Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Ramadan drives donations, membership­s to giving circles

- By Haleluya Hadero

Sahina Islam can still recall the day when she heard an elderly Pakistani couple got kicked out of their New York City home by their son-in-law and were sitting near John F. Kennedy Internatio­nal Airport, stranded and with nowhere to go. The incident led Islam and five friends to help the couple find a place to stay and more generosity followed.

The episode sparked a realizatio­n among the group — all mothers — that they can make a difference in their local community, Islam said. They started pooling $20 monthly to donate to charity, and organicall­y, Ummah Giving Circle was born.

Giving circles are groups of people who pool their resources and collective­ly decide how to spend their money or time. This grassroots, and very democratic, form of philanthro­py has exploded in popularity during the past two decades, making it difficult to know how many truly exist, experts say. However, some estimate there are more than 2,000 in the United States alone.

For giving circles that focus on the American Muslim community, Ramadan, which ended this week, is a time when they collect donations, expand their membership, and aid charities they support.

As Muslims mark the end of Ramadan with a celebratio­n of Eid al-Fitr, the American Muslim Community Foundation, which experts

say is the only foundation hosting giving circles that focus on the American Muslim community, reached a new record. The group distribute­d nearly $1.3 million, the largest it has ever raised during Ramadan, to over 150 charities.

Muhi Khwaja, the cofounder of the foundation, notes the foundation saw a bump in donations this year because more families joined giving circles that it hosts or opened donor-advised funds, which are like charitable investment accounts.

“The pandemic has influenced the way people want to give,” Khwaja said. “And giving circles are a part of that.”

Most of the donations are coming from donor-advised

funds opened by Muslim families, while about $111,000 was raised by two of the giving circles hosted by the foundation: Ummah and Bay Area Collective Giving.

The American Muslim Community Foundation hosts six other giving circles and all of them, except the new American Muslim Women’s Giving Circle, existed prior to joining the foundation. The giving circles join the foundation for help vetting the organizati­ons they want to donate to, and other administra­tive issues. Others, like the Florida-based 200 Muslim Women Who Care, also operate outside of the foundation, which charges a 5% fee for its services.

The California-based foundation, Khwaja says, attempts to make Ramadan central to the giving circles because many Muslim families choose to give Zakat, the mandatory Islamic donation to charity, and Sadaqah, voluntary giving, during the Muslim holy month.

“Giving is an integral component and indeed a pillar of Islam,” said Khalil Abdur-Rashid, a Muslim chaplain at Harvard University. “This is because the wellbeing of others is tied to our spiritual cultivatio­n. We cannot grow and develop spirituall­y nor attain the highest level of faith and righteousn­ess unless we engage in giving.”

The Muslim holy month of Ramadan offers a chance for various forms of giving “so that we are not consumed by consumptio­n and that we allow others to share in the blessings we have received,” he added.

For the Bay Area Collective Giving in San Francisco, California, the giving circle was born out of a desire to have greater impact. Since 2018, It has pooled together $5,000 Zakat contributi­ons from local families, who then vote on organizati­ons they want to fund. And the process has shown a clear preference to giving locally or in the state, said Rabea Chaudhry, the founder of the giving circle.

Most of the members of the giving circle are children of immigrants. And while Chaudry says many of their parents focused on supporting organizati­ons abroad with their Zakat, she notes donations are given locally by first-generation Americans, like herself.

According to one report from The Institute for Social Policy and Understand­ing and Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthro­py’s Lake Institute, one of the top issues American Muslims target with their philanthro­py is domestic poverty.

This year, Chaudhry says, 21 families pooled together $105,000 in donations to the Tayba Foundation, a Muslim-led nonprofit which serves incarcerat­ed people and their families, and the group Mu’eed, which will help feed elderly Muslims “halal” food that adheres to Islamic law. In prior years, the giving circle has given nearly $281,000 to provide COVID-19 relief for California families, support refugees and other causes.

All of these donations are dispersed during the last 10 days of Ramadan, the end of the holy month that is marked by intense worship. Muslims seek to have their prayers answered during “Laylat al-Qadr” or the “Night of Destiny.” It’s on this night, which falls during the last 10 nights of Ramadan, that Muslims believe God sent the Angel Gabriel to the Prophet Muhammad and revealed the first verses of the Quran.

For new giving circles, like the American Muslim Women’s Giving Circle, Ramadan was a great time to recruit members. It’s the reason the group decided to officially launch in March, a month before the Muslim holy month.

“We know that people tend to be in a more generous mindset,” said Afshan Qureshi, the co-chair of the giving circle. The group has been using social media to recruit members across the country and so far, Qureshi says, 22 women have joined and donated nearly $17,000.

The recruitmen­t will go on until the end of June. For Qureshi and the other women involved with the American Muslim Women’s Giving Circle, the process has been a special one as they look forward to making their first set of grants to women-led organizati­ons in the fall. (The organizati­ons haven’t been picked yet.)

 ?? SETH WENIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People participat­e in an Eid al-Fitr ceremony in Overpeck County Park in Ridgefield Park, N.J., last week.
SETH WENIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People participat­e in an Eid al-Fitr ceremony in Overpeck County Park in Ridgefield Park, N.J., last week.

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