THE FUTURE OF ISLAM IN BRITAIN: LEADERSHIP, USURY AND THE POLITICS OF ZAKAT

Authors

  • Yasin Dutton University of Cape Town, South Africa

Keywords:

leadership, usury, zakat, dinar

Abstract

In this article, we offer a few observations on the possible future of Islam in Britain and the facts and findings may apply elsewhere. This article is based on the our critique on the norms established in the Sharī‘a, we firstly highlight the need for amirate, or personal political leadership, in any Islamic community. We then juxtapose this to the present global system – illustrated by several examples from the British context in particular – where power is exercised by financial elites who owe little or no allegiance to any National Government. This group of elite owns its power to control and manipulate world financial markets, particularly through the usurious technique of fractional reserve banking. We examine fractional reserve banking and demonstrate its overtly harām nature, and thus the harām nature of the global monetary system that it supports. The Islamic alternative to this system, as demonstrated by the Sunnah, is to use gold and silver currency as opposed to using harām paper money. Such a currency, in tandem with strong personal leadership, will enable not only the halāl trade, both locally and globally, but also the correct implementation of the critically important Third Pillar of Islam, zakāt. Zakāt requires certain leadership for its collection and distribution, and, secondly, it cannot correctly be collected through paper money but only through gold, silver, crops and livestock.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Published

2010-05-01

How to Cite

Dutton, Y. (2010). THE FUTURE OF ISLAM IN BRITAIN: LEADERSHIP, USURY AND THE POLITICS OF ZAKAT. Jurnal Syariah, 18(2), 453–478. Retrieved from https://jpmm.um.edu.my/index.php/JS/article/view/22672