۱۰ فروردین ۱۴۰۳ |۱۹ رمضان ۱۴۴۵ | Mar 29, 2024
News ID: 357183
27 March 2019 - 13:30
UK Muslims, Jews volunteer together on Sadaqa day

Sadaqa Day, initiated in 2015 as the Muslim community’s day of social action, saw more than a thousand people cook for the homeless and collect for the needy.

Hawzah News Agency (London, UK) – Hundreds of Muslim and Jewish volunteers came together for a day of friendship at the new Golders Green Islamic center in the London Borough of Barnet as part of fifteen interfaith events that took place for the Muslim community’s annual Sadaqa day.

Julie Siddiqi, who founded Sadaqa Day in 2015, praised the support of the Jewish community, saying: “Now in its fifth year, I love seeing the creativity of people and the different activities they organize on Sadaqa Day.”

“After the horrors of Christchurch, it has meant so much to British Muslims that our Jewish and other friends have reached out and shown so much love and support.

“Sadaqa Day is a time to come together and really get active in helping and serving others”

Sadaqa Day, initiated in 2015 as the Muslim community’s day of social action, saw more than a thousand people cook for the homeless and collect for the needy.

Volunteers from both Muslim and Jewish communities united in fifteen interfaith events that took place in London, Manchester, Leeds, Nottingham, Bournemouth, Cardiff and Peterborough.

The events ranged from cooking for the homeless and putting on musical shows to arts and crafts and a ‘bring and buy’ sale.

 “It was a real pleasure to take part in my first Sadaqa Day, supporting our local communities, and to see how many groups did so around the country,” Mitzvah Day’s Chief Executive Georgina Bye, who participated in events at West London Synagogue and collections outside supermarkets, said.

As one of the Five Pillars of Islam, zakat or donating and charity is a religious obligation for all Muslims who meet the necessary criteria of wealth. It’s a mandatory charitable contribution, the right of the poor to find relief from the rich, and is considered to be tax or obligatory alms.

Islamic Shari’ah also has another type of optional donation called Sadaqah. This term was used in the Holy Qur’an and Sunnah for both zakat and charity.

 

Comment

You are replying to: .