3 Questions YOU need to ask about any �Shariah-Com |
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Rakaan
Starter. Male Joined: 02 April 2015 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 1 |
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Posted: 02 April 2015 at 8:46am |
The generous Quran in Surat Al-Nahil Verse 43 says: �Ask the people
who know if you do not.� In other words, the first person you should ask is yourself. It is only after you ask yourself and you are unable to determine whether something is right�or wrong�should you ask others. Too many Muslims forget the �if you do not� part of the verse and immediately�delegate�their judgement�responsibilities to�others. The prophet Mohammad, peace be upon him, mentions this meaning in the beautiful Hadith narrated by Imam Ahmad: Wabisa bin Mabad said:�I approached the prophet, peace be upon him, and he said: You came to ask me about right and wrong didn�t you? I replied:Yes, The prophet said: ask your heart, that which is righteous settles in one�s self and comforts the heart, and that which is sinful upsets one�s self and wavers in the heart, regardless of what people tell you. To assist in determining�right from wrong regarding the Shariah- compliance of a certain financing product, here�are 3�useful questions to ask: 1. When you try to justify using the product, is the only argument you can make: �they have a sharia council that approved it�? If you can�t convincingly articulate how a product provides a substantively different experience than another product you know to be prohibited in Islam, I�d stay away. Albert Einstein famously said: �If you can�t explain it to a six year old, you don�t understand it yourself.� And if you don�t understand how a personal financing product is Shariah compliant, it�s probably not. Trust your judgement and don�t be intimidated by the beard length of someone who says it�s Shariah compliant. With all due respect to people who sit on Sharia-boards, but Shariah compliance is not rocket science. It�s a judgement call that the average person can make if they spend some time�to educate themselves on the topic. I�ve created some mental tools to assist the average Muslim consumer in doing just that. e.g.�3 ways to identify Riba. 2.�Assume Shariah-compliance doesn�t matter to you. Would you still use�this product? If the answer is no, then the product is probably not Shariah- compliant. It is impossible that Allah, the most compassionate the most merciful, will ask His believers to use a product that is inferior in utility to other products on the market. Especially if the products that it is inferior to, let�s say a traditional loan, is prohibited in Islam because it�s�considered unfair to the consumer! I say it�s probably not Shariah-compliant because it is always possible that the product contains benefits that are unknown to you or that you just have bad judgement. I consider both these possibilities to be relatively small since: 1- Whoever is selling the product will make sure you are aware of every single possible feature and benefit of�their product, even the very far fetched ones. Case in point, I was watching a promotional video for one of the �Islamic� financing solutions and they mention, quite enthusiastically, that they will share their customers any loss incurred from �Eminent Domain�. I admit I didn�t know what that was so I looked it up. Turns out, Eminent Domain is the power of a government to acquire private property for public purposes. Really? How often does that happen? Also, this was an American company and nowhere in the video did it mention that �Just compensation� from the government to the property owner is already guaranteed in the U.S. Constitution! 2- People wise up over time. You may exercise bad judgement the first time you choose a product, but the second and third time? It�s unlikely if you have alternatives. If you�re unclear on how to answer�would you still buy this product if Sharia-compliance wasn�t a consideration?�there�s actually a very straight-forward way to get a feeling for the answer.�Does the product have non-Muslim customers?�If the answer is no, there is a good chance you are just buying the words �Sharia-compliant� that were used when they marketed the product to you. Otherwise, if the product was superior to alternatives, some non-Muslims would have seen this and bought the product. Especially if the product is being offered in a predominantly non-Muslim country. 3. What do state and federal government agencies think? If the company�s disclosure documents include the words �loan� and �interest� that�s because the government thinks the product is these things and requires the company to use this terminology. This is not a matter of government bureaucracy or people in the government not having the mental capacity�to understand the genius behind this particular �Islamic� finance product. The government looked at the product, read the terms, and said something along the lines of �yeeaaah I�m not sure what exactly you Muslims are up to, and while you have the freedom to call your product whatever you like, this sure as hell seems like interest-bearing debt to us and you need to make this clear to your customers.� For example, in the United States, if you were truly paying �rent� or some other euphemism used to disguise interest-bearing debt, the IRS�wouldn�t�require the people receiving �rent� payments from you�to disclose�how much they received ininterest�from you last year. So the next time your weighing whether or not to buy a product that claims to be �Shariah-compliant� make sure you ask yourself the above 3 questions. If one or more�of the answers doesn�t check out, trust your logic, and make your decisions accordingly. For more on Islamic finance see: https://foundationsforislamiceconomics.wordpress.com/ Edited by Rakaan - 02 April 2015 at 8:49am |
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