A Waqf is a perpetual Islamic trust — wealth dedicated for charitable purpose, with the principal preserved and the yield distributed. For fourteen centuries, Waqfs have funded mosques, schools, hospitals, water systems, and orphanages across the Muslim world. Mohseen treats Waqf as the long-horizon institution it is.
Waqf principal is never spent — only the yield is distributed. Mohseen tracks principal contributions, yield generation, and distribution events separately, with audit trail for each.
A donor establishing or contributing to a Waqf often commits over many years. Multi-year pledge tracking with installment reminders. Waqif (founder) recognition with consent.
Each Waqf has a stipulated beneficiary class — local mosque upkeep, scholarship to underprivileged students, hospital operations, etc. Distributions tracked against the founder's stated intent.
Waqf trustees (mutawallis) have specific governance authority. Permission-scoped access — only designated trustees can authorise principal-level decisions; ordinary admins see operational details.
For regulated jurisdictions (UK Charity Commission, US state-by-state, Malaysia majlis, GCC) — distribution reporting, principal-preservation evidence, beneficiary class adherence. Audit-ready.
Larger organisations operate multiple Waqfs — education Waqf, building Waqf, refugee Waqf. Each Waqf isolated for accounting; central trustee board sees aggregate.