The Waqf, Its Basic Operational Structure and Development by Prof. Dr. Murat Cizakca
The Waqf, Its Basic Operational Structure and Development by Prof. Dr. Murat Cizakca
The Waqf, Its Basic Operational Structure and Development by Prof. Dr. Murat Cizakca
DEVELOPMENT
Date: January 21st, 2014
Prof. Dr. Murat Cizakca
Voluntarism
Income redistribution by resorting to taxation
is not the preferred method.
Voluntary donations and waqf establishment
were definitely preferred.
Waqfs, in time, became very popular.
3Marshall
G. S. Hodgson, The Venture of Islam, (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1974), vol. II: 124. Bahaddin
Yediyldz, x Yzylda Trkiyede Vakf Messesesi (Ankara: TTK, 2003).
Origins
Although some pre-Islamic civilizations were
aware of waqf like structures,
the origins of Islamic waqfs as we know them today
are traced back to a statement by Prophet Muhammad (pbuh)
known as Thawab bad al Wafah (reward after death):
Abu Hurairah reported Allahs messenger as saying:
When a person dies, all his/her acts come to an end, but three:
recurring (ongoing) charity, or knowledge from which people
benefit, or a pious offspring, who prays for him/her.5
5Imam
Muslim, Sahih Muslim; Al-Kutub al-Sittah wa Shuruhuha (Istanbul: ar, 1992): bab 3, hadith 14.
death.
Waqf is the best instrument for this, because it can
a complete system,
can combine all these three acts.
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Management
Ottoman waqfs were either managed directly by
their founders,
Or, by the trustees appointed by the founders.
During the 18th century, 67 percent of them were
managed by trustees appointed by the founders.
The rest were appointed by courts, when the
appointed trustees had expired.
This contrasts with Malaysia, where the sole
trustee of all waqfs is the SIRC in every state.
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A UNIVERSAL INSTITUTION
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Gaudiosi, The Influence of the Islamic Law of Waqf on the Development of the Trust in England: The
Case of Merton College, University of Pennsylvania Law Review, vol. 136, no. 4, 1988: 1231-1261.
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Daniel Crecelius, Introduction, Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient, vol. 38,
1995, no. 3.
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Inspections
It is difficult to reach a conclusion regarding the
role of inspections on this longevity.
During the 18th century 64 percent of waqfs were
regularly inspected by local courts.
But some founders (36 percent)preferred to have
their waqfs inspected by persons, nazirs,
appointed by themselves.
32 percent of nazirs were paid by the waqfs they
controlled, while 67 percent worked voluntarily.
If a court wanted to inspect a nazir controlled
waqf, it had to obtain permission from its nazir.
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Consequently,
throughout Islamic history waqf-state relations
have remained difficult.
While, on the one hand,
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CATEGORIES OF WAQFS
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founder,
this would be waqf ahli or khas.
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manner.
They were either endowed in urban areas,
where their endowment (corpus) would be
in the form of
residential buildings, shops, bath-houses or
other rent yielding urban property,
or in rural areas in which case
their corpus would be in the form of cultivable land.
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In rural areas,
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Double Ownership
In Hukr there is double ownership,
While the raqaba (dominium eminens) of the land
belongs to the waqf,
the usufruct belongs to the developer
The developer obtains this right to use the property he
builds on waqf land, in return for the rent he pays.
The building is his for as long as he pays the rent
The developer could even bequeath his usufruct to his
heirs, providing they continue to pay the rent
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destroyed,
the waqf simply failed to function.
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IJARATAYN
Ijaratayn (double rent) is defined by the
current waqf law of Turkey as follows:
Waqf assets leased without a fixed terminal
date on the condition that a lump-sum
payment (rent)nearly equal to the value of the
asset is made upfront, plus, the payment of
annual rent.
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Marsad
If a waqf lost its income and its buildings were
in need of repairs, the trustee could borrow
money
In this case, the waqf, not the trustee, would
be considered the debtor (This proves that
waqf had judicial personality an issue
rejected by some orientalist authors)
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Irsad Waqfs
Classical Islamic law demands that a property to be
endowed as a waqf must be privately owned.
But, in time, lands belonging to the state were also
endowed. This happened when the rulers allocated
state lands to certain persons, who then donated these
as waqf. Direct allocations by the rulers were also
common. These were made in the form of waqf to
ensure perpetuity.
Two conditions were relevant: The permission by the
ruler and that the raqaba remains with the state while
the usufruct belongs to the waqf in perpetuity.
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Unit-sharing
Unit-sharing involves land owner and the
developer agreeing to share the total number
of units that the developer promises to build.
Usually, depending on the location of the
land,a ratio of 50/50 or 40/60 is used.
But whatever the ratio chosen, this is a risky
process in view of the possibility that the
developer may fail to complete the building.
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CONCLUSION
Islamic law is very flexible and provides many feasible
alternatives to develop waqf owned assets.
Moreover, these alternatives are not just in theory.
Islamic economic history informs us that they were
successfully used in the past.
This is confirmed by the survival of many waqf assets
over the centuries in excellent condition in some
countries of the Islamic world.
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THANK YOU
FOR YOUR
ATTENTION!
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THANK YOU !