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Classical zakat modelling for the blockhain age: inspiration from Umar bin Abdul Aziz

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Date
2018
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Abstract
As the third pillar of Islam, zakat has a 1,400-year-old history in reducing inequality and redistributing wealth to at least, the deserving Qur'anic recipients (Al Qur'an, 9:60). Understood as an obligatory command, zakat appears no less than 58 times in the primary source of Islamic law, 26 times along with prayer, for instance: "So establish Salat and give Zakat, and hold fast to Allah" (Al-Qur'an 22:78). All Muslims who meet a minimum threshold of zakatable assets (nisab) are required to pay zakat annually. The oft-repeated conundrum however, is if the Zakat institution was so deeply entrenched in the Islamic law, why then do so many continue to suffer from poverty and malnutrition in even Muslim majority nations? According to a report by Pew Research Centre (2011), Muslim-majority countries are amongst the poorest in the world, with a median GDP per capita (after adjusting for purchasing power parity) of just $1,200 in sub-Saharan Africa, compared to more developed countries at $33,700 per capita.
Keywords
Zakat , Blockchain , Caliph Umar bin Abdul Aziz , Socio-economic
Citation
Mahomed, Z. (2018). Classical zakat modelling for the blockhain age: inspiration from Umar bin Abdul Aziz. IF Hub, 11 (December 2018), pp. 1-4.
Publisher
INCEIF
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