For fourteen centuries, the miswak has been carried in the sleeves of scholars, shepherds and companions — a small stick with a long lineage, loved by the Prophet Muhammad ﷺ.

“The siwak is a purification for the mouth
and a means of pleasing the Lord.”
— Prophet Muhammad ﷺ
A tangible act of tahara — cleanliness woven into the day, before prayer, before the Qur'an, before sleep.
The Prophet ﷺ tied miswak to prayer itself. Every use is a small step closer to the Sunnah.
Care for the body is care for the amanah entrusted to us — a mouth kept clean is a mouth kept honest.
“The siwak is a purification for the mouth and a means of pleasing the Lord.”
“Were it not that I might overburden my ummah, I would have ordered them to use the siwak at every prayer.”
“Whenever the Prophet ﷺ entered his house, the first thing he would do was use the siwak.”
The Sunnah invites the miswak into the small hinges of the day — rising, praying, reading, entering the home, preparing for sleep. Salvara sticks are cut from the same Salvadora persica tree the tradition names, so the practice you carry is the practice that was carried.
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