If you’ve been following my journey in financial education, you know that my approach to money isn’t just about numbers on a balance sheet.
For us, as Muslim women, it’s about something deeper: our autonomy, our values, and our ability to shape the world around us.
Money, for me, is a tool for empowerment—a means to advocate for causes I believe in. And one of the most potent ways we can do this is through investing.
As Muslims, we have a responsibility to ensure that our wealth is earned and used in accordance with Islamic principles. That means steering clear of investments in companies involved in industries like alcohol, gambling, or weapons manufacturing.
It means ensuring fair treatment and wages for workers in the companies we support.
Investing with a conscience is not just about feeling good; it’s about actively participating in shaping the world we want to live in. It’s about saying no to exploitation, injustice, and harm.
For me, Halal finance isn’t just a financial strategy—it’s a form of activism.
It’s about putting my money where my mouth is and using my financial resources to support companies that align with my values. It’s about advocating for social and environmental responsibility on a global scale.
Halal finance is not just about earning annual returns on compliant companies. It’s also about seeking out opportunities to invest in companies that are making a positive impact in the world.
Whether it’s supporting renewable energy companies, ethical fashion brands, or businesses that promote social justice, Halal finance allows us to be agents of change in the world.
As Halal finance becomes more mainstream, we have to remember the purpose of the rules we follow.
The commercialization of Halal products, like mortgages, raises important questions about intention and integrity.
Are these products going to be designed to serve our community’s ethical needs? or are they simply capitalizing on a niche market?
It’s deeply troubling and, frankly, insulting to see Halal finance reduced to a commercialized, profit-driven model by the very institutions that are complicit in the suffering of our brothers and sisters on the other side of the world.
At a time when our community is facing unprecedented challenges, from Islamophobia to the ongoing genocide, Halal finance is a powerful tool for us to create an impact globally and have our voices heard.
Offering Halal products as a token gesture, while continuing to engage in practices that harm Muslim communities globally is a level of hypocrisy cannot go unchallenged.
Because Halal finance is not just about making money without interest—it’s about using our wealth to create a more just and equitable world for all.
That’s why it’s crucial for us to educate ourselves about investing. We need to understand where our money is going and the impact it’s having on the world. Because every dollar we invest is a vote for the kind of future we want to see.
Personally, I will continue to support our Muslim run institutions that I trust. If that means lower profits or higher fees, I’m happy to use my money as a means to demonstrate that I will not stand for hypocrisy.