Janamaz (Prayer Rug)
The prayer rug that the worshipper uses to mark a clean prayer area.
Janamaz (Persian/Urdu: جانماز), also called sajjadah (Arabic: سجادة) or musalla, is the prayer rug that Muslims use during prayer. It provides a clean and defined prayer area and marks a sacred space for worship.
In Shia fiqh, it is a condition that the prayer area (makan al-musalli) is clean (tahir) and lawfully obtained (mubah). The janamaz ensures that the worshipper has a clean surface. It is also a condition that the place for sujud is stable enough for the forehead to rest firmly. Imam al-Sadiq (peace be upon him) said: "Pray on a clean place" (Al-Kafi, vol. 3).
Shia Muslims typically place a turbah (clay tablet) on the janamaz at the spot where the forehead will touch the ground during sujud. The combination of janamaz and turbah is characteristic of Shia prayer practice. Many Shia prayer rugs have a special marking or a small pocket for the turbah.
Prayer rugs vary from simple, uniform carpets to richly decorated works of art with mihrab motifs, Quranic verses, and Islamic geometric patterns. In Iran and other Shia-majority countries, the production of prayer rugs is a significant artistic tradition. For the believer, the janamaz is more than a piece of fabric — it is the personal space where one meets Allah five times a day, and many have a strong emotional attachment to their prayer rug.
Related terms
Najaf (Imam Ali's City)
The sacred city in Iraq housing Imam Ali's tomb and the Shia scholarly center.
Sunnah Mu'akkadah (Emphasized Sunnah)
Voluntary prayers that the Prophet (peace be upon him) performed regularly and rarely omitted.
Ijtihad (Independent Legal Reasoning)
The independent interpretive effort to derive legal rules from the Islamic sources.
Karbala (Imam Husayn's City)
The sacred city in Iraq where Imam Husayn was martyred, and home of the turbah.
Sha'ban (The Prophet's Month)
The eighth Islamic month, with special emphasis on the 15th night.
Taqlid (Following a School of Law)
The practice of following a qualified scholar's legal opinions without necessarily knowing the evidence.