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Al Azhar says Interest is Halal - Allah says it's haram. Guess who
is wrong and who is right?
Islamic institute blesses interest
Conservative Islam's opposition to paying interest on savings could be in
line for a shake-up after the most august institution in Sunni Islam gave
its blessing to the practice.
Traditionally, Islamic banks have only been able to pay interest that was
tied to the bank's profits.
A fixed interest rate, conservative scholars hold, is equivalent to usury or
"riba" - the earning of money without doing any work for it.
But Agence France-Presse reports that the Islamic theological research
committee of Egypt's Al-Azhar institute - seen by many as the philosophical
centre of the dominant Sunni strand of the faith - has voted 21-1 to approve
fixed interest rates.
Moving on?
In practice, Egyptian banks may not notice any immediate difference.
Despite the problems traditionalists have with interest, nine out of 10
banking institutions in Egypt pay a fixed rate of interest.
And from the Al-Azhar institute's point of view the decision was necessary.
"Religious jurisprudence means change, and it is illogical to remain frozen
while the world changes around us," Sheikh Saber Talaab, head of the
research committee secretariat, told AFP.
"So long as we do not go against what is written (in the Koran) or the Sunna
(Islamic tradition), we have a clear conscience."
Different readings
But despite Al-Azhar's importance and influence, the decision risks stirring
up controversy.
The prohibition of riba is at the heart of Islamic financial practices, and
the arguments are all the more vocal for being rooted in differences in the
interpretation of the Prophet Muhammad's writings and deeds.
For the reformers, there is a parallel between Muhammad's acceptance of
money from members of his tribe in order to finance trading caravans.
The sharing of the profits between the contributors, they say, is broadly
similar to a bank paying interest using the profits it makes on commercial
deals using the money deposited with it.
But the conservatives say that can apply only if the interest is
proportional to the profit - in other words, if depositors are taking a risk
with their money.
Otherwise, the rule of riba applies, they say.
Source:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/2488525.stm
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