Praise be to Allaah.
Waqf
means freezing the capital or property, and not disposing of it by selling,
giving or inheriting, or in any other way, so that any income or earnings
are to be disposed of in the manner dictated by the person who initiated
the waqf, for charitable purposes and the like.
A
gift or bequest means giving up possession of some wealth to someone
who will benefit from it and who has full power of disposal over it.
In
the case of waqf, the best is to use it for charitable purposes. If
it is used for the purpose of calling non-Muslims to Islam, if there
is the hope that they will enter Islam and it is most likely that they
will do so, there is nothing wrong with that, because if the obligatory
zakaah money may be used to soften people’s hearts towards Islam, then
it is more apt that the money derived from waqf should be used for this
purpose. But it is better to use it in charitable projects, because
the benefit from them is certain rather than merely hoped for.
Waqf
may be used to energize the Islamic economic system, so that waqf funds
may be disposed of in ways that are permitted by sharee’ah in order
to promote the growth of the Islamic economic system.
Any
problems that may be expected with regard to waqf come from the heirs
and relatives, and the way in which the profits should be distributed
among the needy.