The Musallah Project

Thasveer: A portrait series

by Abdul Hannan

Niskarapaaya: Malabar Inspired Prayer Rugs

by Sidra Ali

Evolution of Prayer Rugs in Kerala

by Aflah Habeeb and Basil Islam

Dhikriyāthul Masājid: Reminiscence of Destructed Masjids

by Salim Shafi

Places Prayers Piety

by Suraiya

This video is an abstract take on a personal story of my great grandmother. The story of her witnessing jinns praying by the riverside is an orally passed-on memory in my mother’s family. Taking this childhood memory as a cue, I explore the concept of space and prayer, which ought not to be defined/limited by borders, materials or time. Like the jinns from valyumma’s life, prayers cross and emigrate through diverse and often unimaginable realms.

The video is hence, a humble attempt to illustrate the limitless space possible for prayer by placing the prayer rug over a long trail of landscapes; mountains, gardens, sea shores, deserts, roadways, lakes, hills, fertile lands etc. There is also a saying that wherever you make a prostration, the ground there will pay witness for you after death. It will affirm that at that moment, on that precise place on Earth, you made a sajda in remembrance of the Almighty.

Salla

by Akdham Nalakath

Following the everyday use of a prayer rug at my home, this video portrays how it breaks material binaries and connects the praying person to a spiritual sphere secluded from the outer world. 

I have my own prayer rug to which I feel connected to. I kept wondering what is going on inside the minds of those who design such beautiful prayer rugs and what might have inspired them to go with a specific design. This video is also an attempt to depict that thought process.

Memories of Musallah

by Basil Islam, Hanan Mariam & Zakki Hamdan

These interviews are part of an attempt to document how different generations connect to their prayer rugs. With time, the making and use of prayer rugs has evolved. We can see a transition from grass mats to more colourful, mass-produced rugs aka Musallahs inspired from Turkish/Persian designs. While personal prayer rugs were a luxury in the past, the Gulf-boom and changing sensibilities made Musallahs much more prominent and popular. While most of them feel a spiritual affection towards their Musallahs, some find solace in activities beyond prayer, like sleeping on their rugs and some consider it simply as a space to pray.

A Padam of Padam

by Abdul Hannan

Colloquially, the prayer rug is known as Niskarapadam (niskaram means prayer, and padam indicates carpet). Thus the title embodies the two meanings of the term ‘padam’; one refers to cinema and the other to carpet. 

This video explores diverse manifestations of prayer rug beyond its religious affiliation, by portraying its ordinary existence in everyday life. However, its irresistible aesthetic appeal persuades me to transcend the ordinary to center them around some surreal imagery as well.

Places Prayers Piety

by Suraiya

This video is an abstract take on a personal story of my great grandmother. The story of her witnessing jinns praying by the riverside is an orally passed-on memory in my mother’s family. Taking this childhood memory as a cue, I explore the concept of space and prayer, which ought not to be defined/limited by borders, materials or time. Like the jinns from valyumma’s life, prayers cross and emigrate through diverse and often unimaginable realms.

The video is hence, a humble attempt to illustrate the limitless space possible for prayer by placing the prayer rug over a long trail of landscapes; mountains, gardens, sea shores, deserts, roadways, lakes, hills, fertile lands etc. There is also a saying that wherever you make a prostration, the ground there will pay witness for you after death. It will affirm that at that moment, on that precise place on Earth, you made a sajda in remembrance of the Almighty.

Salla

by Akdham Nalakath

Following the everyday use of a prayer rug at my home, this video portrays how it breaks material binaries and connects the praying person to a spiritual sphere secluded from the outer world. 

I have my own prayer rug to which I feel connected to. I kept wondering what is going on inside the minds of those who design such beautiful prayer rugs and what might have inspired them to go with a specific design. This video is also an attempt to depict that thought process.

Memories of Musallah

by Basil Islam, Hanan Mariam & Zakki Hamdan

These interviews are part of an attempt to document how different generations connect to their prayer rugs. With time, the making and use of prayer rugs has evolved. We can see a transition from grass mats to more colourful, mass-produced rugs aka Musallahs inspired from Turkish/Persian designs. While personal prayer rugs were a luxury in the past, the Gulf-boom and changing sensibilities made Musallahs much more prominent and popular. While most of them feel a spiritual affection towards their Musallahs, some find solace in activities beyond prayer, like sleeping on their rugs and some consider it simply as a space to pray.

A Padam of Padam

by Abdul Hannan

Colloquially, the prayer rug is known as Niskarapadam (niskaram means prayer, and padam indicates carpet). Thus the title embodies the two meanings of the term ‘padam’; one refers to cinema and the other to carpet. 

This video explores diverse manifestations of prayer rug beyond its religious affiliation, by portraying its ordinary existence in everyday life. However, its irresistible aesthetic appeal persuades me to transcend the ordinary to center them around some surreal imagery as well.