| Surah al-Mumtahana (The Tested Woman)Chapter 60: Verse 12
   Women's Individuality "O Prophet! When believing women come to thee to take the oath of allegiance to thee,   that they will not associate in worship any other thing whatever with Allah,   that they will not steal, that they will not commit adultery (or fornication),   that they will not kill their children, that they will not utter slander,   intentionally forging falsehood, and that they will not disobey thee in any just   matter; then do thou accept their allegiance, and pray to Allah for the forgiveness   (of their sins): for Allah is Oft-Forgiving, Most Merciful."
 The  individuality of a woman is a principle of religion. In Islam, a woman is an  independent entity, and thus a fully responsible human being. Islam addresses  her directly and does not approach her through the agency of Muslim males. A  woman would assume full capacity and liability once she has attained maturity  and has received the message of Islam.
 Moreover no woman is said to have truly accepted the message of Islam unless  she does so out of her independent will. Admission to faith is entirely a  personal matter; indeed, faith cannot be adopted by proxy. Women, just like  men, would come to the Prophet (peace be upon him) and pledge their own  allegiance to Islam and the Prophet.
 
 Muslim women, on the strength of their unshakable personal faith, used to work  for the propagation of Islam. Many of them helped to promote the cause of Islam  within their respective family circles, through discussion and debate. Arwa  bint Abdul Muttalib was one such lady who used to support the Prophet (peace be  upon him) and to argue in his favour. She always urged  her son to help the Prophet (peace be upon him) and to do whatever he asked him  to do. Another such lady was Um Shuraik who used to move secretly among the  ladies of Quraish to solicit and convert them to Islam. She had converted many  before she was exposed. The people of Mecca warned her that she would have  suffered but for her kin. (Al Isabah)
 
 If embracing Islam by a woman is an entirely personal matter in the Islamic  tradition and cannot be done through proxy, so are all obligations and duties,  which Islam enjoins on her. No one else can do them on her behalf. She performs  her acts of worship purely on the basis of her own intention; and as such these  are treated in Islam as her personal achievements.
 
 On the basis of her own action, a woman earns reward or punishment. No man is  allowed to plead or intercede for a woman, nor is he held responsible for her  actions and their consequences. The doctrine of ultimate accountability does  not take the family as a unit for collective responsibility; rather, each  individual male or female, is an autonomous unit of reckoning in front of God,  and is held directly responsible for his or her actions or his or her share in  joint acts.
 Source:“On the Position of Women in Islam and in Islamic Society" - Hassan al-Turabi
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        Monasticism 
          “All of Creation are Allah’s dependents  – and the best of them in the sight of Allah are those who provide the greatest benefit to  his dependents.” [Mu`jam al-Tabarânî al-Kabîr (9891)]
 The  Prophet (peace be upon him) emphasized that we can attain Allah’s love by  helping other people in their worldly needs. Since Islam calls upon its  adherents to be actively engaged in making a contribution to the world and to  human welfare, we find that it categorically prohibits monasticism. We must  understand that monasticism is the idea that it is an act of devotion to  renounce the world altogether and focus purely on spiritual concerns and the  goal of the Hereafter. 
          Three of the Companions once asked the Prophet’s wife to  describe to them the Prophet’s worship. When she did so, they found it to be  less than they aspired to. They said: “How can we compare our state to that of  the Prophet (peace be upon him)? His sins, past and future have been forgiven.”  Then one among them said: “I will pray throughout the  night, every night.” Another among them said: “I will fast every day without  break.”
 The third among them said: “As for me, I will renounce  women and never marry.”
 Later, the Prophet (peace be upon him) came to them and  said: “Are you the ones who said those things? Whereas, by Allah, I am the most  God-fearing and devout among you; yet I fast at times and at other times leave  off the fast, I observe prayer and sleep as well; and I marry women. Whoever  desires something other than my way is not of me.” [Sahîh al-Bukhârî (5036) and  Sahîh Muslim (1401)]
 This  balanced attitude between worldly and spiritual concerns, where devotion to  Allah is not seen as antagonistic to worldly activities, is one of the reasons  why Islamic civilization flowered in its early centuries.  As  time went on, things changed. The extreme asceticism of certain Islamic  mystical paths, over time, captured the popular Muslim imagination. When such  deviant mystical ideas became entrenched in Muslim society, it lost its vigor  and vitality. People began seeing piety towards Allah as being synonymous with  the renunciation of the world. They sometimes went so far as to see  righteousness in self-inflicted abuse and the complete denial of comfort.  They  also twisted the beautiful idea of relying on Allah into something else by  saying: “Leave the world’s concerns to its Creator.” By turning away from the  beautiful and balanced principles enshrined in Islamic teachings, the Muslim  world fell into decline. Source:“O Messenger of Allah! Do  we get blessings for indulging our lusts?”- Dr. Ghâzî al-Tawbah
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          Key Concepts in  Islamic Banking Central  to Islamic banking and finance is an understanding of the importance of risk  sharing as part of raising capital and the avoidance of riba (interest) and gharar (risk or  uncertainty). Islamic  law views lending with interest payments  as a relationship that favours the lender, who charges interest at the expense  of the borrower. Because Islamic law views money as a measuring tool for  value and not an 'asset' in itself, it requires that one should not be able to  receive income from money (for example, interest or anything that has the genus  of money) alone. Deemed riba (literally an increase or growth), such practice is prohibited under Islamic  law (haram) as  it is considered usurious and exploitative. 
            Accordingly, Shariah-compliant finance (halal) consists of profit banking in which the financial institution shares in the profit  and loss of the enterprise that it underwrites.  Of  equal importance is the concept of gharar.  Defined as risk or uncertainty, in a financial context it refers to the sale of  items whose existence is not certain. Examples of gharar would be forms of insurance, such as  the purchase of premiums to insure against something that may or may not occur or derivatives used  to hedge against  possible outcomes Source:“Working With Islamic Finance” - Marc L. Ross
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