Invest in Lasting Change
SADAQA-E-JARYA
Your charitable investments in areas like education, farming, and small businesses can reap long-term benefits by making people self-sufficient and rise above their poverty.
GIVE SADAQA-E-JARIYA, REAP REWARDS FOREVER
Animal Farming
We help families start sustainable farming: £50 for poultry (5 chickens, 1 rooster) or £100 for 2 goats for milk production in rural areas.
Small Businesses for the Poor
We provide essential tools for starting businesses, including sewing machines (£65), push-carts (£150), and shop setup (£200–£500), to help families thrive.
Farmer Assistance
Most of the communities where H.M.W.O. implements its projects depend on agricultural economies. Over 80% of their population consists of farmers. Unlike in developed countries, these farmers do not receive any subsidies. Therefore, a major portion of the population of such communities continues to stay below the poverty line, generation after generation.
Harshton.M.W.O supports farmers in need by providing essential resources:
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Seeds
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Fertilizers
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Pesticides
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Technical know-how
Your Sadaqa-e-Jarya helps change their lives
“If a human dies, then his good deeds stop except for three: a Sadaqa Jariah (continuous charity), a beneficial knowledge, or a righteous child who prays for him.” – Sahih Muslim
Your Sadaqa Jariah could help many deserving people change their lives for good. And, in return, you continue getting the reward as long as the poor people continue to benefit from your donation through good education, medical aid and livelihood programmes.
We strongly believe in helping people earn a decent living and become financially independent and self-sufficient, instead of providing them perpetual assistance. Then they don’t have to be provided with charity for food, medicines, shelter, clothing etc.
This self-employment philosophy is derived from the following incident during the time of the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him):
A man of the Ansar came to the Prophet (saw) and begged from him. The Prophet (saw) asked him if he has anything in his house? He replied: Yes, a piece of cloth, a part of which we wear and a part of which we spread (on the ground), and a wooden bowl from which we drink water. The Prophet (saw) asked him to bring those items to him and helped him sell for two dirhams. He (saw) asked the Ansari to buy food with one dirham, buy an axe with the second dirham, and go and gather firewood and sell it. The man went away, and gathered firewood and sold it. When he had earned ten dirhams, he came to the prophet and told him that he had bought a garment with some of them and food with his earnings the others. (Abu Dawud, Hadith 1637)
This incident illustrates an important distinction between simply providing relief as opposed to making someone self-sufficient. Relief is generally a short-term solution to a long-term problem. Self-employment through economic and social change is a long-term solution, which is why we focus on projects that promote self-employment.
Harshton.M.W.O’s livelihood and Islamic Micro-finance Program includes the following projects:
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Animal Farming
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Small Business for the Poor
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Farmer Assistance





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