Uprightness and honesty in monetary dealings forms a vital
part of the fundamental teachings of Islam.
The Quran as well as the Traditions of the Prophet are
emphatic that a true Muslim is he who is honest and upright
in his business and monetary transactions, keeps his word
and fulfills his promises, shuns fraud and avoids deceit and
perfidy, encroaches not upon the rights of others nor takes
part in wrongful litigation, does not give false evidence,
and abstains from making dishonest money as from usury and
graft. Whoever is not free from these vices is, according to
the Quran and the Traditions, not a true believer but a
renegade and a worthless transgressor.
We now proceed to examine some of the relevant Quranic
verses and Traditions. A short verse of the Quran says: O ye
who believe! Eat not up each other's property by unfair and
dishonest means. (IV: 29)
The verse forbids Muslims against all unclean and corrupt
means of making money, such as, dishonest trading,
embezzlement, gambling, speculation and bribery. Then there
are verses in which these hateful practices are dealt with
one by one. For instance, a severe warning is given in the
following verse to traders who cheat in weighment: Woe to
those that deal in fraud, those who, when they have to
receive by measure from men, exact full measure, but when
they have to give by measure or weight to men, give less
than due. Do they not think that they will be called to
account on a Mighty Day when (all) mankind will stand before
the Lord of the Worlds. (LXXXIII: 1-6)
In the same way the under mentioned verse exhorts Muslims to
be very particular about their trusts and about other
people's rights. God doth command you to render back your
trusts to those to whom they are due. At two places in the
Quran a chief distinguishing feature of Muslims is said to
be that they are: Those who faithfully observe their trusts
and their covenants. (XXIII: 8)
The Prophet used often to say in his sermons: “Remember,
there is no faith in him who is not trustworthy; there is no
place for him in religion who cares not for his pledged word
or promise.”
Another Tradition says: “The signs of a hypocrite are three:
when he speaks, he is false; when he promises, he fails; and
when he is trusted, he plays false.”
Condemning those who cheat in business the sacred Prophet
has said, “He who cheats is not of us. Deceitfulness and
fraud are things that lead one to Hell.”
The Prophet of God once came upon a heap of corn in the
market of Medina and thrust his hand into it. His fingers
felt damp. On being asked, the trader replied that rain had
fallen upon it. The Prophet observed, “Why did you not then
keep (the wet portion of) it above the dry corn, so that men
may see it? He who deceives is not one of us.”
Thus, traders who deceive by showing to customers a false
sample or by concealing from them the defects of the article
they offer for sale are not true Muslims in the judgment of
the holy Prophet and, God-forbidding, they are going to end
up in hell.
Another Tradition says: “The seller must explain to the
buyer the defects, if any, in the quality of the article
offered for sale. Should this not be done, the seller will
permanently be caught in the wrath of Allah (according to
another narrator the exact words are, ‘he will always be
cursed by the angels').”
In short, all manner of deceit and dishonesty in business is
prohibited in Islam. It has been proclaimed to be an act
worthy of unqualified condemnation. The holy Prophet has
expressed his strong dislike for those who do so. He has
said that he will have nothing to do with them; they do not
belong to him. Likewise, bribery and usury, although they
might be practiced by mutual consent and agreement, are
totally disallowed to Muslims and those who are guilty of
them have been condemned squarely in the Traditions.
A well-known Tradition on usury reads: “The curse of God
rests on him who offers loan on usurious terms, and on him
who receives, and on those who are witnesses to the
transaction, and on the writer who writers the deed
thereof.”
As for bribery, the Prophet has, in a Tradition, “condemned
alike the giver of bribes, and the taker of brides in
deciding cases”.
A Tradition goes even to the extent of saying that, “If a
person made a recommendation for anyone in a just matter and
the gratified party gave him something as a gift (in return
for it) and he accepted it then he committed a grave error
(meaning that it, too, is a form of bribery).”
Worse still is the unsurpation of another's property by
force or fraud or dishonest litigation. We have it on the
authority of the Prophet that: “Whoever occupies land
belonging to another unjustly will be sunk into the ground
along with that plot of land on the Doomsday till he reaches
the lowest layer of the earth.
“He who acquires the property of a Muslim unjustly by taking
a false oath (before an Officer) is debarred by God from
entering Paradise and the Fire of Hell is made inevitable
for him”, On hearting it a Companion is reported to have
asked, “Even if it be a minor thing?” The Prophet is said to
have replied, “Yes, even if it be a twig of Pilo (a plant
which grows wild. Its twigs are used for cleaning the
teeth).
The Prophet, again is reported to have warned a person who
was very fond of entering into litigation with others in
these strong words, “Remember, he who will obtain the
property of another by swearing a false oath will appear as
a leper before God (in the Day of Judgment).
“Whoever laid his claim on a thing that was not his is not
of us. He will do well to reserve a place for himself in the
hell.”
It is narrated that one day, after the morning prayers the
holy Prophet stood up and said thrice with great feeling
that, “Perjury has been made the equivalent of Polytheism.”
III-Gotten Wealth
Money or property, which is acquired through unfair means,
as we have just indicated, is positively unclean and
unlawful and anyone who makes use of it and spends it on his
needs does himself a great harm. As the sacred Prophet has
warned, his prayers will not find acceptance with God, his
supplications will not be answered, his petitions will not
be granted, and in case he does good deeds they will avail
him nothing. In the Hereafter, there will be no share for
him in the special favours and good graces of the Lord.
A Tradition says: “If a person earns or acquires anything
through dishonest means and then gives away a part of it in
charity, his act of charity will not be accepted, and if he
will spend from it on his needs there will be no
auspiciousness or real prosperity in it, and should he leave
it behind to his descendants on his death it will serve for
him as hell's provision. Believe it, God does not erase evil
with evil (i.e., charity and salvation). One impurity cannot
remove another; it cannot make it pure.”
And another: “God is pure Himself and He accepts only
offerings that are pure.”
The Prophet, at the end of the Tradition also narrated the
story of a man “who undertakes a long and tedious journey
(to supplicate to God at a haloed place) and arrives (at his
destination) in such a state that his hair is disheveled and
his body is covered from head to foot with dust. He throws
up his hands towards the heavens and cries out, “O Lord! O
my Preserver!' but his sustenance if of the impure and he
has been brought up on what is polluted; how can his prayer
be granted when such is the case?”
The above amply demonstrates that when a person draws his
livelihood from impure means his prayers no longer remain
worthy of being answered. Yet another Tradition of the holy
Prophet reads:
“If a person buys a cloth for ten dirhams and one of them is
tainted (i.e., it has been earned dishonestly), none of his
Namaz will be accepted by God as long as he wears it.”
And, here is one more: “The flesh gathered on one's body by
means of unclean earning deserves to be thrown into the
Fire”.
Brothers If we have the tiniest spark of faith left in our
breasts we must make up our minds, once for all, after
hearing these Traditions, that whatever poverty and hardship
we may have to endure in the world we will never care to
make a single penny from unclean and dishonest sources and
will always content ourselves ith what we earn through
honest lawful means.
Clean Earning and Honest Trade
Just as Islam has condemned all unclean and unlawful means
of making money as wicked and sinful and denounced all
profits derived from them as filthy and devilish, in the
same way it has proclaimed great virtue in seeking one's
livelihood honestly and in engaging oneself cleanly in trade
or profession.
The Prophet has said:
“To earn a clean living is also a duty next only to the
prescribed duties of the faith.”
“The cleanest food is that which has been earned by the
labour of his hand. Indeed, Prophet David used to work with
his own hands for the food he ate.”
“The trader who plies his trade cleanly and honestly will
rise in the hereafter in the company of Prophet's saints and
martyrs.
Kindness and Compassion in Monetary Dealings
Islam has laid great stress on honesty and truth fullness in
trade and other monetary dealings and described profound
virtue and excellency in it. It has declared it to be a
means of gaining nearness unto God. Islam, likewise, enjoins
on us to be kind and avoid harshness and severity in our
monetary transactions and has promised great spiritual
advantage in it also.
We will reproduce two of the Prophet's Traditions here:
“Blessings of God be on him who is mild and gentle in his
business transactions and in the realization of his dues.”
“God will protect him from the agonies of the Day of
judgment who allows respite to a poor and indigent servant
of His in the payment of his debt or writes off the debt
(altogether or a part of it).”
These Traditions are meant for merchants and other wealthy
men from whom people borrow money in the hour of their need.
As for the borrowers, the Prophet used to urge them to do
their best to pay back their debts quickly lest they die in
a state of indebtedness, with the claim of anyone lying
unsettled on their heads. How strict the Prophet was in this
regard can be imagined from the following Traditions:
“If a person is killed in the path of God then all his sins
will be forgiven (by virtue of his martyrdom). But if he
owes anyone anything even martyrdom will not secure his
release from it.”
“By the lord in whose power lies the life of Mohammad, if a
person falls a martyr in the path of God and returns to life
and is killed again in the path of God and returns to life
and is killed again in the path of God and returns to life
only to be killed once more in the cause of God and there is
still a debt outstanding against him, (until it is settled)
even he will not be able to enter Paradise”.
These two Traditions are quite sufficient to show what great
importance Islam attaches to monetary affairs and the rights
of men. May Allah grant us the wisdom to understand their
delicacy and significance and to make it our constant
endeavour to assure that the claims of no one are left
unsatisfied by us! |