Happy Muslim Mama: Praying at Work
I have been at my new job a week and a half and I am thoroughly enjoying it alhamdulillah. The day goes by in a flash, I am learning so much and there is lots of opportunity to be creative and throw around ideas.
One of the areas I am doing a lot of work in at the moment is Equality and Diversity, both internally as a workplace and externally as part of a wider community. It’s funny though, sometimes its small things that can make such a difference as a Muslimah in the workplace.
There seems to be some cultural sensitivity and understanding, in that male co-workers haven’t tried to shake my hand. My manager is really supportive about my need to pray and best of all, there is a good facility to make wudhu (ablutions) for prayer.
Pretty much in every place I have worked, I have made wudhu in the disabled bathroom for privacy and almost in every case this has a very small sink with a tap that sprays everything and leaves you and your surroundings dripping wet. I wear a plain abaya, so wearing any colour other than black makes it very visible that you are walking around with the front of your clothes wet. In the last place I worked the disabled toilets were locked and only those with the pass keep could access them. One toilet was left unlocked, but on more than one occasion I went to use only to be told off for trying to use a disabled loo.
In my current workplace, there is a disabled toilet on every floor with a shower. People use the showers after exercise etc, so I don’t feel like I will be told off for using it to make wudhu. Best of all the sink is big, the taps flow freely rather than spray everywhere.
I have struggled with praying at work for years, not because of the prayer, but because it always felt like so much work washing up for prayers. It was always a relief when I was on my period and didn’t have to pray and could avoid the rigmarole of taking everything off, getting wet and messy, then cleaning everything up – all as fast as possible in the hope that no one is waiting outside to moan at you. I had to remind myself that the ablutions are as much a part of the prayer as the prayer itself.
Now it’s a relief that I can relax when I make wudhu, there is space to put my things and there is a clean space to wash up. I think it’s something I will raise with my employers to let them know it might seem like a small thing, but it makes a difference and has really improved my experience at work.
