A branch
of the Sunnah.

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.

A miswak stick resting on an open book beside a wooden mashrabiya screen

“The siwak is a purification for the mouth and a means of pleasing the Lord.”

— Prophet Muhammad ﷺ

Purity

A tangible act of tahara — cleanliness woven into the day, before prayer, before the Qur'an, before sleep.

Worship

The Prophet ﷺ tied miswak to prayer itself. Every use is a small step closer to the Sunnah.

Care

Care for the body is care for the amanah entrusted to us — a mouth kept clean is a mouth kept honest.

From the words
of the Prophet ﷺ.

The siwak is a purification for the mouth and a means of pleasing the Lord.

Sunan an-Nasa'i 5

Were it not that I might overburden my ummah, I would have ordered them to use the siwak at every prayer.

Sahih al-Bukhari 887

Whenever the Prophet ﷺ entered his house, the first thing he would do was use the siwak.

Sahih Muslim 253

Recommended before every prayer, every wudu, every waking.

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.

Shop the Miswak