Yacob's understanding of shared humanity as rational foundation supports zakat's implicit economics: mutual dependence creates stronger, more stable communities than isolated individualism.
Zera Yacob reasoned toward universal human connection—the insight that all people share fundamental nature and mutual vulnerability. Zakat operationalizes this insight economically: when wealth becomes genuinely interdependent through systematic giving, communities strengthen. Modern economics often treats this as sentiment; Yacob would recognize it as rational truth. A society where desperate poverty exists creates instability—desperate people become unpredictable, resentful, potentially violent. A society where everyone's basic needs receive attention creates predictability and social peace. Zakat's distribution prevents the dehumanization that extreme inequality produces: when wealthy individuals never encounter poverty, they can maintain fictions about poor people's moral inferiority. But zakat forces contact and awareness. Furthermore, zakat recipients become more productive community members when freed from survival desperation; they can develop skills, contribute talent, and strengthen collective capacity. Yacob's rationality would recognize that the wealthy benefit from zakat—they gain social stability, moral clarity, and communities where human potential develops rather than withers. Interdependence isn't sacrifice; it's enlightened self-interest aligned with dignity. Zakat makes explicit the economic rationality of mutual care.
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