Yacob's insistence on reason and truth-seeking demands that credit relationships be built on complete transparency and honest disclosure.
Reason cannot flourish in darkness. Zera Yacob held that truth-seeking requires visibility and honest communication. In credit contexts, transparency becomes the structural foundation of trustworthiness. Both lenders and borrowers must operate with full disclosure: lenders clearly stating all terms, conditions, fees, and consequences; borrowers honestly representing their financial situation, income stability, and ability to repay. Hidden information—undisclosed debts, inflated income claims, concealed penalties—violates the Yacobite commitment to reason because it prevents rational decision-making. Transparency protects both parties: borrowers can make informed choices about whether to accept terms; lenders can accurately assess risk. This concept also includes right of audit and explanation. Borrowers deserve clear accounting of how payments are applied. Lenders deserve honest explanations when borrowers face hardship. Transparency mechanisms—written agreements, regular statements, accessible records—transform credit from a relationship of hidden asymmetry into one of mutual clarity. This openness itself becomes the mechanism through which trust is built and creditworthiness is established and verified.
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