鶹Լ

Video summary

Kaisan, 12, from London, demonstrates how he washes before prayer, using the washing ritual called 'Wudu'.

In the mosque washroom, we see Kaisan wash his hands up to the wrist, wash his mouth and nose, and his face, arms, head and feet in the way that Muslims do all over the world.

This is from the series: My Life, My Religion: Islam.

Back to top

Teacher Notes

Teach the class that Muslims have a habit of washing five times every day before prayer, which is a habit that is both practical (it helps you to be clean) and spiritual (it reminds you that Allah is the Creator, and when humans come to speak to God, being clean in body is a symbol of being pure in our spiritual lives too).

These clips will be relevant for teaching Religious Education at KS2 in England, Wales and Northern Ireland and First and Second Level in Scotland.

Back to top

What is Islam? video

Young Muslim girl Sara gives a brief guide to the faith by describing the five Pillars of Islam: belief, prayer, giving, fasting and pilgrimage.

What is Islam?

Ramadan and Eid ul Fitr. video

Sara, aged 11, explains why fasting is good: for devotion to Allah, for self discipline and for sympathy for the poor, explaining her religious practice.

Ramadan and Eid ul Fitr

The Muslim pilgrimage, Hajj. video

Sara, aged 11, describes how the Hajj pilgrimage has an impact on Muslims.

The Muslim pilgrimage, Hajj

Prayer in Islam. video

Kaisan, a 12 year old British Muslim boy, explains how he prays five times a day, and says what it means to him in spiritual terms.

 Prayer in Islam

The Qur'an. video

Kaisan and Naeem share ways that the Qur’an makes a difference to their lives.

The Qur'an

The Mosque. video

Kaisan, aged 12, shows us round the East London Mosque or Masjid, house of prayer.

The Mosque

Being a young Muslim. video

A young Muslim girl from London called Sara introduces herself, her Muslim faith and her family.

Being a young Muslim

The Hijab. video

Sara, aged 11, has decided to start wearing the hijab as she begins secondary school. She explains why this matters to her and expresses her Muslim faith.

The Hijab

Back to top