Waqf boards are India's big urban landlords. But whose interest are they serving? (2024)

The main purpose of the huge waqf board universe in India is to serve the Muslim community. But even as the waqf board has emerged as the third largest owner of land in the country, Indian Muslims are struggling for basic needs and fare worse than Dalits on several socio-economic indicators. Waqf owners today are India’s largest urban landlords.

Waqf is a type of charitable endowment in Islamic law where the ownership of a property is transferred to Allah and the property is permanently dedicated for religious or charitable purposes. The person making the waqf (known as waqif) may specify the purposes for which the income generated by the property should be used. This could include supporting the poor and needy, maintaining a mosque or other religious institution, providing education, or funding other charitable causes.

In this way, waqf is considered a form of religious charity that allows individuals to contribute to the welfare of society and earn spiritual rewards. Waqf properties are managed by a waqf board, which is responsible for ensuring that the income generated by the property is used in accordance with the wishes of the waqif and Islamic principles.

The concept of waqf has its roots in early Islamic history, with the practice established during the time of Prophet Muhammad. During the Islamic Golden Age, waqf institutions played a critical role in the development of Islamic scholarship and education. Many of the world’s oldest universities, such as Al-Azhar University in Cairo (Egypt) and the University of Al Quaraouiyine in Fez (Morocco), were founded as waqf institutions.

History of waqf in India

Waqfs in India date back to the beginning of the Delhi Sultanate. In Waqf Laws and Administration in India (1968), authors S Athar Husain and S Khalid Rashid provide an overview of the history of waqfs. According to them, Sultan Muizuddin Sam Ghaor dedicated two villages to the Jama Masjid of Multan.

However, during the British Raj, a dispute over a waqf property ended up in the Privy Council of London. The four British judges who heard the case described the waqf as “a perpetuity of the worst kind” and declared it invalid. It is important to note that the decision of the four judges was not accepted in India, and the Mussalman Waqf Validating Act 1913 saved the institution from destruction. Today, after the Armed Forces and the Railways, the waqf is the largest landowner in India.

In 1954, the Jawaharlal Nehru government passed the Waqf Act, which led to the centralisation of waqfs. Under the Act, the government established the Central Waqf Council in 1964.

In 1995, the law was amended to allow the formation of waqf boards in each state and union territory. The Central Waqf Council serves as an advisory body to the Centre on matters related to waqf properties. Any dispute is decided by a waqf property tribunal headed by a member of the state service and two other members (not necessarily Muslims). Some states like Bihar have separate Shia and Sunni waqf boards.

Also read: Pasmanda Muslims missing from positions of power— Waqf Board to Jamaat-e-Islami

Pasmanda Muslims bear the brunt

The dismal performance of waqf boards raises a question on the purpose of these institutions.

Waqf properties are not generating enough profit for the community, and there have been several allegations of corruption and mismanagement since Independence.Each state has its own story to tell, from Uttar Pradesh to West Bengal. In September 2022, AAP MLA Amanatullah Khan, Delhi Waqf Board chairman, was arrested for alleged misappropriation of waqf funds and other irregularities. Last month, the Centre seized 123 waqf properties.

These are just a few examples that show how the waqf board has become a tool to save the interest of elite (Ashraaf) Muslims and ordinary Indian Muslims get nothing out of it.

Ashraaf have been serving their own interest by using the numerical strength and marginalised status of Pasmanda in the name of minority politics. The waqf board is no exception. Like all other Muslim institutions in India, waqf boards are also ruled by Ashraafs and have negligible participation of Tribals, Dalits and Backward Muslims.

Pasmanda Muslims also bear the brunt of reaction coming from other communities over special privileges given to waqf boards by the 1995 Act. No other minority group has so much land for the place of worship. In fact, Hindu temples and their land still belong to the State. Additionally, waqf making claims on others’ lands only adds to the fault lines among communities and affects Pasmanda Muslims more than anyone else.

Time has come to re-examine the purpose of waqf boards and whose interest they really serve.

Amana Begam Ansari is a columnist and TV news panelist. She runs a weekly YouTube show called ‘India This Week by Amana and Khalid’. She tweets @Amana_Ansari. Views are personal.

(Edited by Prashant)

Waqf boards are India's big urban landlords. But whose interest are they serving? (2024)

FAQs

Waqf boards are India's big urban landlords. But whose interest are they serving? ›

Waqf boards are the third largest landowners in India, after Armed Forces and Railways. But India's Muslim community is still struggling for basic needs. The main purpose of the huge waqf board universe in India is to serve the Muslim community.

What is Wakf board in India? ›

Central Waqf Council is a statutory body under the administrative control of the Ministry of Minority Affairs was set up in 1964 as per the provision given in the Waqf Act, 1954 as Advisory Body to the Central Government on matters concerning the working of the Waqf Boards and the due administration of Auqaf.

How Waqf Board acquired property in India? ›

But the Government of India gave the land of Muslims who went from India to Pakistan to the Waqf Boards. After which the Waqf Board Act was made in the year 1954. But in the year 1995, by changing the Waqf Board Act, the Waqf Boards were given unlimited rights to acquire land.

Is Delhi under Waqf Board? ›

Delhi Waqf Board is a state level statuary body under the Delhi Government under Wakf Act 1954. It exercises control over mosques, graveyards and religious waqfs. The primary function of Wakf Board is to insure its properties and revenue are appropriately managed and utilized.

Who owns the waqf land in India? ›

Currently, there are over 8,54,509 properties under Waqf Boards, covering more than eight lakh acres of land. The Waqf Board has significantly expanded its property holdings over the years, even though the overall land in the country remains the same.

Is Waqf legal in India? ›

Though many of these Acts were repealed by the Waqf Act 1954 the basic features continue to exist in our law. Post-independence, India enacted the Waqf Act 1954. The legislation, based on the earlier waqfs legislation, created a Waqf Board.

Can ancestral property be sold in India? ›

If the ancestral property remains undivided, a father cannot sell his ancestral property without the consent of the successors. If a father with two sons has inherited an ancestral property from his father, the grandsons also have a share in the property, and the father cannot sell it without the sons agreeing to it.

Who gets ancestral property in India? ›

In an undivided ancestral property, four generations of the male lineage have their claim. Basically, the father, the grandfather, the great grandfather and the great-great grandfather have inheritance rights over an undivided ancestral property.

Who can inherit ancestral property in India? ›

The heirs in an ancestral property get coparcenary rights from the time of their birth. Earlier, only the male heirs in the joint Hindu family had coparcenary rights. The Hindu Succession (Amendment) Act, 2005 amended Section 6 to also provide coparcenary rights to daughters.

Who controls the waqf? ›

The corporate waqf is established by a company's founder, individual shareholders, or government entities. Governmental regulation ranges from exercising complete control over the waqf assets to providing limited oversight by the trustees to prevent managerial abuse.

How much land does Waqf Board have in India? ›

According to officials, there are 8.7 lakh Waqf properties in India, on an area of 9.4 lakh acres.

Who pays Imam salary in Delhi? ›

"So the monthly honorarium of Rs 18,000 and Rs 16,000 being given to the imams and muezzins of DWB mosques in Delhi is being paid by the Delhi government virtually from the taxpayers money, which in turn is in sharp contrast with the example quoted by the appellant in which the priest of a Hindu temple is getting a ...

What is the full meaning of waqf? ›

1. : an Islamic endowment of property to be held in trust and used for a charitable or religious purpose. 2. : a Muslim religious or charitable foundation created by an endowed trust fund.

What is the role of the waqf? ›

Waqf is an instrument for voluntary charity in Islam and provided considerable contributions to the development of early Islamic society (Chapra, 2008). Since the fall of the Ottoman Empire, waqf has been considered an outdated institution which is no longer relevant in bringing about any significant economic changes.

What is an example of a waqf? ›

A Waqf endowment usually benefits the community as a whole by offering a service that is useful to society. For example: a hospital or a university. In Arabic, Waqf, or the plural 'Awqaf' means 'restriction' because it acknowledges that all properties belong to God.

What is the value of waqf properties in India? ›

Waqf Board has the 3rd largest ownership of land after Railways & Defense. As per Sachar committee report (2006), they've 5 lakh properties comprising 6 lakh acres of land whose value is ₹1.2 lakh cr. And yet they occupy public places like Roads, railway, parks etc for Namaz.

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