In the inpatient psychiatry department at Hennepin County Medical Center, patients can spend days or weeks getting treatment. Most of the time, they don’t have access to their phones. Many are facing serious mental health challenges.
For some Muslim patients, these circumstances can make it difficult know which direction to face for prayer.
Muslims are obligated to pray five times a day, each time while facing the Kaaba in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, the holiest city in Islam. This direction is called qibla.
Hennepin Healthcare recently expanded a program to the psychiatry department that places stickers on the walls to help patients find qibla. Staff say it’s a small gesture with a big impact.
Normally, patients would have to find qibla by using an app on their smartphone, or by asking a staff member for help. But Imam Sharif Mohamed said when patients aren’t feeling their best and are in an unfamiliar environment, that’s one more thing that they have to worry about.
He said adding the stickers is a small thing the hospital can do to put Muslim patients more at ease.
“It creates some kind of healing, some kind of belonging, some kind of respect,” Sharif said.
Sharif is the co-founder of Open Path Resources, and helped set up a Muslim spiritual care program at HCMC and worked with hospital staff to place the stickers in the correct position.