Submitted:
31 May 2026
Posted:
02 June 2026
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Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction: The Paradox of Sacred Poverty
“A nation that permits its most vulnerable children to be harvested as instruments of institutional commerce while their administrators educate their own children in elite private schools has not experienced a failure of religious education policy. It has experienced a failure of moral accountability.”
2. Theoretical Framework
2.1. Political Economy of Religious Institutions
2.2. Dependency Theory and Human Capital Formation
2.3. Islamic Jurisprudence as Internal Critique
2.4. Research Methodology
3. Cultivated Mendicancy: The Institutionalization of Solicitation
3.1. The Architecture of Child-Mediated Revenue Collection
3.2. Homiletic Conditioning: The Theology of Solicitation
“The deployment of children in organized charitable solicitation campaigns, rationalized through religious rhetoric and sustained by food-security dependency, constitutes a form of institutionalized economic exploitation that operates beneath the threshold of legal and regulatory visibility insulated from scrutiny by the sacred authority of its administrators and the cultivated docility of its beneficiaries.”
3.3. Violation of Islamic Anti-Mendicancy Principles
4. The Tamleek Juridical Mechanism: Sacred Charity, Private Accumulation
4.1. The Instrument and Its Legitimate Purpose
4.2. Mechanisms of Asset Privatization in Practice
4.3. Violation of Waqf Law and Zakat Distribution Ethics
5. Dynastic Institutional Capture: Religious Feudalism in Contemporary Form
5.1. Hereditary Succession and the Subversion of Merit
5.2. Teacher Appointments as Revenue Instruments
5.3. The Double Standard: Elite Exemption from Sacred Dependency
“When those who administer an educational institution ensure that their own children are educated elsewhere, they have disclosed more eloquently than any critic could their private judgment of that institution’s educational value.”
6. Epistemic Closure Through Religious Sanction
6.1. The Delegitimization of Alternative Educational Pathways
6.2. Sacred Authority as Instrument of Accountability Suppression
7. Macroeconomic Consequences: Human Capital Deficit and National Development
7.1. The Scale of Productive Exclusion
7.2. Intergenerational Dependency Reproduction
7.3. Summary Table: Mechanisms, Violations, and Consequences
| Mechanism | Institutional Practice | Islamic Legal Violation | Economic Consequence |
| Cultivated Mendicancy | Systematic child deployment in charitable solicitation; homiletic normalization of begging as spiritual practice | Prophetic prohibition of solicitation by able-bodied individuals (Bukhari 1429, 1474; Muslim 1041) | Dependency-oriented dispositions; exclusion from productive participation; learned helplessness |
| Tamleek Juridical Mechanism | Conversion of communally-donated assets to privately-controlled property; circumvention of Waqf law | Waqf inalienability (Bukhari 2737); Zakat distribution categories (Al-Tawbah 9:60) | Private appropriation of public charitable resources; administrator wealth accumulation |
| Dynastic Institutional Capture | Hereditary succession; teacher appointments by student revenue capacity; elite exemption from dependency | Amanah and Adl principles in communal institutional stewardship | Educational quality suppression; perpetuation of institutional dysfunction |
| Epistemic Closure | Delegitimization of formal education as irreligious; suppression of accountability through sacred authority | Islamic obligations of Shura and transparency in communal affairs | Insulation of exploitative practices from reform; perpetuation of human capital deficit |
8. Policy Recommendations: Toward Accountable and Productive Religious Education
8.1. Immediate Regulatory Measures
- Mandatory Financial Audit and Transparency: All registered madrasas should submit annual audited financial statements to a designated regulatory body with public disclosure of income sources, expenditure categories, and asset holdings. The Societies Registration (Amendment) Act 2024 provides a legislative foundation; effective implementation demands dedicated enforcement capacity proportionate to violations detected.
- Child Welfare Protection: Legislative prohibition of the deployment of enrolled students in organized charitable solicitation activities including grain collection, animal hide collection, and monetary solicitation should be enacted in accordance with Pakistan’s child labor legislation and the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child.
- Waqf and Tamleek Regulatory Framework: A national registry of madrasa-associated properties and endowments should be established, with independent verification of ownership structures and a strengthened legal framework preventing privatization of communally-donated assets through Tamleek manipulation.
8.2. Medium-Term Structural Reforms
- 4.
- Curriculum Integration: Incentive frameworks including conditional registration renewal and access to state Zakat funds should be linked to meaningful integration of foundational productive competencies within madrasa curricula, including literacy, numeracy, and vocational skills relevant to Pakistan’s labor market needs.
- 5.
- Governance Standards: Registration requirements should mandate minimum governance standards, including independent oversight bodies with community representation, merit-based criteria for teacher appointment, and mechanisms for parental participation in institutional accountability.
8.3. Long-Term Structural Investment
- 6.
- Public Education Investment: The fundamental condition rendering madrasa enrollment attractive to impoverished families the absence of viable public alternatives requires sustained structural address. Increased investment in accessible quality education, including conditional cash transfer programs, constitutes the most durable mechanism for reducing involuntary madrasa dependency [10].
- 7.
- Islamic Scholarly Engagement: Meaningful reform requires engagement with the Islamic scholarly tradition on its own terms. The jurisprudential case against institutionalized mendicancy, Waqf privatization, and Zakat misappropriation is strong and well-grounded in the primary sources of Islamic law [11,12]. Its articulation by credible religious scholars may prove more effective than external regulatory compulsion alone [17].
9. Conclusion
AI and AI-Assisted Technology Disclosure
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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