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In
the beginning the Muslims used gold and silver by weight and
the dinar and dirhams that they used were made by the Persians.
The first dated coins that can be assigned to the Muslims
are copies of silver dirhams of the Sassanian Yezdigird III,
struck during the Khalifate of Uthman, radiy'allahu anhu.
These coins differ from the original ones in that an Arabic
inscription is found in the obverse margins, normally reading
"in the Name of Allah". Since then the writing in
Arabic of the Name of Allah and parts of Qur'an on the coins
became a custom in all mintings made by Muslims.
Under what was known as the coin standard of the Khalif Umar
Ibn al-Khattab, the weight of 10 dirhams was equivalent to
7 dinars (mithqals)
In the year 75 (695 CE) the Khalifah Abdalmalik ordered Al-Hajjaj
to mint the first dirhams, thus he established officially
the standard of Umar Ibn al-Khattab. In the next year he ordered
the dirhams to be minted in all the regions of the Dar al-Islam.
He ordered that the coins be stamped with the sentence: "Allah
is Unique, Allah is Eternal". He ordered the removal
of human figures and animals from the coins and that they
be replaced with letters.
This command was then carried on throughout all the history
of Islam. The dinar and the dirham were both round, and the
writing was stamped in concentric circles. Typically on one
side it was written the "tahlil" and the "tahmid",
that is, "la ilaha ill'Allah" and "alhamdulillah";
and on the other side was written the name of the Amir and
the date. Later on it became common to introduce the blessings
on the Prophet, salla'llahu alayhi wa sallam, and sometimes,
ayats of the Qur'an.
Gold and silver coins remained official currency until the
fall of the Khalifate. Since then, dozens of different paper
currencies were made in each of the new postcolonial national
states created from the dismemberment of Dar al-Islam.
Allah says in the Qur'an:
And amongst the People of the Book there are those who,
if you were to entrust them with a treasure (qintar), he would
return it to you. And amongst them is he who, if you were
to entrust him with a dinar would not return it to you, unless
you kept standing over him. Qur'an (3,75)
Qadi Abu Bakr Ibn al-Arabi, the greatest authority on Qur'anic
Law wrote in his famous "Ahkam al-Qur'an" about
this ayat:
"The benefit that can be taken from this is the prohibition
of entrusting the People of the Book with goods".
Qadi Abu Bakr said: "The question concerning entrusting
property is legislated by the text of Qur'an." This means
that the ayat is a legal judgement of absolute validity and
of the greatest importance to the deen.
Entrusting wealth to non-Muslims is not allowed, but furthermore,
taking a non-Muslim as a partner outside Dar al-Islam (where
we stand over them) is extremely restricted, because they
might cheat or might use our wealth in forbidden transactions.
Since paper-money is a promise of payment, can it be permitted
to trust the issuers while they hold the payment (our property)
outside our jurisdiction? History has also demonstrated repeatedly
that paper money has been a permanent instrument of default
and cheating the Muslims. In addition, Islamic Law does not
permit the use of a promise of payment as a medium of exchange.

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