The World Islamic Mint was established in the early 2000s to produce gold dinars and silver dirhams conforming to the classical Umayyad weight standards codified in the 7th century — specifically the 2.975g dirham unit, making this five-dirham piece an exact quintupling of that historical measure. The project drew direct support from figures within the Islamic gold dinar movement, most prominently the Malaysian politician and activist Umar Ibrahim Vadillo, whose writings argued that paper currency is forbidden under Islamic law.
These pieces circulate within a loose network of Muslim communities and barter markets, particularly in Malaysia, Indonesia, and parts of the Gulf — not as legal tender anywhere, but as a parallel medium of exchange.
The World Islamic Mint was established in the early 2000s to produce gold dinars and silver dirhams conforming to the classical Umayyad weight standards codified in the 7th century — specifically the 2.975g dirham unit, making this five-dirham piece an exact quintupling of that historical measure. The project drew direct support from figures within the Islamic gold dinar movement, most prominently the Malaysian politician and activist Umar Ibrahim Vadillo, whose writings argued that paper currency is forbidden under Islamic law.
These pieces circulate within a loose network of Muslim communities and barter markets, particularly in Malaysia, Indonesia, and parts of the Gulf — not as legal tender anywhere, but as a parallel medium of exchange.