Five times each day, about 2 billion Muslims around the world stop what they are doing and pray. The prayer is called salah in Arabic. It is one of the Five Pillars of Islam — the basic religious obligations every Muslim is expected to fulfil. The prayer involves a specific sequence of standing, bowing, kneeling, and prostrating, with specific words said in Arabic. The whole prayer takes about five to ten minutes for each of the five daily times. Muslims pray facing Mecca (Makkah), the holiest city in Islam, in present-day Saudi Arabia. The direction toward Mecca is called the qibla. Muslims pray on a clean surface, ideally one set apart from the noise and dirt of everyday life. To create this clean space anywhere, they use a prayer mat. The Arabic word for the mat is sajjada. In South Asia (Pakistan, India, Bangladesh) it is called janamaz. In Turkey it is seccade. In Central Asia it is namazlik. The mat is a small rectangle of cloth — usually 70-110 cm long and 60-80 cm wide — large enough for one person to perform the prayer movements. The mat marks out a sacred space wherever the worshipper happens to be: at home, at work, in a hotel room, in an airport, beside the road. When the prayer is finished, the mat is folded or rolled up and put away. Many traditional prayer mats have a specific design feature: a niche or arch shape woven or printed at one end. This represents the mihrab, the niche found in mosques that indicates the direction of Mecca. When the worshipper places the mat with the niche pointing toward Mecca, they know they are facing the right direction. Different regions of the Islamic world have developed distinctive prayer rug traditions. Anatolian (Turkish) prayer rugs are famous for their bold geometric designs. Persian prayer rugs from Iran often have elaborate floral patterns. Central Asian rugs (Turkmen, Uzbek) have their own distinctive geometric styles. Indian Subcontinent prayer mats often use detailed floral patterns. Modern prayer mats are widely produced in many materials, from simple printed cotton to elaborate hand-knotted carpets. Some travel mats are pocket-sized for easy use during journeys. Some workplaces and airports now provide prayer rooms with mats for Muslim employees and travellers. The Hajj — the pilgrimage to Mecca that every able Muslim should perform once in their lifetime — sees millions of people praying on millions of mats together. This lesson asks how the prayer mat is used, what its design means, and how a small piece of cloth carries one of the world's largest daily religious practices.
Because regular prayer is one of the central practices of Islamic life. The Five Pillars of Islam are: shahada (declaration of faith), salah (the five daily prayers), zakat (giving to those in need), sawm (fasting during Ramadan), and Hajj (pilgrimage to Mecca for those who can). Salah is the most frequent of these — done five times every day for the whole of an observant Muslim's adult life. The frequency is part of the meaning. Muslims are reminded throughout the day to pause, turn toward Mecca, and remember God. Work, school, shopping, travel — all are interrupted briefly five times a day. The structure shapes the day. Other religions have similar practices. Jewish observance includes morning, afternoon, and evening prayers, plus blessings at meals. Christian monastic traditions had multiple daily prayer times (Lauds, Prime, Terce, Sext, None, Vespers, Compline). Buddhist and Hindu traditions have daily practices. The five-times-a-day Islamic prayer is one of the most demanding regular religious practices in any tradition. The prayer mat is part of how this enormous daily commitment fits into ordinary life. Students should see that 'religion' for many people is not just belief — it is daily physical practice. The prayer mat is one of the clearest examples.
Because the conventions are part of the religious meaning. The mihrab arch helps the worshipper face Mecca. The size accommodates the prayer movements. The avoidance of human and animal figures reflects Islamic religious teaching about images. The materials (clean, durable) suit daily use. Each design choice has a reason. The same is true of many other religious objects. The mezuzah's specific Hebrew text, the Buddhist prayer flag's specific colours, the Christian altarpiece's specific arrangement — all have religious reasons. The prayer mat is one of the most refined examples because the design serves so many different functions: visual reminder of qibla direction, clean prayer space, regional artistic expression, religious symbol. Students should see that 'design conventions' in religious objects are usually not arbitrary. Each element has a purpose connected to the religious practice. Knowing the conventions deepens appreciation for the object.
Because the Islamic world spans many cultures, climates, and craft traditions. Islam emerged in the Arabian Peninsula in the 600s CE and spread across the Middle East, North Africa, Central Asia, the Indian Subcontinent, Southeast Asia, and beyond. Each region had its own existing textile traditions, which adapted to make prayer mats. The result is enormous regional variety expressing one shared religious practice. The same kind of diversity exists in many religious traditions. Christian church architecture varies enormously by region — Romanesque, Gothic, Byzantine, Baroque, Ethiopian rock-cut churches. Hindu temples vary by region — South Indian, North Indian, Khmer, Indonesian. Buddhist temples vary by country — Thai, Japanese, Tibetan, Sri Lankan. Each tradition has core common elements (specific religious requirements) and enormous regional expression. The Islamic prayer mat is one of the clearest examples in textile arts. Different regions have shared the same religious requirement (a clean space to pray) and developed completely different artistic traditions to fulfil it. Students should see that 'one religion' often produces enormous artistic variety. The shared core is religious; the variety is cultural and historical.
A continuing 1,400-year-old practice that adapts to modern life. The basic object — a small rectangle of cloth marking a clean prayer space — has been remarkably stable. The materials, designs, and contexts have evolved enormously. A modern Muslim worker in London or New York or Dubai may use a prayer room mat at work, a designer mat at home, and a travel mat on business trips. The same religious requirement that drove ancient Anatolian and Persian rug-making continues to drive modern prayer mat design. Students should see that 'religious tradition' is not preserved by being frozen. It is preserved by being practised, in whatever form fits the practitioner's life. Muslim prayer mats are practised in every country in the world. The form varies enormously. The function — marking a clean sacred space, indicating the qibla direction, supporting the daily prayers — is constant. The work continues, on millions of mats, five times a day. End the lesson here. Somewhere right now, a Muslim is rolling out a prayer mat. The next prayer is beginning.
The Muslim prayer mat is a small rectangular cloth used by Muslims to create a clean sacred space for the five daily prayers (salah). The Arabic word is sajjada; in South Asia it is called janamaz, in Turkey seccade, in Central Asia namazlik. About 2 billion Muslims worldwide use prayer mats, making this one of the world's most widespread religious practices. Most prayer mats are 70-110 cm long and 60-80 cm wide, sized for one person to kneel and prostrate. Many feature an arch shape at one end representing the mihrab — the niche in a mosque indicating the direction of Mecca, the qibla. Different regions of the Islamic world have developed distinctive prayer rug traditions: Anatolian (Turkish, with bold geometric designs), Persian (Iranian, with elaborate floral patterns), Central Asian (Turkmen, Balouch, with geometric motifs), Indian Subcontinent (with detailed florals), and North African. These are some of the great textile traditions of human history. The Ottoman, Safavid, and Mughal courts produced especially fine prayer rugs. Modern prayer mats are made in many materials and price ranges, from simple printed cotton to hand-knotted master rugs. Travel mats, prayer mat apps with qibla compasses, and other modern adaptations are common. Workplaces, airports, and public spaces increasingly provide prayer rooms with mats. The annual Hajj pilgrimage sees millions of pilgrims praying together on mats facing the Kaaba in Mecca. The prayer mat is a piece of religious technology: it solves the practical problem of creating a clean sacred space anywhere, while also expressing artistic traditions that span 1,400 years and the entire Islamic world.
| Region | Distinctive style | Notable feature |
|---|---|---|
| Anatolia (Turkey) | Bold geometric mihrab designs | Famous styles: Konya, Ladik, Mucur, Kayseri |
| Persia (Iran) | Elaborate floral patterns | Curved mihrab; Tree of Life motif; Tabriz, Isfahan, Qom |
| Central Asia | Geometric patterns; nomadic traditions | Turkmen guls; Balouch dark colour schemes |
| Indian Subcontinent | Detailed florals; Mughal heritage | Persian influence with Indian craftsmanship |
| North Africa | Geometric and calligraphic | Moroccan, Tunisian, Egyptian regional styles |
The prayer mat is just a fancy rug.
It is a religious object with specific design features (especially the mihrab arch) that serve practical religious functions. The size, the shape, the patterns all relate to the requirements of the daily prayer. Calling it 'just a rug' misses what it is.
This challenges the dismissive framing of religious objects as mere decoration.
All Muslim prayer mats look the same.
Different regions of the Islamic world have developed distinctly different prayer rug traditions over centuries. Anatolian, Persian, Central Asian, Indian Subcontinent, and North African styles are all different. The Islamic world spans many cultures and craft traditions.
'All the same' misses the regional richness of one of the world's great textile traditions.
Muslims pray facing whichever direction is convenient.
Muslims pray facing Mecca (the qibla direction) — wherever they are in the world. This requires knowing the geographical direction toward Mecca. Modern technology helps with apps and built-in compasses, but the direction itself is determined geographically, not chosen for convenience.
This matters because the qibla is central to Muslim prayer practice and is sometimes misunderstood.
The prayer mat is essential — Muslims cannot pray without one.
The mat is helpful for keeping a clean prayer space, but Muslims can pray on any clean surface — a clean floor, a clean towel, even directly on clean ground or grass. The mat is a useful tool, not an absolute requirement. The requirement is a clean space, which the mat provides.
This corrects an overstatement that sometimes appears in basic descriptions of Muslim prayer.
Treat Islam with the respect of any major living religion. About 2 billion Muslims worldwide make Islam the world's second-largest religion (after Christianity). Some students may be Muslim, have Muslim family, or have never encountered Islamic practice. Give them space to share if they want, but do not put them on the spot. Use proper Islamic terms — sajjada, salah, qibla, mihrab, Mecca. Pronounce 'salah' as 'sah-LAH' (or in some traditions 'SAH-lat'); 'sajjada' as 'sah-JAH-dah'; 'mihrab' as 'mih-RAHB'; 'Mecca' as 'MECK-ah' (the Arabic name is Makkah, increasingly used). Be respectful of Muslim diversity. There are many traditions within Islam — Sunni (about 85-90% of Muslims), Shia, Sufi, Ahmadi, and others. Different traditions have slightly different prayer practices but share the basic structure. The lesson should not present any one tradition as the only Muslim way. Be careful with current political tensions. Islam is sometimes the subject of political controversy in various countries. The lesson focuses on the prayer mat as a religious object — a daily practice for ordinary Muslims, not a political symbol. Avoid making the lesson into commentary on contemporary politics. Be respectful of religious art conventions. Islamic religious art generally avoids depicting humans and animals. Prayer mats follow this rule strictly. The lesson should respect this convention without endorsing or critiquing it. Avoid the lazy 'exotic Orient' framing. Islamic prayer mats are sophisticated religious and artistic objects, not vague mystery. They are made by real craftspeople following real traditions and real religious requirements. Be aware that Islamophobia is a real issue affecting many Muslim students worldwide. The lesson should treat Islamic practice with the same neutrality and respect given to other religions. If students raise critical questions about Islam, redirect to specific lessons on the topic and avoid generalisations. Honour the women's role. Many prayer rugs throughout history have been made by women weavers, especially in Central Asia and parts of the Middle East. The lesson should not over-emphasise male religious authority while underplaying women's craft contributions. Finally, end the lesson on the present. Hundreds of millions of prayer mats are in use today. The 1,400-year-old practice continues. The story is alive.
Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about the Muslim prayer mat.
What is a Muslim prayer mat used for?
What is the qibla, and how does the prayer mat help with it?
What are the Five Pillars of Islam, and where does the prayer mat fit?
What are some major regional traditions of Islamic prayer rugs?
How is the prayer mat used in modern life?
These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.
In your own life, are there practices that interrupt your day for important purposes — religious, family, work, health?
The prayer mat creates a clean sacred space anywhere. What other small portable objects create special spaces for their users?
Workplaces and public spaces increasingly provide prayer rooms for Muslim employees and travellers. Do you think this is the right approach? Are there limits?
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