My social studies students and I are studying Islam right now. The other day, we were reading about one of the Five Pillars, zakat (charity in Islam that means "that which purifies"). Muslims believe that giving away money helps to purify it and also "safeguards [them] against miserliness" (1). I asked the class if this was true, that giving money away makes us less greedy. They generally agreed that it does. I wanted to test whether or not they really believed this, so I handed a volunteer a $10 bill. I told the class that I would ask for the bill back the next day. I said that they should pass the bill around among their classmates, and that as a result, there would be no way for me to know who had the bill. For that reason, whoever wanted to keep the money could keep it. Even if I did learn who kept it, I told them, I would not punish that person. I wanted them to be motivated by their own honesty. The next day, I asked for the bill, and a student handed it to me. They had practiced the unselfishness (and, admittedly, also perhaps the social expectations) that they believed happens when you give away wealth.
1. Why Is Charity So Important in Islam? Zakat Foundation of America. 2019. Web. 9 November 2019.
1. Why Is Charity So Important in Islam? Zakat Foundation of America. 2019. Web. 9 November 2019.
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