Question: What is the position
of raffle-tickets in Islam?
Answer: This amounts to gambling.
One of the arguments in favour of raffle tickets is that the scheme is
widely used for philanthropic causes. It must be borne in mind that gambling
in the Qur’anic times in Arabia was no exception. In fact, owing
to its philanthropic aspect, gambling was considered a boon rather than
a bane. The rich would indulge in drinking and gambling and would give
whatever they won to the poor. Indeed, the abstainer was regarded as niggardly.
However, the Qur’an very clearly pointed out that the moral corruption
that ensues from such activities is greater them whatever benefit they
provide:
They ask you about gambling and drinking. Say:
There is great sin in both and also some benefit for people, but their
sin is greater than their benefit. (2:219)
Of this moral corruption, one aspect particularly
worth mentioning is that these so-called philanthropic schemes develop
the attitude of selfishness and indifference. In an Islamic society, infaq,
or spending in the way of Allah, is a basic value. The destitute, therefore,
are the direct responsibility of the society and their problems cannot
be left to the mere adjustments of demand and supply as in the laisser
fair concept. It should be impossible for a Muslim to sleep with the peace
of mind, if he finds out that a neighbour had not been able to eat at night
owing to poverty. Destitution, poverty, misery and disease should be sufficient
enough as reasons for impelling a Muslim to spend whatever he can spare.
‘Spend in the way of Allah that ye may be rewarded in the Hereafter’. ‘Spend
in the way of Allah that ye may enter the Kingdom of Heaven’. Such adages
used to be the underlying reason for infaaq. But whatever is this: ‘Spend
in the way of Allah that ye may get a refrigerator (or a deep-freezer or
a VCR)’? and ‘Spend in the way of Allah that ye may win tickets to Madame
Noor Jehaan’s concert’?
Millions are spent merely on organizing
these ‘philanthropic’ schemes – millions that could be directly spent on
the poor – and thousands are spent by the gentry on the apparel they need
for just one such occasion. It is the height of indifference, prodigality
and selfishness that a person who can afford to spend thousands on buying
tickets to the concert and thousands on new clothes for the function is
not motivated to spend in the way of Allah by the misery of a fellow human
being and by the reward in the Hereafter. The mere knowledge that a human
being is in need of what a Muslim can spare should give the Muslim sleepless
nights. Yet there are Muslims who can spare millions but do not take out
a penny unless they are certain of a news items and a photograph lauding
their altruism. Would that they were able to appreciate what Jesus (sws)
had said:
Be careful not to do your ‘acts of righteousness’
before men, to be seen by them. If you do, you will have no reward from
your Father in heaven. So when you give to the needy, do not announce it
with trumpets, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and on the streets,
to be honoured by men. I tell you the truth, they have received their reward
in full. But when you give to the needy, do not let your left hand know
what your right hand is doing, so that your give may be in secret. Then
your Father, who sees what is done in secret, will reward you. (Matt, 6:1-4)
The Qur’an says:
O you who believe! do not mar your almsgiving
by reminders of your generosity and by hurting the feelings [of the one
you had helped], like the one who spends his wealth to be seen of men but
believes neither in Allah nor the Final Day. (2:264)
And:
And if you allow them to be revealed when you
do your alms, that too is good; but if you conceal them and make them reach
the poor in secret, that is best for you. And Allah remains well aware
of what you do. (2:271)
When a concert or a refrigerator not the
‘Kingdom of Heaven’ becomes the reason for charity, it means that the whole
foundation of moral values, which are so essential to an Islamic society,
has been impaired to the extent that the edifice that rests on it may collapse
in the wake of the mildest of storms.
The raison d’etre for charity should
be concern for others and the reward in the Hereafter not Madame Noor Jehaan’s
concert or a refrigerator. Loss of values means the death of society. Loss
of the spirit of infaq – a basic value in an Islamic society – means the
death of Islamic society. That must never be.
Those who spend of their wealth [in charity]
by night and by day, in secret and in public have their reward with their
Lord. For them shall be no fear, nor shall they grieve. (2:274)
(Asif Iftikhar)
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