Khums
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Khums (derived from the Arabic خمس or "fifth") is a Shi'a article of faith that refers to a one-fifth tax, which all adult Muslims who are financially secure and have surplus in their income normally have to pay on annual savings, net commercial profits, and all moveable and immovable property which is not commensurable with the needs and status of the person.
The Shi'a texts on Islamic laws usually assign a separate chapter to khums, following that of zakat.
The Qur'an refers to it in the following verse:
- Know that whatever of a thing you acquire (Arabic: ghanimah), a fifth of it is for Allah, for the Messenger, for the near relative, and the orphans, the needy, and the wayfarer... (8:41)
- Profit or gain from earning
- Minerals (also applicable to the Hanafi school of law)
- Buried treasure (applicable to all schools of Islamic law)
- Amalgamation of Halal (legal) wealth with Haram (illegal).
- Gems obtained from sea diving.
- Spoils of war.
- As commonly held, a land which a dhimmi (a non-Muslim living under the protection of Islamic Government) purchases from a Muslim.
External links
- [Khums (The Islamic Tax) by Syed Muhammad Rizvi]
- [Chapter on Khums from Islamic Laws by Ayatullah Ali al-Sistani]
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