For Islamic-giving organisations, the Hijri year is not a footnote — it's the framework. Ramadan, Hajj, Eid, Muharram, Mawlid — every observance is computed on the Umm al-Qura calendar basis and available for seasonal planning.
Two calendars, side by side
Your community lives on the lunar rhythm; your board, your auditor, and your tax authority live on the civil one. Mohseen never makes you choose — every screen, receipt, and report carries both.
Appeals, recurring sadaqah, and seasonal drafts follow the Hijri year — Ramadan, the best ten days of Dhul Hijjah, Muharram — landing on the right lunar dates every year, automatically.
Reports, year-end statements, and exports follow the civil fiscal year your treasurer and tax authority expect. The same sadaqah shows up correctly in both rhythms — no spreadsheet translation.
Devotional recurring rhythms contributors actually want: weekly after Maghrib every Jumu'ah, daily at iftar through Ramadan, annually on 1 Shawwal — alongside ordinary monthly schedules.
The Hijri year
Sacred months marked. Ramadan in gold. Seasonal appeal drafts keyed to each major observance, ready for staff review before the season arrives.
The Hijri calendar drifts ~11 days earlier each Gregorian year. Ramadan was in March last year; it's in February next year; it reaches January within a decade. An organization planning on the wrong month loses the most generous giving window of the year — Ramadan giving runs 2–4× a normal month. The platform recalculates automatically: your seasonal appeal drafts are keyed to the right Hijri dates, not the Gregorian approximation from last year.
How the calendar works in the platform
Hijri-awareness is not a toggle in the settings panel. It runs through every layer.
Every contributor receipt, appeal end-date, and recurring schedule can stay connected to the Islamic-year rhythm your community gives around.
Hijri dates computed on the Umm al-Qura calendar basis — a single, predictable convention your whole team can plan against, years ahead.
Ahead of Ramadan, Eid, Hajj season, Muharram, and Mawlid — a draft appeal appears in the dashboard with respectful copy, a suggested goal, and a ready-to-print QR code for the Jumu'ah announcement. Staff reviews; nothing auto-sends.
Contributors choose devotional rhythms at checkout: weekly after Maghrib every Jumu'ah, daily at iftar through Ramadan, annually on 1 Shawwal — recurring that follows the Hijri year, not just the first of the month.
The most sacred nights of the year are not a frequency-maximisation opportunity. Mohseen encodes restraint: measured, respectful outreach in the last ten nights of Ramadan — adab over volume, by design.
Events publish .ics feeds, and each contributor's portal includes a personal giving calendar with iCal — Hijri-aware dates that land in Google Calendar, Outlook, or Apple Calendar.