Allocation of Waqf Surplus Income to Welfare
This criterion assesses whether the organization directs surplus income from its waqf (endowment) assets to community welfare initiatives after covering necessary maintenance and operational costs. For this criterion, ‘waqf surplus’ means net distributable income from waqf assets for the reporting period after (i) direct property/asset running costs, (ii) planned maintenance provision, and (iii) any deed-required retentions/capital maintenance/inflation-proofing, while ring-fencing permanent endowment capital. Surplus is calculated fund-by-fund and may be ‘income yield’ or ‘total return’ only where the deed and trustee resolution permit a total-return approach under applicable law and SORP disclosures. This aligns with the principle of preserving waqf capital (ḥifẓ al-māl) while addressing essential welfare needs (ḥifẓ al-nafs), ensuring that the asset remains intact and its yield is spent on beneficiaries, as exemplified by Umar’s waqf of Khaybar. It also embodies *Birr* (righteousness, Q2:177) and prevents wealth concentration (Q59:7).
Compliance 2
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Fund-by-fund allocation controls (Waqf Register)Governance Essential
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Grant-making due diligence (incl. Bribery Act, CC11, GDPR)Compliance Essential
Good 4
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Clear policy on surplus waqf income allocation and definitionDocumentation Essential
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Carry-forward control and approval workflowProcess Essential
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Shariah governance (Niyyah documentation, Deed fidelity)Compliance Essential
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Strategic alignment of welfare initiatives with community needsLeadership High
Better 3
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Reinvestment Decision Framework (Asset lifecycle plan)Strategy Important
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Impact assessment of funded welfare programsContinuous Improvement High
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Diverse welfare portfolio mapped to Maqāṣid al-SharīʿahSustainability High
Best 1
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Fund-by-fund SORP disclosures and independent assuranceTransparency High
Discussion (1)
📋 **Version updated: 1.0.0 → 2.9.7** **Changes:** Updated islamic_references from mizan-297.json
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