THE global Islamic intellectual community is mourning the loss of Professor Dr Muhammad Umer Chapra, a foundational architect of contemporary Islamic finance, whose death marks the conclusion of a life spent anchoring financial systems within the frameworks of social justice and human dignity.
In an international tribute, Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim stated that the world of Islamic scholarship and erudition has lost one of its finest sons, emphasizing that Dr Chapra spent his entire existence dedicated to the struggle for justice, the empowerment of thought, and the elevation of human dignity through knowledge.
Born in Bombay in 1933 and later earning a doctorate in economics from the University of Minnesota in 1961, Dr Chapra spent nearly 55 years serving as the chief economic adviser to the Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency, alongside senior advisory tenures at the Islamic Development Bank.
His extensive career was defined by an insistence that macroeconomic growth must remain subordinate to ethical accountability, an ideological stance that earned him prestigious international accolades including the King Faisal International Prize.
Anwar, in a Facebook post today, observed that Dr Chapra emerged as a vital intellectual force at a time when traditional economics frequently divorced financial transactions from moral and human considerations.
The Prime Minister remarked that the late scholar reminded the world that prosperity without justice is ultimately nothing more than a mirage, beautiful to look at, but entirely devoid of true meaning and genuine well-being.
Through his extensive publications, which include celebrated titles such as Islam and the Economic Challenge and Towards a Just Monetary System, Dr Chapra successfully revived a classical Islamic intellectual tradition that linked material progress to individual spiritual health and communal responsibility.
Anwar affirmed that the scholar's vast corpus of work would continue to guide international policymakers attempting to build economic alternatives that prioritise human equity over unfettered capital accumulation.
Expressing his deep personal condolences, Anwar prayed that the Almighty would shower infinite blessings upon the soul of a man he regarded as both a brilliant academic luminary and a cherished personal friend.
His legacy will remain an enduring torch illuminating the efforts of the Muslim world to construct an economic system that is more equitable, humane, and dignified, Anwar said. - June 14, 2026