Hyderabad: One of the five pillars of Islam, “zakat” is mandatory charity for every well-to-do Muslim. And Hyderabad Zakat and Charitable Trust (HZCT) has shown how this obligatory form of charity can be channelised to bring change in society through education.

With this noble goal, the 25-year-old organisation has been using “zakat” to pull the community out of illiteracy and today more than 24,000 students study in its 106 schools.

The trust made a humble beginning in 1992 when Ghiasuddin Babukhan, a reputed businessman and philanthropist of this city, with some friends and other like-minded people came together to pool their “zakat” for education. “It started with total ‘zakat’ of just Rs1.1 million (Dh63,285),” recalled HZCT chairman Babukhan while talking to IANS.

With a firm belief in “empowerment through education and freedom through knowledge”, Babukhan and his friends formed a network of schools for poor, mostly in remote villages.

Though these Urdu-medium schools were taken over by the government under the Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan, the trust continues to monitor their functioning, appoint teachers, distribute free uniforms and books.

What started with a total “zakat” of just Rs1.1 million has now expanded to an annual budget of Rs120 million and has touched the lives of over a million people in the last two-and-a-half decades, including poor students, orphans and widows in Telangana, Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra and Karnataka.

Every Muslim whose assets reached “nisab” or minimum value (the current market price of 60.65 tolas of silver) has to pay 2.5 per cent annual Islamic tax on his wealth.

“People donate without any hassle. I don’t know 99 per cent of the donors. I have never met them. We have ensured total transparency. No questions are asked except positive feedback from the donors. Some people come personally to donate huge amounts,” said Babukhan.

“I don’t know whether there is any trust of this size and calibre in India,” he added.

HZCT runs its activities professionally as it has 40 dedicated volunteers and a well-paid, full-time staff. It ensures transparency by publishing annual reports for the donors. Education accounts for over 70 per cent of the trust’s spending of Rs1.07 billion since its inception.

The trust is spending more than Rs25 million schools alone and this includes salaries, uniforms, and “Gems of the Nation” cash awards of Rs10,000 each to girl students who secure 9.3 GPA or above in the 10th Grade.

What is interesting about these schools is 70 per cent of the students are girls. The pass percentage is 92 against the average of 57 in government-run schools.

“Our schools are a success story, not because I am handling it, but because Allah is handling it. For other works there can be several hurdles, but nobody can stop us in the area of education,” he said.

“More than 200,000 students have so far passed out of our schools and many have become professionals like doctors and engineers,” said Babukhan.

In 1996, Foundation for Economic and Education Development (FEED) was formed to run the institutes established by the trust. FEED set up the Hyderabad Institute of Excellence (HIE) in 2013 to hone the skills of meritorious students from poor and needy families to groom them as leaders with a strong sense of dignity, integrity, love for the country, and deep religious values.

Spread over 120 acres at Vikarabad near Hyderabad, this residential school boasts of world-class amenities and state-of-the-art infrastructure, providing education from 6th to 12th Grade. About 50 per cent of the students at HIE are on annual scholarship of Rs200,000 each.

It also prepares students for various competitive exams like IIT-JEE Mains and Advanced, National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (NEET), Birla Institute of Technology Science Aptitude Test (BITSAT), and entrance exams to Jawaharlal Institute of Postgraduate Medical Education and Research (JIPMER) and the National Defence Academy. In 2017, Hyderabad Institute of Excellence had 100 per cent results in the Intermediate (12th Grade) with 13 students scoring above 98 per cent marks.

“The results over the last four years have been excellent as many students got admissions to reputed colleges in different parts of the country and also into IITs and NITs,” said Babukhan, who believes that the environment plays an important role in creating leaders.

The education programmes of the trust have so far benefited about 378,000 students. It now plans to focus on education of orphans.

The trust is providing financial aid to 10,000 orphans for education from school level to professional courses.

This year it disbursed Rs16 million for an orphan scholarship programme. It also spent Rs17 million for distribution of foodgrain, Iftar packs and clothes during Ramadan to about 4,000 widows and orphans and also for distribution of “zabiha” meat.

Other works undertaken by HZCT include relief activities during the Gujarat riots and earthquake, and the Kashmir earthquake and floods.

In 2016-17, HZCT spent Rs55.7 million on scholarships for professional courses, orphans and physically handicapped, Rs17.5 million on welfare schemes like feeding the poor, Rs2.5 million on remarriage of young widows, and Rs1.2 million on drinking water and borewells.