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Some people argue that only usury (interest at such an exorbitant rate that it exploits the debtor) has been declared unlawful by Islam. Therefore, interest at a mutually acceptable rate can be charged, which is usually the case in loans given for commercial purposes. It is in loans given for the purposes of personal needs that the possibility of exploitation exists. The following verse of Qur’an is presented to support this point of view: O believers! Do not devour interest, doubling and redoubling.[3:130] This verse, however, does not support the argument. It merely indicates the gravity of the failing of those who, in a time when infaq (spending in the way of Allah) in relation to jihad (holy war) was affording great opportunities to the Muslims to earn Allah’s forgiveness, were busy earning interest. This style is used in a language to reprimand a person for the heinousness of his attitude of not only doing something wrong but also showing total disregard for values in doing so. For example, when one says (in English) ‘For God’s sake, [at least] don’t flirt with another woman in front of your wife’, it does not mean that one is suggesting that one should flirt with another woman while one’s wife is not around. To take an example from the Qur’an, consider the following verse: Force not your slave-girls into prostitution that you may seek pleasures of the life of the world, if they would preserve their chastity. [24:33]
Obviously, this verse does not mean that
if the slave-girls are willing, prostitution may be allowed. It merely
points out the intensity of the sin of those who force such slave-girls
to prostitution as wish to avoid the despicable crime.
And that interest based loan which you give that it may increase in the wealth of others does not increase with Allah....(30:39)
Therefore, if anyone advocates that the
word is also used in a sense different from its denotion, the onus of proof
is on him.
O you who believe! Observe your duty to Allah, and give
up what remains [due to you] from Riba [interest], if you are [in truth]
believers. [2:278]
These two verses have the same context
and therefore can be taken together to show that interest has not been
prohibited merely in cases where the debtor is in difficult circumstances.
The words ‘And if the debtor is in straitened circumstances’ indicate an
exceptional case, and point out that the prohibition in the previous verse
(2:278) is of interest at a normal mutually acceptable rate.
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*. Islahi, Amin Ahsan, Tadabur-i-Qur'an, 5th, Ed., Vol. 1., (Lahore Faran Foundation, 1993), pp. 238 & 239. |