Your child's first world should feel like their Deen.
Most Islamic toys feel like homework. Ours feel like play. Beautiful wooden toys that make Islamic symbols feel joyful, familiar, and completely natural — not foreign or formal.
Build a play corner where the Kaaba, Masjid, crescent, Arabic letters, and prayer all feel like part of everyday childhood.
"My son knows every Marvel hero by name. When I showed him a picture of the Kaaba, he said 'what's that?' That was the moment I knew something had to change."
— Fatima R., Toronto · before Olive & Play
The Prophet ﷺ said the heart of a child is like fertile ground — whatever you plant in it grows. These toys exist to make sure Islam is what grows first.
Right now — what does your child's world say about their faith?
They know Spiderman's origin story. They can name fifty Pokémon. The Kaaba, the Adhan, the crescent — do those feel just as natural? Or do they still feel like something that belongs in a different world?
The Kaaba feels foreign
You want Islam to feel like home — but when Islamic symbols never appear in daily play, they stay abstract. Unfamiliar. Something your child learns about instead of something they already know.
The toy graveyard problem
You've tried the workbooks, the flash cards, the "educational" products that felt good to buy and got ignored in three days. Islamic learning has to feel like play to actually stick.
You don't want to destroy your home
You're not willing to sacrifice a calm, beautiful living space for loud plastic clutter. You want pieces that reflect your values and still belong in a real modern home.
The window is smaller than you think
The years when play shapes identity don't last. The symbols and objects children encounter before age 6 become the things that feel natural forever. This window is open right now.
Three new ways for your child to know their Deen.
Each one built around a different kind of play — busy hands, fast wheels, and language — so the collection grows with your child.

🌙 Busy at the Masjid Board
Toddlers need busy hands — and this gives those hands something worth doing. Latch the door, slide the window, spin the minaret. Every activity wrapped around the architecture of a Masjid.
Fine motor · Sensory play · Ages 18mo+
🕌 Little Masjid Raceway
Cars race down the ramp, past the minarets, and every run ends at the Masjid. It's not a lesson, it's a racetrack — but the Masjid is always there, always central, always where the action lives.
Active play · Symbol recognition · Ages 2+
🚂 Alif Train Set
Each carriage carries an Arabic letter. The alphabet learned through play — again and again at whatever speed your child wants. By the time they're ready to read, Alif through Ya will feel like old friends.
Arabic alphabet · Language · Ages 2+The more you build, the more you save — and it all unlocks automatically.
Free shipping on every order · Add 3 for FREE Puzzle Set · 30-day guarantee
The moments parents keep messaging us about.
Not aspirational claims. The specific things Muslim parents describe again and again — pulled directly from how families talk about life after the box arrives.
That's the shift parents describe. Not that the toy was educational. That their child stopped needing to be taught — and started knowing. The Kaaba, the Masjid, the crescent become familiar through play, not lessons. And once something feels familiar, it feels like home. That shift is permanent.
Parents stop forcing conversations about Islam. The toys open the door. Curiosity grows on its own, naturally and without pressure.
Open-ended wooden play has longer attention arcs than any tablet. Parents consistently notice it gets chosen first within weeks of arrival.
Neutral tones and natural wood designed for real modern homes. Not chaotic. Not childish. Something you'd actually leave out on a shelf.
When your child builds the Masjid and proudly shows their grandparents — that's not a lesson. That's identity. Those moments compound.
Premium hardwood, smooth finishes, durable construction. More heirloom than impulse buy — the kind of thing you keep, or pass down.
How it actually works inside a real home
It arrives like a gift, not a package
Natural wood, smooth finishes, thoughtful packaging. The unboxing experience is part of the product — and the first impression sets the tone for how they'll treat it.
They reach for it themselves
No instructions. No pressure. No learning objective written on the box. Just child-led play with shapes and symbols they naturally return to, again and again.
Islam becomes part of what they already know
Over weeks and months, the Kaaba, the Masjid, the crescent become familiar — not because they were taught, but because they were always there, in their hands, in their world.
Each piece has a job beyond looking beautiful.
Six products now in the Little Ummah collection — choose the pieces that fit your child, mix old favourites with the three new arrivals, and build a play corner that covers every kind of learning.

🕋 Wooden Kaaba Train Set
Makes Islamic shapes and symbols part of what your child naturally sees, builds, and talks about.

✨ Noor & Me Hijab Knit Doll
Turns screen-free play into little moments of connection, imagination, and Muslim identity.

🧩 Little Muslim Puzzle Set
Supports hands-on learning while keeping the playroom calm, intentional, and beautiful.

🚂 Alif Train Set
A meaningful piece they can return to again and again — not a toy that disappears after one week.
Not another Islamic toy that gets ignored.
The goal is not to add more stuff to your home. It is to make Islam feel present, familiar, and loved in the play your child already wants to do.
- Feels like a lesson, so your child needs you to initiate it.
- Gets used once or twice, then disappears into the toy bin.
- Loud, plastic, overstimulating, or visually chaotic in your home.
- Teaches facts, but does not create daily familiarity.
- Feels like play first — the faith connection happens naturally.
- Open-ended pieces your child can build, race, latch, and return to.
- Beautiful enough to leave out, which means Islam stays visible every day.
- Builds recognition of the Kaaba, Masjid, Arabic letters, and Muslim identity through repetition.

I wanted Islam to feel like home — not a lesson.
I created Olive & Play because I wanted our children to grow up seeing their Deen in the ordinary moments: on the shelf, in their hands, in the stories they make up while they play.
Not everything has to be formal to be meaningful. Sometimes identity is built quietly — through the toys they reach for, the symbols they recognise, and the words that become part of their world.
The Letter Train, the Masjid Raceway, the Busy Board — these are the pieces I wish existed when we started. Now they do.
"I didn't expect it to hit me the way it did."
The most powerful reviews aren't about the product. They're about the moment. Read them and tell us this isn't exactly what you want for your child.
"My son built the Masjid and then called his nanu on video to show her. She started crying. He had no idea why — but I did. He made that connection on his own, through play."
"He was three when we got this. He's five now and it's still the first thing he reaches for in the morning. I've never had a toy last more than three months before. This is different."
"The Kaaba is just... in her vocabulary now. She points at it in books, at the mosque, on TV. It's not abstract to her anymore. That happened through play, not lessons."
Not that they bought something beautiful. That something shifted.
The Kaaba stopped being abstract. Islam stopped feeling foreign. Their child stopped needing to be taught — and started knowing. That's not a product outcome. That's the window, open, while it still is. Six pieces. Three new arrivals. Build the corner that makes your home feel like theirs.

Your Puzzle Set is not a random freebie.
It completes the play story. Add 3+ pieces and the Little Muslim Puzzle Set becomes the quiet-time companion — something your child can explore solo, piece together alongside siblings, or use to retell the stories they're learning through their other toys.
Choose the pieces that keep Islam close after Eid.
Pick by age, personality, and the kind of play your child already loves. Choose any 3 toys and we'll add the Little Muslim Puzzle Set free while post-Eid gifts last. Add a 4th for the best value: free puzzle + 15% off.
The offer stays simple: build their 3-piece play corner after Eid and the free Puzzle Set unlocks automatically while this gift allocation lasts.

Choose a toy to preview.
Tap a product to see its gallery, age fit, parent proof, and what's included.

🕋 Wooden Kaaba Train Set
Eid may be over, but the Kaaba can stay close. Not as an abstract image, but as something your child sees, names, moves, and recognizes through play.
- Makes the Kaaba visible in everyday play.
- Creates easy openings for faith conversations.
- Beautiful wooden design that belongs on a shelf.

✨ Noor & Me Hijab Knit Doll
For keeping Islamic identity present in daily play after Eid.
- Designed to feel like play first.
- Supports familiarity without pressure.
- Beautiful enough for a modern Muslim home.

🚂 Alif Train Set
Long after the Eid cards and decorations are put away, Arabic letters can stay in their hands, moving, connecting, and becoming familiar before formal learning begins.
- Makes Alif to Ya feel approachable before lessons.
- Builds early recognition through repetition.
- A gentle bridge into future Arabic and Quran learning.

🕌 Build-a-Masjid Block Set
For children who love stacking, constructing, and making little worlds. Building a Masjid with their hands makes Islamic architecture feel present and theirs.
- Builds the Masjid with their own hands.
- Encourages open-ended play and storytelling.
- Keeps Islamic shapes present in creative play.

🌙 Busy at the Masjid Board
When the celebration ends, toddlers still need something to touch, slide, open, and explore. This gives their busy hands a Masjid-centered world to return to after Eid.
- Turns fidgety hands into meaningful Masjid play.
- Builds fine motor skills through Islamic architecture.
- Makes the Masjid feel familiar through movement.
Order with complete confidence. If you're not fully happy — for any reason — get in touch within 30 days for a full refund. No forms, no friction, no questions asked.
Tracked delivery on every order in the regions we currently serve: Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia. The experience feels premium from the moment you check out.
Ready to gift or place where your child already plays.
No pressure, no worksheets — just familiar Islamic symbols in their hands.
Try it in your home. If it is not right, you are covered.
The questions parents ask most
The downside is a refund. The upside is their childhood.
Your child grows up with Islam feeling as natural as everything else they love.
You return it within 30 days and get a full refund. Zero risk.
P.S.
The fear isn't that the toy won't work. It's that your child will grow up feeling like their faith belongs somewhere else — not in their hands, not in their play, not in the ordinary Tuesday morning when identity is actually built. The window is open right now. It won't be forever.
— Olive & Play. Made from one Muslim home, for yours.