God’s Tax, Man’s Luxury: The Sacred Business of Plunder
Humanity has always excelled at creating the "Middleman for the Divine." We take a biological impulse—the need for social cohesion and the desire to alleviate the guilt of wealth—and we codify it into religion. In the case of Zakat, it is a beautifully designed systemic tax aimed at narrowing the wealth gap. It is meant to purify the soul and the wallet. However, as the recent arrest of three individuals in Selangor for allegedly misappropriating RM230 million in Zakat funds proves, the "poverty tax" is often just a "luxury fund" for the clever.
From an evolutionary perspective, we are status-seeking primates. No amount of religious indoctrination can fully suppress the lizard brain's urge to hoard resources, especially when those resources are sitting in a massive, poorly guarded pile labeled "charity." Whether it is gold bars bought with Palestinian aid funds or luxury cars purchased with Zakat, the mechanism is the same: the predator dons the robes of the protector. We see this throughout history, from the sale of indulgences in the medieval church to the modern NGO executive. The "Divine" rarely complains about a missing decimal point, which makes religious funds the ultimate low-risk, high-reward target for the unscrupulous.
The cynicism here is breathtaking. To steal from a pot specifically designed for the destitute requires a level of biological coldness that would make a shark blush. Yet, in our modern "spiritual economy," faith is often treated as just another business model. The mosque, the church, and the temple provide the brand equity, and the corrupt officials provide the logistics for the heist. We like to tell ourselves that we are moral beings guided by higher powers, but whenever a large sum of "holy money" appears, the primate instinct to grab the biggest banana always seems to win.