of the
unhappy men is
common human nature. One who is bereft of this basic quality is not a
human; he
is a stone. As an Urdu poet says:
"Man was created for sympathy
(by
Allah), Otherwise there was no dearth of angles for worshipping Him."
The question before faith is
that it
should frighten men from their Lord in relation to the condition of
such
helpless and poor people.
Once the Prophet of Islam saw
such a
scene. The tears rolled out from his eyes, and he was very much
perturbed. He
gathered all the Muslims and delivered a very effective speech. He
reminded
them of the rights of men on men and their duties. He warned them of
the
punishment from Allah and the consequences in the Hereafter. His speech
was so
effective that the people who were present there, freely donated
whatever they
could, with the result that so much money was collected that the man
whose
condition had so moved the Prophet became a wealthy man from this
spontaneous
help from the companions of the Prophet, and all his defects were
covered. '
Jarir has narrated: "We were
in the
company of the Prophet in the morning. Some people came in his
presence. They
were ill-clad. Their sheets were torn from various places. Many of them
belonged to the tribe of Bani Madhar. When the Prophet saw their
starving
condition. his face changed color. He went into his house and then came
out and
asked Bilal to give Azan. He called the
faithful to prayer and the Prophet led the prayer. Then he delivered a
speech,
and said:
"O
People! Fear your Lord, who created you from a single
person, created, of like nature, his mate; and from them twain
scattered (like
seeds) countless men and women ; fear Allah through Whom you demand
your (rights)
of one another, and to towards the womb (that bore you). Verily, Allah
ever
watches over you."
(An-Nisa: 1)
"O People who believe! fear
Allah,
and every person should see what he has prepared for his future."
(Hashr: 18)
Then the Prophet said:
"Everyone
should give in charity dinar, dirham, cloth, dates,
wheat, etc." He went on till he urged: "Give, even' if it is a stone
of a date."
The narrator says that after
this a man
from Ansar brought a bag so full that it was slipping from his hand and
it fell
to the ground before he reached the Prophet. Other people also brought
things
to be given in charity, till there were two big heaps of eatable goods
and
clothes. At that time I saw that the face of the Prophet glowed with
joy as if
it was gold. Then he said:
"Anybody who inducted a good
Sunnah
in Islam, he will get its reward (sawab) and then also the
reward of
others acting on it, without there being any reduction in the reward of
these
who act on that Sunnah.
And anybody who inducted a bad
system in
Islam, he will get the punishment for it and also the punishment of all
those
who will act on it, without there being any reduction in the punishment
of
those who act on it."
(Muslim)
These eloquent words invite us
to compete
in matters of righteousness and we should try to vie with each other in
performing virtuous deeds, e.g. social welfare work during inclement
weather,
or relief work after natural calamities, etc., etc.
On the other hand these words
warn those
who introduce bad practices in the society, and by this they increase
the
problems and complications of the society, and they leave their
successors to
face the ill consequences of their acts.
Charity A Guarantee for the Success in the World and Salvation in the Hereafter
It is human nature to love
wealth and to
be greedy to get it. For this a man travels long. distances and bears various
kinds of troubles. The disease of selfishness and a tendency of
giving
preference to his own benefits over all other things are there in a man
from
the first day. He thinks about himself more and cares little for
others.
If he is given the entire
wealth of the
earth, nay, even if he gets the treasures of the blessings of his Lord,
he will
not be prepared to spend from it willingly, and different kinds of
diseases of
selfishness will tie his hands.
"Say (O Prophet !) If you get
the
treasures of my Lord in your possession, you would have blocked it from
fear of
its being spent. Verily, man is narrow- minded."
(Bani Israil:
100)
Islam has considered this kind
of
thinking and mentality as very cheap and mean, and it is to be resisted
vehemently. It is to be counted with alertness and cleverness. Islam
has very
clearly stated that only that man can be successful in achieving the
rewards in
this and the next world who removes the motivations of narrow-
mindedness and
niggardliness and nourishes charity and generosity:
"So fear Allah as much as you
can..
listen and obey.. and spend in charity for the benefit of your own
souls.. and
those saved from the covetousness of their own souls,-they are the ones
that
achieve prosperity."
(Taghabun: 16)
Heaps of silver and gold from
which the
rights of poor and needy persons are not met become the causes of their
owner's
punishment and disgrace in this world and in the next. Such wealth is
like the
snakes which are hiding in their holes and arc waiting to bite men.
Islam has
clarified that this wealth will be turned into living snakes on the
Doomsday,
and this snake will be chasing for attacking and biting its owner.
"The wealthy man who has not
paid
the rights of others from his wealth, his treasure will become a snake
on the
Doomsday, which will chase him with open mouth, then a voice will be
heard:
'Catch hold of your wealth which you had concealed, and I am
unconcerned with
this. When he will see that there is no escape, he will put his hand in
its
mouth, and it will bite him as a bull eats the grass."
(Bukhari)
Islam explains to the man that
his love
for wealth leads him near destruction, and that if he ponders over the
reality
of wealth and its consequences he will realize that charity is better
than
selfishness and that gift is nobler than miserliness.
"Man will say : my wealth, my
wealth, although his wealth was of three kinds: whatever he ate, drank
and
finished it; or had spent un clothes and they were torn; or he gave to
others
and stored for the Hereafter, and what was other than this has been
finished or
has been left for the people."
(Muslim)
It is strange that what a man
leaves for
others, he expresses harshness in that. If he will not use his wealth
for
bettering his own economic condition and for the welfare in the
Hereafter, then
from what else will he try to derive benefit?
The holy Prophet disclosed
this reality,
when he said:
"Who is there among you that
likes
the wealth of his inheritor more than his own wealth ?" The Companions
replied: "O Messenger of Allah! We like our own wealth." The Prophet
then said: "The wealth of each one of you is what he has sent to God,
and
the wealth of the inheritor is what each one of you leaves behind." .
(Bukhan)
In spite of this when the
Prophet
declared that he would collect the
Zakat, he treated leniently and with softness the greed of men to hoard
money
and tackled them with great dexterity. He said:
"Soon to you will come the
collectors of Zakat. When they come, welcome them. Give them full
liberty to
collect whatever they want. If they act justly, they will do good to
themselves. And if they are unjust, its evil will be on them. Keep them
pleased, for the payment of your zakat will be completed by their
pleasure, and
they should pray in your favor."
(Abu Daud)
If a man is successful in
removing the
obstructions that miserliness and narrow-mindedness place in the path
of
righteous feelings, then it is a perfect achievement in the eyes of
Islam.
Ordinarily a man is hopeful about life, and his relationship with it is
strong
and firm, provided he is healthy and energetic and courageous about
future. At
such a time man spends his money moderately and he is always thinking
of
increasing his wealth, so that he may be reassured about his future and
that of
his children. If in these circumstance~ a man controls all the factors,
and
keeps his hands open, spends his money open-heartedly and generously,
he
neither worries about poverty or want, nor is he afraid about his ruin,
then
such a man performs the act of great good. One man went to the Prophet
and
asked him:
"O Messenger of Allah! What
charity
is the best reward-winning ?" The Prophet said: "That you give in
charity, although you may be healthy and in need of money; you may be
afraid of
getting poor so also you may be hopeful of getting wealth and being
free from
want. Let it not happen that you should go on postponing to give in
charity,
till your last breath, then you start making a will to give this much
in
charity to this man and that much to that man."
(Bukhari)
“If
you give charity openly even so it is
good, but if you give it secretly to the needy, it is much better for
you, and
He will/ remove some of your ill- deeds. And Allah is well aware of
what you
do."
( Baqarah : 271)
"If you loan to Allah a
beautiful
loan ,
He will double it to your (credit), and He will grant
forgiveness ;
for Allah is most Ready to appreciate (service), Most
Forbearing,-Knower of
what is hidden and what is open, Exalted in Might, Full of
Wisdom."
(Taghabun : 17, 18)
When a man commits a sin and
he realizes
that there has arisen distance between him and his Lord, then the thing
that
brings back cleanness, light and gets him a shelter under the
benevolence and
pleasure of his Lord is spending his most loved wealth and property in
the
cause of Allah, and he should gladden the hearts of the poor and the
needy with
its help, and should try to achieve rank before the Most Gracious
Being. Hazrat
Abu Zar has narrated that the Prophet has said:
“There was a worshipper in the
Bani
Israil, who had worshipped Allah in a
monastery for sixty years. One day there was rainfall and the whole
area became
green. When he saw from his hillside-monastery he felt-would it that he
went
down in the valley and recited Allah's praises and collected more
virtue. Then
he went down from the monastery. He had one or two loaves. In the
meanwhile he
met a woman, and talked to her and the woman also enjoyed, and
suddenly
he covered the woman and then slumber overtook him.
Then he came for taking a bath
to a lake,
and a beggar asked him for alms. The monk then gave
him both the loaves, and then he suddenly died. ! His sixty
years' worshipping was weighed against the act of illegal sex, then the
scale
of the sin was heavier. Then in the
scale of his virtue the two loaves were put, then the scale of the
virtue
became heavier, and he achieved salvation."
(Ibn Habban)
The effect of and the role
that charity
and generosity play in salvation and deliverance can be found in the
best example
that Allah taught to His Prophet so that he may convey it to
his
followers:
"I command you to give
charity. Its example is like that of a man who has been held by his
enemies,
his hands have been tied to his neck, and he has been drawn
near with
the intention of being beheaded; suddenly he inquires of the
possibility of
saving his life by giving money. Then he began giving whatever valuable
things-of little or more value- that he had,till he was able to
get
himself free."
(Hakim)
Zakat, charity and other
generous acts
are of great importance in this life and in the Hereafter. On its basis
alone a
Muslim's relationship with his religion either becomes strong or weak!.
There
is nothing more depriving than miserliness in paying others' dues and
nursing misgivings
against God. And there is nothing more helpful for success and glory
than
confidence in Allah's favors and a man's charity and generosity.
Allah's Messenger has said:
"The acts of righteousness and
virtue save a man from the adverse consequences of the wicked acts. The
charity
that is given unobtrusively cools down Allah's anger, and kindness to
kinsmen
increases a man's age."
(Tibrani)
Another tradition has it :
"Arrange for the cleanness by
taking
zakat out of your wealth. Arrange for the treatment of your sick by
giving in
charity, and fight the waves of adversity by praying to God meekly and
humbly."
(Abu
Daud)
The
heaviest blow to Satan, the most successful method to counter
his tricks and the greatest shield against his distrusts is that man
should
give his wealth in charity, and spend his money in the cause of Allah.
For this
reason the devil inspires man to be weak and narrow-minded so that he
may be
prevented from giving generously and be involved in the entanglements
of the
material world:
"The devil threatens you with
poverty and bids you to lewd conduct. Al/ah promises you His forgive-
ness and
bounties. And Allah is AI/-Embracing, AI/. Knowing."
(Baqarah.. 268)
It is mentioned in the hadith
:
"When a man decides to give
something in charity, a group of seventy devils clings to him and tries
to put
him off it."
(Ahmed)
When a man distributes his
salary or
allots it to different items of expenditure, be allots its major
portion to
such items as are perishable. He thinks of them as if they are the dues
from
which there is no escape. Islam has informed that a man may consider
the
expenditure on his food and medicine as on perishable items, but the
wealth
which he spends in the cause of Allah is such that never perishes.
Hazrat Ayesha narrates that
they
slaughtered a goat, and the Prophet asked:
"How much of its flesh has
remained ?" They replied: "Nothing remained except the shoulder
piece." The Prophet said: "Everything has remained except the shoulder
piece."
(Tirmizi)
This hadith is in
accord with
these words of Allah: "Whatever is with you is perishable, and
whatever is with Allah is permanent."
(Nahl.. 96)
In a hadith-Qudsi it
is written:
"O son of Adam! Spend your
treasure
in the cause of Allah. With me there is no fear of its getting burnt,
drowned
or stolen. In its place whatever you would need, I will give it to
you."
(Baihaqui)
Philanthropy-means to Increase wealth
Sometimes a thought enters the
mind that
charity reduces the wealth, and brings a man nearer to poverty, and
takes away
from him that peace and re-assurance that is available to him under the
shadow
of wealth.
Such a thought is generated by
Satan, who
puts it into the minds of the hoarders of low and mean nature.
The fact is that charity is
the means of
nourishment and development. Donation of wealth is a long and wide
road. A man
who spends the gifts of Allah generously with his two hands, his hands
are
always full with the gifts of Allah. He is always surrounded by the!
favors and
blessings of Allah.
In a hadilh it is
mentioned:
"There are three men about
whom I
can take an oath. No man's wealth can be reduced by charity. Any man
who shows
patience in the face of oppression, Allah honors him. And a man who
opens the
door to begging, Allah opens on him the door of poverty and want."
(Ibn Majah)
Man should display charity and
generosity
and should try to fill up the gaps found in society. Those poor and
needy
persons who may come to him for succors should not be returned by him
disappointed, but instead he should satisfy them and should deal with
them in
such a way that he himself reaps rich benefits for the next world.
If today a little is spent in
charity,
tomorrow or day-after-tomorrow great advantages will accrue from that.
Allah has termed this
generosity or
donation as "excellent loan,' which will be repaid in increased
quantities, not two or three times-but many more times. He has
encouraged His
slaves to spend money in His cause and has very clearly informed them
that this
spending in the cause of Allah enables them to deservingly get
limitless favors
and blessings of Allah, which are everlasting.
It is mentioned in a hadith
Qudsi:
"O My slave! spend, spend, it
is
your duty to spend. Allah's hand is full. The charity of the day and
night
cannot reduce it. What do you think, how much has He spent since He
created the
earth and the heavens ? He never closed His hands, when His throne was
on the
water, in His hands was the balance which went down and went up."
(Bukhari)
Allah says:
"And whatever you spend (for
good)
He replaces it. And He is the Best of Providers."
(Saba: 39)
Spenders
in the cause of Allah remain in his sight and in his
shelter in both the states of plenty and adversity. The angel sent Darud
on
them, and wish for increase in their wealth. As regards those who hoard
money
very miserly, they wish their loss and ruin. And will they remain with
their
wealth or will the wealth remain with them for all time ? The wealth
has come
to us from others, and will again go to others. Then why
this pride and conceit about it? And
for this reason, why should one forget his position and manners?
The things with which man is
attached in
this world, will be left by him for the real inheritor of those things,
and he
will appear before his Lord in such a condition that he would have no
wealth
nor would he enjoy any rank or position. He will be totally
empty-handed, as he
had first come to the world. The wealth and property about which he had
acted
miserly will become a load in his neck on the Day of Judgment. And it
is not
surprising because Allah will take revenge on such persons who forgot
these
realities and lived in this world unmindful of their duties. The only
thought
that troubled them was that whether a thing was beneficial for them or
not.
They were thoroughly self-centered and in their selfishness they forgot
what
was really good for them.
Allah's Messenger says:
"Every morning two angels come
down
to earth. One of them says: 'O Allah! Give full recompense to the
spender (for
good cause).' The other one says: 'O Allah! Ruin and destroy the
miser', "
(Muslim)
Remove Poverty Movement
A man is greedy for wealth
because he
wants that he should leave behind him plenty of wealth and property for
his
children, so that they may be safe and secure after him. This is a good
and virtuous
intention. Islam considers it a duty of a Muslim that he should take
care of
his family and dependents, and keep them away from want and penury. If
Islam
wants you to be helpful in removing poverty and want from the homes of
other,
it also dislikes you to bring poverty and want in your homes.
It is mentioned in the hadith
:
"To leave your inheritors rich
and
wealthy is much better than leaving them poor and needy, and being
forced to
beg before other."
(Bukhari)
Provision for the children and
a
guarantee for their future are duties of accepted importance. But how
can it be
proper if a man stakes his religion and character after these things It
is
sheer foolishness if a man sacrifices his position, decency and Allah's
pleasure only for the purpose of leaving his income for his children.
Islam shows that like all
other good
things a man's wealth and children are a trial for him. If he is
entangled in
their love and forgets his duties and does not offer the expected
sacrifices,
then these good things and gifts become a trouble for him, nay, they
become
more dangerous and destructive.
"0 you who believe ! Truly,
among
your wives and your children are (some that are) enemies to yourselves : so beware
of them! But if
you forgive and overlook, and cover up (their faults), verily, Allah is
Oft-Forgiving, Most Merciful. Your riches and your children may be but
a trial:
but in the presence of Allah, is the highest reward."
(Taghabun: 14, 15)
Yea, the man who does not go
to jihad,
because he likes the proximity of his wife, or the man who
restrains his
band from giving in charity because he wants to save his wealth for
saving more
and more for his children, be is showing ungratefulness to Allah for
the good
things of life that He has provided, and he thinks that they are really
'gifts'
while actually they are a trial for him.
Khaula Bint Hakim says:
"One day the Prophet came out
carrying his grandchild, and he was saying: 'You (children) become the
means of
miserliness, cowardice, ignorance and foolishness. And you are also the
fragrance of Allah."
(Tirmizi)
It means that the person who
preferred to
be a miser, coward and fool on account of his child, he was in a loss,
and a
person who paid the dues of Allah and His slaves, he became successful.
However, being niggardly in
paying the
dues and for hoarding for the children, a man's poverty and need do not
end, it
also does not guarantee his becoming a wealthy person; and such a man
will not
be able to proffer any excuse which will be acceptable.
Abdullah bin Masood narrates
that the
Prophet PBUH said:
"Allah has blessed two types
of
persons with plenty of wealth, property, and children. He will ask the
persons
of one of these groups: 'O Such and Such man I' He will reply: 'We are
present,
O our Lord! we are present.' He will ask: 'What have you done with the
wealth
and property with which I had blessed you ?' The slave will reply:
'That I have
left for my sons, for 1 was afraid of his poverty'. The Lord will say:
'If you
know the reality you will laugh less and cry more. The thing which you
fear, I
have sent it down on them."
He will ask another person :
'O Such and
such man I' He will reply: 'I am present, O My Lord! I am present.' He
will
ask: 'Had I not blessed you with plenty of wealth and property ?' The
slave
will reply: 'Certainly, my Lord!' He will ask: 'What have you done with
those
blessings ?' He will reply: 'I spent it in the path of your obedience,
and I
left my children to your Mercy, Kindness and Benevolence.' Then God
will say:
'Listen, If you know the reality, you will laugh more and cry less. The
things
on which you relied, I provided him with them'. "
(Tibrani)
Islam advises that man should
first be
kind to himself, then with his home people, then with his relatives and
with
all humans.
A man's being kind with his
self means
that he should meet all his permissible and proper needs by halal or
permissible means, and should avoid haram or forbidden means.
He should
keep himself safe from the manifestations of poverty and starvation,
for a man
loses his dignity because of these conditions. The necessary standard
of
Muslim's honour is not maintained. But all these things should be done
in
between miserliness and wasteful spending. Muslims are allowed to keep
so much
wealth with them that it may suffice to meet their needs, and if they
have not
these means then they are poor and needy.
Abu Saeed Khudri narrates: .
” A man in a poor condition
entered the Masjid-i-Naba,'
(Prophet's Mosque). At that time the Prophet was commanding the
people to
give charity. When the people collected the donations, he gave two
items of
clothing to that man in poor condition. When for the second time the
Prophet
advised the people to give in charity, that seedy looking man threw one
item of
clothing. The Prophet said in anger: 'See this shabby-looking man, I
had given
him two pieces of clothing, and when I again advised people to give in
charity,
he threw his one piece.' The Prophet reproached him considerably."
(Abu Daud)
The holy Prophet wanted to
remove
poverty, penury and want and obscenity from society, while some people
did not
care whether they were moving about without clothes or without
footwear. If the
people of this kind consider their such appearance as a manifestation
of
religious teachings, then it is not correct, because Islam makes it a
duty for
every Muslim to strive for so much wealth as may make him able to raise
his
head with dignity in society.
Jabir has reported:
A man came to the Prophet with
a piece of
gold with him and said to the Prophet that he got it from a mine and
requested
him to accept it ; that it was in charity and that he had nothing else
which he
could give in charity. The Prophet turned his face a
away. So he came from the right side, and again requested. This
time also the Prophet turned his face away. So he came from the left
side and
pleaded. This time also the Prophet did not pay any attention. So he
came from
behind and repeated his request. The Prophet took it and threw it
towards him so
forceful that had it touched him it would have been painful
Then he said: 'Some of you
come to give
the entire property in charity. After this they go on begging before
others,
and the best charity is that which comes from a wealthy person'."
Who deserve First to Partake of your Wealth?
It is the duty of the Head of
the family
to find out what are the reasonable needs of his household. people, and
he
should meet them with generosity. It is not religiousness that a man
should let
his wife and children suffer for want of means and should spend his
wealth for
other purposes, however important they may be. Family relationships
deserve
more attention and preferable treatment over others.
The Prophet has said:
"One dinar is that which you
spend
in the cause of Allah, and one dinar is that which you spend for
freeing a
slave; and one dinar is that which you spend on your family. But of all
these,
the greatest reward will be given for the dinar which has been spent on
the
family."
(Muslim)
In the discussion on Sincerity
this hadith
had been quoted :
"What a Muslim spends on his
family,
for seeking the pleasure of Allah, is also counted as charity."
(Bukhari)
By this clear guidance Islam
wants that
the allotment of the expenditure should be in proportion to the
benefits to
society, for family is the foundation of a great society and the first
brick.
of its edifice. Therefore, it is necessary to pay attention to it first
and to
pay its dues fully.
In this teaching there is a
warning for
those who spend heartily and squander money carelessly outside their
homes
among their friends while at home they become a picture of poverty and
helplessness.
The people who deserve more to
be
benefited from the excess wealth of a person are his relatives and
kinsmen. It
is their right that when the hand should be raised for giving in
charity it
should first be extended towards them. It also appeals to a sound
intellect
that when there are needy and poor persons in the vicinity of a person,
then
where is the sense in leaving them uncared for and extending the
helping hand
towards others?
Such an action might generate
a feeling
of hatred and rancor in the hearts of
the deprived persons, and they may feel that the ignorance shown in
their
respect is with a view to harming them and putting them to great loss. And if giving of pain and dissatisfaction is
done consciously, then this kind of charity becomes troublesome for the
giver.
A haditlt has it:
“O
Community of Muhammed! By the Being Who has sent me with Truth,
Allah cannot accept the charity of those persons whose relatives are in
want of
his kindness and help, and he is distributing it among others, leaving
them. By
the Being in Whose power is my life, on the Day of Judgment Allah will
not look
at such a man."
(Tibrani)
The wife of Hazrat Abdullah
bin Masood,
Zainab Saqafiah says: .. Allah's Messenger bas said :
'O Group of ladies Give in
charity, even
if you have to sell ornaments." She says : 'I went to Abdullah bin
Masood
and told him: 'You are a poor man and the Prophet has asked us to give
in
charity. You go to the Prophet and ask him whether this thing can be an
alternative for charity, if so it is well, otherwise I will give in
charity to
others instead of to you.' Abdullah bin Masood said: 'You go and ask
him.'
She says that on her way to
see the
Prophet, she met a woman from Ansar, who was also troubled with the
same
thoughts. They went together. As a precautionary measure they had to
stop
outside his room. When Hazrat Bilal came out of the room, she said to
him: 'Go
and ask the Prophet and tell him that two women have come to ask you
whether
looking after the husbands and nourishing their children can be an
alternative
to charity or not? And do not tell him who the women are.'
She says that Bilal went in
the presence
of the Prophet and asked him about her problem. The Prophet asked who
the women
were. He answered that one was a woman from the Ansar and another was
Zainab.
The Prophet asked: 'Which Zainab ?' He replied: 'The wife of Abdullah
bin
Masood.' The Prophet said: 'These two will get the reward of the
relationship
and also the reward for the charity.'
(Bukbari)
Allah’s Messenger has said:
"To spend on the poor is
charity,
and to spend on the relative gets the reward for double charity, one is
charity
itself, I and another for kindness to relatives." '
(Tinnizi)