Benevolence (Ihsan) has been emphasized over and
over again in Islamic teachings. The Qur’an says:
Indeed Allah ordains justice and benevolence. (16:90)
Benevolent behaviour is
considered a natural response of a believer to the spiritual realization of the
tremendous blessings he received from his Creator and Nourisher without being
entitled to them. In other words, a true believer is prepared to give to others,
over and above what he owes to them on the principle of justice to express his
gratitude to God Almighty for having done the same to him on a much larger
scale. The Qur’an, when urging the believer to spend in the way of Allah,
says:
And spend [to earn the
pleasure of Allah] out of the means of sustenance that We have provided you
with. (63:10)
It must, however, be clarified that benevolence is a
bonus-value which in order to be valid must always succeed justice.
Otherwise ‘benevolence is likely to undermine benevolence’. In other words
benevolence starts from the basis that justice has already been done. If an
employer, for instance, treats his own employees badly and keeps them underpaid
(ie contravenes the spirit of justice), no matter how much he may spend in
avenues of charity, his behaviour would be unacceptable to Islam.
It is not always easy to draw a clear line of demarcation
between justice and benevolence. When an attitude of benevolence is urgently
needed to alleviate the hardship of the needy, the act of benevolence should
more properly be considered binding and, therefore, counted as a requirement of
justice. Parting with 2.5% every year from the savings of legitimately earned
wealth to cater for the needs of other (Zakah) may appear an act of
benevolence from the point of view of the giver, but it is no more than simple
justice (requirement of justice) if one considers the need and deprivation of
the fellow human beings. Likewise, parting with one’s savings to help meet a
need of another person through an interest-free loan, although apparently an act
of benevolence, is involuntary as far as restriction on demanding interest is
concerned. Thus such apparently voluntary virtue, which if neglected, would
violate the peculiar requirements of Islamic justice have been made involuntary
for the believer in Islam (check). This clear demarcation of justice and
benevolence precludes the possibility of the two ever overlapping practically
since the role of the latter emerges only when the domain of the former ends. In
the apparently ‘grey areas’, the intensity and urgency of the needy and the
possibility of the potential helper’s ability to come to his aid and his own
circumstances would ultimately decide whether an action or lack of it was
relating to justice or to benevolence.
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