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		” الرِّبَا 
		” 
		(THE 
		RIBA) ANOTHER PERSPECTIVE 
		
		                                          
		        
		
		                                     
		
		
		T.O. SHANAVAS. MD 
		 
		
		(Author 
		of “Islamic 
		Theory of Evolution The Missing link Between Darwin and the Origin of 
		Species” 
		(Publisher: Brainbow press, USA). Co-authored the book,
		
		And God 
		Said, "Let There Be Evolution!": Reconciling the Book of Genesis, the 
		Qur'an and the Theory of Evolution" edited by Prof. 
		Charlie Wynn and Prof. Arthur Wiggins. (Publisher: All Things That 
		Matter Press, USA.) 
		 
		 
		
		I have taken a mortgage for my home, not because I cannot afford pay in 
		front but it makes economic sense ( also “…but 
		do not waste: verily, He does not love the wasteful!” Quran 7:31) 
		
		even though it is claimed that 
		there is a consensus among most Muslim scholars against paying and 
		taking interest. We, the members of Islamic center of Greater Toledo, 
		took 3 million dollar bank loan for initial construction of the mosque 
		in 1981and 2.5 million dollars for later expansion.  
		
		
		Let me state explicitly:
		Let there be
		no doubt that the Quran categorically 
		prohibited 
		
		” الرِّبَا 
		” 
		(THE 
		RIBA),
		
		
		“O you who have believed, do not consume 
		
		” الرِّبَا 
		” 
		(THE 
		RIBA), 
		doubled and multiplied, but fear Allah that you may be successful.” 
		(3:130). 
		“Allah has permitted trade and has forbidden 
		Riba 
		“ 
		(2:275).
		
		 
		 
		
		Then what is the rationale to 
		go against the Muslim consensus (ijma)? 
		It is based upon multiple observations of which 6 are listed below: 
		 
		
		
		1.     
		Muslim 
		consensus gives a special status to cash/ currency as compare to all 
		other assets 
		
		
		2.     
		Ummar 
		Ibn-Kathab’s statement on 
		
		” الرِّبَا 
		” 
		(THE 
		RIBA), 
		
		
		3.     
		Divergent 
		message from hadiths collections
		 
		
		
		4.     
		
		The definition of
		
		
		” الرِّبَا 
		” 
		(THE 
		RIBA) by 
		eminent early Muslim scholars 
		
		
		5.     
		
		The Quran 
		
		
		6.     
		History of Pre- 
		Abu Bakr al-Jassas 
		(d. 370 Hijrah)
		Definition of Riba, the Riba 
		al-Jāhiliyyah. 
		 
		
		Muslim consensus gives a special status to cash/ currency as compare to 
		all other assets. 
		 
		
		A simplified definition of interest is 
		
		interest 
		is a 
		
		fee 
		paid by a borrower of 
		
		
		assets 
		to the owner as a form of compensation for the use of the assets. 
		
		Scholarly voices from Muslim countries without free press draw a 
		boundary line between cash and other assets.
		It restricts the 
		rent of cash illegitimate or haraam and makes the rent of all 
		other assets legitimate or halaal. This artificial bifurcation,
		cash being separated from other assets, 
		is completely baseless due to the following reasoning:  
		 
		
		
		         
		(A).  
		First of all, this unnatural division of 
		asset is not admitted throughout the 
		world 
		neither in 
		theory nor in practice. None of branches of knowledge directly related 
		to assets e.g. accounting, economics and commerce recognize it.
		Even in ordinary life it is not so, same 
		treatment is given to cash and all other assets throughout the world in 
		theory as well as in practice. Hence this artificial bifurcation 
		does not exist in the real world. 
		 
		         
		
		(B). The definition of interest with artificial bifurcation 
		is self-contradictory.  The 
		religious scholars, handpicked by Muslim countries, ruled properties 
		that depreciate can be rented. So, all assets 
		that are depreciated with the passage of time can be given on rent. But 
		this rule is not admitted in the case of cash / currency, even though 
		currency is also depreciated with the passage of time due to inflation. 
		Hence here also the bifurcation is a completely self- contradictory 
		concept. 
		 
		         
		(C).
		The most important point is that, Quran is also not ready to 
		accept this baseless concept of artificial bifurcation. The simple proof 
		of this fact is that Quran has used the term mal 
		
		 (مَالَ)
		for all assets including 
		cash. Quran has used the word 86 times but it is never used exclusively 
		for cash anywhere in the Quran. Hence the 
		Quran does not support this strange concept of bifurcation.  
		 
		
		
		       
		According to the 
		so-called “Islamic financing,” renting an asset or apartment or other 
		commodity is halaal and 
		renting cash haraam. For 
		example,  Renting of $ 
		100,000 dollar for buying a home at the current 4% yearly interest rate 
		costs  
		$ 4000 interest even without expected 
		33% US tax decrease on it.   Renting 
		$ 100,000 dollar apartment costs the renter about 500 dollar/month = 
		6000 dollar/year is halaal.
		The renter owes more money to apartment owner 
		than to a bank and still apartment renting is
		halaal and renting currency 
		is haraam. It does not make 
		sense. 
		 
		Islam’s 
		position regarding justice is unequivocal and universal.
		“O 
		ye who believe! 
		
		stand out firmly for justice, 
		as witnesses to Allah, even as against yourselves, or your parents, or 
		your kin, and 
		
		whether it be (against) rich or poor: 
		for Allah can best protect both. Follow not the lusts (of your hearts), 
		lest ye swerve, and if ye distort (justice) or decline to do justice, 
		verily Allah is well- acquainted with all that ye do.”
		
		 [Quran 4: 135]. 
		Who is the most just and more honorable in this? The one who 
		rents an apartment for more money or a bank that rents the money for 
		less and at the same time force saving?  
		 
		
		 2.
		UMAR 
		IBN KHATAB (RA): Riba related verse 
		was the last verse revealed and Prophet (S) did not explain it in 
		detail. 
		 
		`Umar 
		delivered a sermon on the pulpit of Allah's Messenger (ﷺ), saying, 
		"Alcoholic drinks were prohibited by Divine Order, and these drinks used 
		to be prepared from five things, i.e., grapes, dates, wheat, barley and 
		honey. Alcoholic drink is that, that disturbs the mind." `Umar 
		added, "I wish Allah's Apostle had not left us before he had given us 
		definite verdicts concerning three matters, i.e., how much a 
		grandfather may inherit (of his grandson), the inheritance of Al-Kalala 
		(the deceased person among whose heirs there is no father or son), and
		various types of Riba (usury) ." 
		 
		(REFERENCE: 
		Ibn Majah, Sunan Ibn Majah, tr. M. T. Ansari (New Delhi, 2000), Book of 
		Inheritance, Vol. 4, #2267). 
		 
		         
		
		
		Most Muslims believe the Quran or Prophet (s) did not explain 
		
		” الرِّبَا 
		” 
		(THE 
		RIBA)”. 
		Initially let me quote few Hadiths pertinent to our discussion. 
		 
		 
		
		The selective reading of the set of Hadiths 1-5 definitely endorses the 
		opinion held by most mosque communities. 
		But a parallel reading of Hadith 1-5 and the set of hadith A-E 
		leads to different or at least four kinds of “holy truths.” 
		 
		
		
		Initially let me quote the Hadiths that Muslims use to endorse the point 
		of view that all 
		
		” Riba 
		are haraam. 
		 
		
		
		Hadith # 1  
		
		Jabir said that Allah's Messenger (may peace be 
		upon him) cursed the accepter of the Riba and its payer, 
		and one who records it, and the two witnesses, and he said: They are all 
		equal.  (Muslim: Book 
		
		
		#010, 
		Hadith 
		
		
		#3881) 
		 
		
		
		Hadith # 2. 
		
		Narrated 'Aun bin Abu Juhaifa: My father bought a slave who practiced 
		the profession of cupping. (My father broke the slave's instruments of 
		cupping). I asked my father why he had done so. He replied, "The 
		Prophet forbade the acceptance of the price of a dog or blood, 
		and also forbade the profession of tattooing, getting tattooed and
		receiving or giving 
		the Riba." 
		 (Bukhari: Book 
		
		
		#34, 
		Hadith 
		
		
		#299). 
		
		 
		
		
		Hadith # 3  
		
		From Anas ibn Malik: The Prophet said: “If a 
		man extends a loan to someone he should not accept a gift.” (Mishkat, 
		op. cit., on the authority of Bukhari's Tarikh and Ibn Taymiyyah’s 
		al-Muntaqa) 
		 
		
		
		Hadith # 4. 
		
		Narrated Abu Burda: When I came to Medina. I met Abdullah bin Salam. He 
		said, "Will you come to me so that I may serve you with Sawiq (i.e. 
		powdered barley) and dates, and let you enter a (blessed) house that in 
		which the Prophet entered?" Then he added, "You are In a country where 
		the practice of Riba is prevalent; so if 
		somebody owe you something and he sends you a present of a load of 
		chopped straw or a load of barley or a load of provender
		then do not take it, as it is Riba."  (Bukhari: 
		Book 
		
		
		#58, 
		Hadith 
		
		
		#159) 
		 
		
		
		Hadith # 5 
		
		Abu Sa'id al-Khudri (Allah be pleased with him) reported Allah's 
		Messenger (may peace be upon him) as saying: Gold is to be paid for by 
		gold, silver by silver, wheat by wheat, barley by barley, dates by 
		dates, salt by salt, like by like, payment being made hand to hand.
		He who made an addition to it, or asked for an 
		addition, in fact dealt in the Riba. The receiver and the giver 
		are equally guilty.  (MUSLIM: 
		Book 
		
		
		#010, 
		Hadith 
		
		
		#3854) 
		 
		
		
		Summary of the above hadiths: 
		
		
		1.     
		
		
		Any addition over the loaned capital is
		haraam. 
		
		
		2.     
		
		
		The Creditor cannot accept or the debtor cannot offer even gift because 
		gift become the riba. 
		 
		 
		
		
		The following Hadiths challenges and contradict above hadiths and the 
		derived conclusions: 
		 
		
		Hadith A 
 
		
		  
		
		
		Hadith B 
		
		Abu Huraira (Allah be pleased with him) reported: There came a person 
		demanding a camel from Allah's Messenger (may peace be upon him). He 
		(the Holy Prophet) said: Give him (the camel) 
		of that age or of more mature age, and said: Best among you is 
		one who is best in clearing off the debt.  (MUSLIM: 
		Book 
		
		
		#010, 
		Hadith 
		
		
		#3900) 
		 
		
		
		Hadith C 
		“Malik related to me from Humayd ibn Qays al-Makki that Mujahid said, "Abdullah 
		ibn Umar borrowed some dirhams from a man, then he discharged his debt 
		with dirhams better than them. The man said, 'Abu Abdar-Rahman. These 
		are better than the dirhams which I lent you.' Abdullah ibn Umar said, 
		'I know that. But I am happy with myself about that.'…"
		Malik’s 
		Muwatta: Book 
		
		
		#31, Hadith
		
		
		
		#31.42.91 
		 
		
		
		Hadith D 
		
		Narrated Abu Rafi': 
		
		“The Messenger of Allah (s borrowed a young 
		camel, and when the camels of the sadaqah (alms) came to him,
		he ordered me to pay the man his young camel.
		I said: I find only an excellent camel in its 
		seventh year. So the Prophet (s) said: Give it to him, for the best 
		person is he who discharges his debt in the best manner.” (Jami 
		Al- Tirmidhi, 
		Kitab al-Buyu, v.6, #56] 
		 
		
		
		Hadith E 
		
		Narrated Al-A'mash: We argued at Ibrahim's dwelling place about 
		mortgaging in Salam. He said, "Aisha said, 'The Prophet bought some 
		foodstuff from a Jew on credit and the payment was to be made by a 
		definite period, and he mortgaged 
		his iron armor to him."  (Bukhari: Book
		
		
		
		#35, 
		Hadith 
		
		
		#454) 
		 
		
		Narrated 'Aisha: The Prophet died while his armor was 
		mortgaged 
		to a Jew for thirty Sa's of barley.  (Bukhari: 
		Book 
		
		
		#59, 
		Hadith 
		
		
		#743) 
		 
		
		This type of mortgaging or using pawnbroker’s service is recognized as 
		Islamically valid and acceptable, as illustrated through this hadith. 
		
		Summary of Hadith A-D: 
		1. Contrary to the set of 
		Hadiths 1-5 quoted above, the set of Hadith A-D shows the Prophet (s) 
		and Ummar (ra) giving extra amount over and above than they borrowed. By 
		the definition of the people and scholars for so-called Islamic 
		financing, the extra “giving” 
		of Prophet (s) and Ummr (ra) in this instance becomes 
		” الرِّبَا ” 
		(THE 
		RIBA). 
		 
		
		2. 
		
		There is every reason that the Jew extended loan with without taking 
		profit or interest for the loan to Prophet (s) because Jewish Scripture 
		freely allow the creditor Jew to charge interest: 
		
		                       
		 
		
		           
		Thou shalt not lend upon usury to thy brother, usury of money, 
		usury of Victuals, usury   
		of anything that is lent upon usury. Unto a stranger thou Mayest 
		lend upon usury….” 
		
		           
		(Deuteronomy 23: 19-20). 
		 
		
		Prophet (s) was well-known among his people for honesty before his 
		
		prophethood, and used to be called "al-ameen" 
		(the trustworthy). This is a name that would not be given except to one 
		who was extremely truthful, trustworthy and upright. In spite of it the 
		Jew took Prophet (s) had to mortgage his armor to Jew to borrow food 
		suggesting that the Jew did not trust Prophet (s). And therefore it is 
		illogical to assume that such a Jew 
		
		offered food to Prophet (s) on credit and did not benefit from the 
		transaction, and if he did, then isn't that riba? 
		
		 
		
		
		After reading these two sets of Hadiths (1-5 and A-E) following can be 
		stated: 
		
		
		1.     
		
		This sets 
		of hadiths (1-5 and A-E) on “The Riba” are contradictory and is 
		problematic and so there are no supporting crystal clear evidence for 
		the “haraamization” of every 
		kind of interest  (riba) in 
		financing business. 
		 
		
		
		2.     
		
		Set 1-5 
		are authentic and A-D are not and so all interest in in finance are
		Haraam. 
		
		
		3.     
		
		Set A-E 
		are authentic and set 1-5 are not and so interest (riba), not loan 
		sharking “
		al---Riba (” 
		
		الرِّبَا ”
		 is
		Halaal, 
		
		
		4.     
		
		Set A-E 
		is before the prohibition and set 1-5 after the prohibition of the Riba 
		by God and so the riba is prohibited.
		 
		
		
		5.     
		There is 
		no definitive information or corroboration to support Hadith A-E are 
		from a time before the revelation of “ 
		al---Riba (” 
		
		الرِّبَا. ” 
		
		Moreover,
		there is no reason to believe 
		that the Jew extended the loan to Prophet (s) without riba because 
		Jewish Scripture freely allow him to charge interest and his arbor 
		remained mortgaged until after his death. It contradict # 4 statement. 
		Moreover, The Riba verses were revealed after conquest of Mecca and 
		according to Ummar (ra) Prophet (s) died before explaining “
		al---Riba (” 
		
		الرِّبَا. ” 
		
		 
		The two sets of hadiths (1-5 and A-E) is quite clear. “
		al---Riba (” الرِّبَا ” 
		 in Quran cannot be synonymous 
		with the extra paid by Prophet (s) and Ummar (ra). From these 
		Hadith sets we conclude extra payment over and above borrowed amount 
		(interest) is permissible and at the same time “
		al---Riba (” الرِّبَا ” is 
		prohibited. Such an understanding of the two sets of Hadiths (1-5-and 
		A-E) preserve the authenticity of “Sahih
		Hadiths” of Bukhari and Muslim and protects it becoming
		da’if (week). 
		
		 
		
		
		                            
		
		
		The Quran and “ 
		al---Riba (” الرِّبَا .” 
		
		 
		
		 
		
		
		The commonly held Muslim censuses is that the Qur’an does not define
		“ al---Riba (” الرِّبَا .”
		 This judgment contradicts 
		the Quran. The Quran states that
		
		the God spelled out the “easy 
		to understand 
		
		Quran
		(54:17)
		
		
		as the “guide 
		for the pious” 
		(2:2)
		
		
		to lead “to 
		the path which is clearer and straighter than any other” 
		(54:17)
		
		
		by 
		“clarifying every matter.” 
		
		(16:89). 
		
		Therefore,
		
		
		there is no better source than the Quran “to 
		clarify every matter” and 
		
		“easy to understand.” 
		 
		
		God’s speech is never redundant or arbitrary. If anyone claims 
		redundancy in letter and word in the Quran it undermines the divine 
		authority of the book. So, I 
		believe it is impossible to take away or ignore a single word or to even 
		remove single particle from the text without seriously damaging the 
		integrity of its meaning.  
		Likewise, every attempt to restructure the syntax of the text, for 
		example by ignoring or moving a word forward or backward would 
		significantly alter the meaning substantially. Every letter, word, and 
		its location in the Divine Speech are precise 
		and purposeful. All have a specific function and meaning. So, let us 
		look at the phrase “al—URiba (”
		الرِّبَا 
		”). 
		 
		
		In order to understand “ al---Riba (” 
		الرِّبَا ” in the Quran,
		
		we initially need to define the word, riba. 
		According to Lisan Al Arab, a classical Arabic dictionary, the 
		grammatical declination of the noun riba is derived from the verse “raba” 
		which means “increased or grew.” Therefore, any increase in borrowed 
		capital can be defined as riba. 
		If we do not make clear distinction between generic “riba” and “al—URiba 
		(” 
		الرِّبَا 
		”), 
		then an act of making profit out of buying and selling in trade becomes 
		prohibited activity. But any sort of increase or raise or riba is not 
		” 
		الرِّبَا 
		” 
		( THE RIBA) prohibited by shariah. 
		Thus all the verses of the Quran regarding the prohibition of the riba 
		mentions it as “al—URiba (”
		الرِّبَا 
		”), 
		that is with the definite article “al.” 
		The certainly the definite article, “al”,
		here is not indefinite or general, otherwise every form of 
		monetary increase, such as business profit would have been prohibited. 
		So, “al” here is a specific and some 
		special kind of increase has been prohibited under
		shariah.  
		 
		
		In order to demarcate “al—URiba (” 
		الرِّبَا 
		”) 
		from the generic “riba,” the 
		Quran assigned two properties to 
		“al—URiba (” 
		الرِّبَا 
		”). 
		They are: 1. Extortion of people’s wealth by “doubling 
		and multiplied claims” (Quran 3:130); and 2. “consuming 
		people's property unjustly”
		
		
		in verse (4:161). “Consuming 
		Unjustly”, because a Muslim expected to be kind and compassionate to a 
		fellow being in trouble. 
		 
		 
		
		So based on these Quranic criteria, not every kind of riba or increase 
		or interest on capital is al---Riba (” 
		الرِّبَا 
		”).
		 al---Riba 
		(” الرِّبَا 
		”)
		
		
		is the doubling or multiplying of the obligation of the debtor if he/she 
		makes default at the end of the term of the loan. According to Imam 
		Al-Razi quoted below, the creditor collect interest every month and then 
		ask to return the capital in full and if not given, creditor increase 
		the obligation of the debtor. Such an understanding of “al---Riba 
		(” الرِّبَا 
		” 
		was recorded by Tabari and others in the classical Islamic period. For 
		example: 
		 
		
		
		(A).  
		Explaining the meaning of the term used in verse 3:130 (O 
		you who have believed, do not consume“ 
		al---Riba (” الرِّبَا ”  , 
		doubled and multiplied, but fear Allah that you may be successful.”), 
		Tabari (d.310 AH), the well known commentator on the Qur’an, says:  
		 
		
		           
		“Do not consume riba after having professed Islam as you have 
		been consuming it            
		before Islam. The way pre-Islamic Arabs used to consume riba was 
		that one of them   would have 
		a debt repayable on a specific date. When that date came the creditor 
		would      
		demand repayment from the debtor. The latter would say, ‘Defer 
		the repayment of   my debt; I 
		will add to your wealth.’ This is the Riba 
		which was doubled and redoubled.” 
		
		(REFERENCE: 
		Tabari: Jami’ al-Bayan fi Tafsir al-Quran Vol. IV page 59. quoted in A. 
		Saeed, Islamic Banking and Interest: A Study of the Prohibition of Riba 
		and its Contemporary Interpretation (New York, 1996), p.22 
		 
		
		(B) 
		The way in which riba was doubled and redoubled in the 
		pre-Islamic period is expressed by the son of Zayd b. Aslam (d.136 AH) 
		as follows: 
		 
		
		           
		The Riba in the pre-Islamic period 
		consisted of the doubling and redoubling [of money
		    or commodities], 
		and in the age [of the cattle]. At maturity, the creditor would say
		   to the debtor, ‘Will 
		you pay me, or increase [the debt]?’ If the debtor had anything, he
		         
		would pay. Otherwise, the age of the cattle [to be repaid] would 
		be            
		increased . . . If the    
		debt was money or a commodity, the debt would be doubled to be 
		paid in one year,            
		and even then, if the debtor could not pay, it would be doubled 
		again; one hundred in one           
		year would become two hundred. If that was not paid, the debt 
		would increase to four           
		 
		
		           
		hundred. Each year the debt would be 
		doubled. 
		
		(REFERENCE: 
		bn Hajar  Tahdhib 
		al-taTahdhib. Vol.3. Page 395 quoted in A. Saeed, P. 22) 
		 
		
		(C) 
		Imam 
		Fakhr al-Din al-Razi (d. 606) in his Tafsir al-kabir
		
		
		had describes very clearly the customary practice of lending and 
		borrowing. He stated that Pre-Islamic Arabs used to charge interest on 
		borrowed money and at end of the term of loan if the creditor cannot pay 
		the creditor increased the capital owed by the debtor. This increase is 
		“The Riba.” 
		
		           
		"As for the riba al-nasi`ah, it was a 
		transaction well-known and recognized in the days of
		           
		Jahiliyyah, i.e., they would advance money on the basis that they 
		will take a specified            
		amount every month and the principal will remain due. Then on the 
		date the debt became                       
		due, they demanded the debtor to pay the principal. If payment 
		became impossible (or       
		hard), they would increase the term and the payable amount. So 
		this was the riba people         
		practiced in the time of Jahiliyyah." 
		
		
		REFRERENCE: 
		http://www.islamicperspectives.com/Riba2.htm 
		 
		 
		
		
		(D).   
		This type of riba (“al---Riba (” 
		الرِّبَا 
		” 
		) is known as Riba al-jāhiliyyah, and 
		according to some Islamic scholars, such as Imam Ahmad Ibn Hanbal (d. 
		241/855), only such Riba is undoubtedly unlawful from the Islamic 
		viewpoint. Ibn Qayyim al Jawziyya (d. 
		
		AH 691) describes the views of Ibn Hambal as follows: 
		
		           
		“The Qur’an vehemently condemns 
		riba, but provides little explanation of what  
		
		           
		that term means, beyond contrasting riba and charity and 
		mentioning exorbitant    
		‘doubling’. 
		Commentators describe a pre-Islamic practice of extending delay to  
		
		           
		debtors in return for an increase in the principal (riba 
		al-jāhiliyyah). Since this  
		
		           
		practice is recorded as existing at the time of the revelation, 
		it is one certain           
		instance of what the Qur’an prohibits.
		Hence Ibn Hanbal, founder of the Hanbali
 
		
		           
		School, declared that this practice—‘pay or increase’—is the only 
		form of riba the            
		prohibition of which is beyond any doubt.” 
		
		[REFERENCE; 
		Ibn Qayyim al Jawziyya quoted in F. Vogel and S. Hayes, Islamic Law and 
		Finance: Religion, Risk and Return (The Hague, 1998), 72-73. Hereinafter 
		F. Vogel and S. Hayes.) 
		 
		
		(E).   
		Imam Malik (d. 179 AH) in his Muwatta uses the same definition.  
		 
		
		           
		“Malik related to me that Zayd ibn Aslam said, ‘Riba in the 
		Jahiliyya was that  
		
		           
		a man would give a loan to a man for a set term.
		When the term was due, he  
		
		           
		would say, “Will you pay it off or increase me?” 
		If the man paid, he took it. If  
		
		           
		not, he increased him in his debt and lengthened the term for 
		him”. 
		
		(REFERENCE: 
		Imam Malik, Muwatta, #1361) 
		 
		 
		
		(F).    
		al-Baghawi (d. 510 Hijrah ) repeats the same understanding in his 
		Qur’anic commentary on verse 277 of al-Baqarah as he narrates a 
		tradition from Ikrimah (d. 107 AH) and Ata (d. 117 AH), which offers the 
		same definition in the sense of which Riba was used: 
		 
		
		           
		“Regarding the word of God: ‘O believers! Fear God and forgo what 
		remains of al-         
		riba’,ʿAta 
		and ʿIkrimah 
		said that this verse revealed in connection with [the dealings] of
		  al-ʿAbbas 
		ibn ʿAbd 
		al-Muttalib and Uthman bin ʿAffan, 
		may Allah be pleased with them.          
		These persons used to make advance deals about dates in advance 
		before the            
		ripening of the crop [i.e., they used to buy dates in advance 
		with cash or with dates].            
		After   the ripening 
		of dates the owner would say that if you two exercise your right,
		      
		nothing would be left for the sustenance of my family;
		would you agree to
		     take only 
		half of the agreed quantity and leave the remaining half which I
		          
		will pay in double quantity    
		next season. So they agreed to this. When the appointed time 
		came, they demanded the          
		increase. When the Prophet heard about it, he prohibited it and 
		the said verse was     
		revealed.” 
		
		(REFERENCE: 
		Tafsir al-Baghawi quoted in I. Suhail, What is Riba? (New Delhi, 1999), 
		p. 97. Sited by Mohammad Omar Farooq “Exploitation, Profit and the 
		Riba-Interest Reductionism.” International Journal of Islamic and Middle 
		Eastern Finance and Management. Vol. 5 Iss: 4 (Date online 23/10/2012) 
		
		  
		
		(G)      
		Abdullah Saeed, Professor of Arabic and Islamic studies, 
		University of Melbourne, Australia further refers to Zamakhshari (d. 549 
		AH)12 and Baydawi (d. 691 AH) in the same way. 
		He also mentions Ibn al-Arabi (d. 543 AH) in the same vein. Riba 
		was well known among the Arabs. A person would sell something on a 
		deferred payment basis. Upon maturity the creditor would say [to the 
		debtor]:  
		 
		
		           
		‘Riba was well known among the Arabs. A person would sell 
		something on a deferred     
		payment basis. Upon maturity the creditor would say [to the 
		debtor]: ‘Will you pay [as
		     agreed] 
		or will you add an amount to the [original] debt?’  
		
		(REFERENCE: 
		Ibn al-Arabi quoted in A. Saeed, 23.) 
		 
		
		Therefore, Riba prohibited is the Pre-Islamic practice al---Riba (”
		الرِّبَا 
		”) 
		or the Riba al-jāhiliyyah of doubling and tripling of the obligation of 
		the debtor.
		
		
		The injustice and exploitation involved in such riba-based transactions 
		are obvious, and hardly require any further explanation or 
		rationalization.  
		 
		
		Summary: 
		
		The meaning of al---Riba (” 
		الرِّبَا 
		”)
		
		
		is “extortionate claim over the property of the debtor by the creditor.” 
		That is why the Quran characterizes such extortion as “their 
		consuming people's property unjustly”
		
		
		in verse (4:161).
		
		
		  
		 
		
		Let us study the verses on al---Riba (” 
		الرِّبَا 
		”) 
		in the Quran 
		based on what I have explained above. 
		
		  
		
		
		                            
		
		
		” الرِّبَا 
		” 
		(THE 
		RIBA) verses  
		 
		
		Let us study the verses on al---Riba (” 
		الرِّبَا 
		”) 
		in the Quran 
		based on what I have explained above. 
		 
		
		“Their taking 
		الرِّبَا 
		” 
		(THE 
		RIBA 
		which was prohibited for them, and their consuming people's property 
		unjustly. For the unbelievers among them, We have prepared a painful 
		torment.” 
		(4:161) 
		 
		
		The verse was a reference to Jews who charge 
		
		” الرِّبَا 
		” 
		(THE 
		RIBA) 
		against Jewish Scriptural directive on their Jewish brothers: 
		
		                       
		“…Take thou not usury of him, or increase: but fear of God;  
		
		                       
		that thou brother may live with thee….” 
		
		
		(Leviticus 25:35-7) 
		 
		
		
		The Quran 3:130  
		
		
		“O you who have believed, do not consume 
		الرِّبَا 
		” 
		(THE 
		RIBA,
		doubled and multiplied, but fear Allah 
		that you may be successful.  
		
		 
		
		Pre-Islamic Arabians practiced a kind of futures market, not exactly as 
		practiced today.
		
		
		Current futures market 
		is a central financial exchange where people can trade standardized 
		futures contracts, that is, a contract to buy specific quantities of a 
		commodity or financial instrument at a specified price with delivery set 
		at a specified time in the future. Similarly, Arabs 
		traders including prominent companions of Prophet (s) advance grain or 
		fruits or other commodities to the farmers the long before harvest was 
		due along with an oral agreement to give back the traders certain amount 
		of grain or fruits after his harvest at a specified time. If the farmer 
		could not deliver his promise either due to crop failure or other 
		reasons the trader doubled or even more the amount grains or fruit to be 
		delivered for the extension delivery date. The increase depended solely 
		on the whims of the trader. This extortionate increase (“doubled 
		and multiplied,”) of the commodity to be delivered is 
		الرِّبَا 
		” 
		(THE 
		RIBA). 
		
		The prophet (s) prohibited such futures contract. For example, with 
		unripe dates: 
		
		“Ibn 'Umar (Allah be pleased with them) reported that Allah's Messenger 
		(may peace be upon him) forbade the sale of palm-trees 
		(i. e. their frults) until the dates 
		began to ripen, and ears of corn until they were white and were safe 
		from blight. He forbade the seller and the buyer.  (Muslim: 
		Book 
		
		
		#010, 
		Hadith 
		
		
		#3666) 
		 
		
		If we closely look at the Hadith # 5 quoted above along with another 
		hadith, what I said becomes very clear.  
		
		“…Prophet had said, 'There is no riba when it is not done from 
		hand to hand (i.e. when there is delay in payment).' " 
		 (Book 
		
		#34, 
		Hadith 
		
		#386) 
		Bukhari. Riba happens only on delayed payment.  
		
		 
		
		Now 
		read the Hadith #5. 
		
		“Prophet said; 
		
		Gold is to be paid for by gold, silver by silver, wheat by wheat, barley 
		by barley, dates by dates, salt by salt, like by like, payment being 
		made hand to hand. 
		He who made an addition to it, or asked for an addition, in fact dealt 
		in the Riba. The receiver and the giver are equally guilty.” 
		 
		
		We need to ask, who in the world did or does exchange an ounce of wheat, 
		barley, dates, gold salt etc., of exact quantity and of same quality? 
		What would be the rationale for exchanging a pound of barley with 
		another pound or kilo of the same quality? If the orthodox position or 
		understanding is considered valid, here it seems that the Prophet has 
		permitted a kind of transaction that people have no reason to engage in. 
		Usually, permission of Prophet (s) involves something that people 
		usually do or need. In this case, none of those possibilities apply. 
		People without any sense will exchange an equal 
		amount of the same quality of wheat in trade. How in the world 
		the Prophet would permit something that people cannot be expected to 
		sensibly engage in real life? This is clearly a 
		trivialization of the Prophet's guidance. On the other hand, it will 
		make lots of sense only if Prophet (s) is talking about Pre-Islamic form 
		futures market and the extortionate increase of capital obligation of 
		debtors, ” 
		
		
		الرِّبَا 
		” 
		(THE 
		RIBA), 
		
		when the farmer is unable to deliver wheat that he borrowed. 
		
		 
		
		 
		
		
		Quran 275-280 2:275-276. 
		Those who live on ”
		
		الرِّبَا 
		” 
		(THE 
		RIBA). 
		
		 will not rise up before Allah 
		except like those who are driven to madness by the touch of Shaitan. 
		That is because they claim: "Trading is no different than
		” 
		الرِّبَا 
		” 
		(THE 
		RIBA), 
		but Allah has made trading lawful and
		” 
		الرِّبَا 
		” 
		(THE 
		RIBA) 
		unlawful. 
		He who has received the admonition from his Rabb and has mended his way
		may keep his previous gains; Allah will 
		be his judge. Those who turn back (repeat this crime), they shall be the 
		inmates of hellfire wherein they will live for ever. 
		
		
		 Allah has laid His
		curse on 
		
		” الرِّبَا 
		” 
		(THE 
		RIBA) and blessed charity to prosper. Allah does not love any 
		ungrateful sinner. 
		 
		 
		Comment:
		
		Verse 2:275 restates affirmatively the prohibition of 
		
		” الرِّبَا 
		” 
		(THE 
		RIBA). 
		
		God  characterizes 
		
		” الرِّبَا 
		” 
		(THE 
		RIBA) 
		
		here as a curse. 
		God let the creditor keep 
		“previous gains” as a mercy. 2:278-280.  
		O ye who believe! Observe your duty to Allah, and
		give up what remaineth (due to you) from usury, 
		if ye are (in truth) believers. If you will not give up
		
		” الرِّبَا 
		” 
		(THE 
		RIBA), which you demand, know that you are in the state of war 
		with God and His Messenger. But if you repent, 
		you will have your capital. Do not commit injustice and no justice will 
		be done to you.” 
		If the debtor is in a difficulty, grant him time till it is easy for him 
		to repay. But if ye remit it by way of charity, that is best for you if 
		ye only knew.” Finally, God states in verse 282: 
		
		
		“O 
		you who believe! when you deal with each other in contracting a debt for 
		a fixed time, then write it down;…” because the unjust practice of
		
		
		” الرِّبَا 
		” 
		(THE 
		RIBA) 
		based only oral agreement and the “doubling 
		and multiplying” 
		of
		
		
		the obligation from the debtor by the whims of the creditor without a 
		written contract. 
		 
		
		Comments:            
		1. All remaining part of
		
		” الرِّبَا 
		” 
		(THE 
		RIBA) 
		
		after this last revelation annulled.             
		2.
		
		“if you will not
		
		“give up what remaineth (due to you) 
		from 
		
		” 
		
		الرِّبَا 
		” 
		(THE 
		RIBA),”
		you are in the state of war with God and His Messenger.             
		3. Creditor can collect the capital If the debtor is financially 
		solvent.               
		4. If the debtor is in a difficulty, grant him time till it is 
		easy for him to repay.            
		5. the debtor cannot pay, God recommends to forgive the debt 
		charitably because            
		           
		           
		    “…Allah 
		causes charitable deeds to prosper.” Quran 2:276). 
		
		           
		6.  All debt 
		contracts must be written down and witnessed. 
		
		                                                      
		
		
		SUMMARY  
		 
		
		1. Most Muslims believe that the 
		
		” الرِّبَا 
		” 
		(THE 
		RIBA) 
		verses were the last verses revealed.  
		
		2. Prophet (s) did not live long enough explain 
		
		” الرِّبَا 
		” 
		(THE 
		RIBA) 
		
		
		3. Most Muslims believe Hadith set 1-5 prohibit 
		
		” الرِّبَا 
		” 
		in 
		
		general. 
		4. The Set of Hadith set A-D
		allows paying extra with return of borrowed 
		money or commodity. 
		5. There are instances when
		Propher (s) and Ummar (a) paid more than they 
		borrowed. 
		
		    So, 
		
		” الرِّبَا 
		” 
		(THE 
		RIBA) 
		
		and interest are one and the same. 
		
		6. All the verses of the Quran regarding the prohibition of the riba 
		mentions it as “al—URiba  
		
		(” 
		الرِّبَا 
		”), 
		that is with the definite article “al.” 
		The certainly the definite article, “al”, 
		here is not indefinite or general,. So, 
		the “al” here is a specific and some 
		special kind of increase has been prohibited under
		shariah. 
		
		7. ” 
		الرِّبَا 
		” 
		(THE 
		RIBA) 
		
		is an extortionist practice in Arabian futures 
		market in Prophet (s)’ time and nothing remotely similar to current 
		banking practices. 
		
		8.  Prophet (s)
		prohibited futures market existed in his 
		time. 
		
		9.  
		Muslims must write a contract agreement 
		in presence of witness any future promises. 10. All debt contracts must be written and witnessed. | |||||||
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