۵ اردیبهشت ۱۴۰۳ |۱۵ شوال ۱۴۴۵ | Apr 24, 2024
News ID: 358548
19 July 2019 - 02:00
Play and pray: Mosque's playground draws kids

According to Çelikiz, his desire to make the mosque a more favorable place for children stemmed from his own childhood.

Hawzah News Agency (Başiskele, Kocaeli, Turkey) - Frustrated by the small number of children attending his summer Quran reading classes, an imam in Kocaeli's Başiskele district took measures into his own hands. After making the mosque more kid-friendly with a new playground, the cleric is now overwhelmed with the number of kids. Kadir Çelikiz, who serves as the imam of Merkez Mosque in the northwestern city, is a beloved figure among children after his work to turn their time at the mosque into a fun experience.

Çelikiz, like other imams across the country, teaches Quran in summertime classes. When he noticed only a few children would sign up for classes, he decided to put some attractions in the mosque's courtyard to draw them. Çelikiz, who has worked as an imam at the same mosque for 10 years, contacted sponsors for activities, and with their help, he installed an inflatable playground, started staging theater plays for children and serving them popcorn and candy. Soon, the number of children attending the classes swelled to 150 from only 30 in a year, and a record 250 children signed up for classes this year.

 

 

Every Monday, after classes end, children are invited to watch theater plays that teach children moral values or spend hours inside the inflatable playground. Çelikiz also organizes traditional child games for young visitors, from tug of war to sack races.

According to Çelikiz, his desire to make the mosque a more favorable place for children stemmed from his own childhood. "I used to play around at the mosque, while the adults were praying when I was a child, and they'd always chide me. This used to worry me a lot. I wanted to end this mindset and make children more attached to the mosque," he said.

 

 

As a matter of fact, worshipers tend to admonish children accompanying their parents to mosques at the slightest noise they make, and the Presidency of Religious Affairs (DİB) has recently started a campaign to call on the public for a better approach to children visiting mosques.

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