How to Start a Deeniyat Maktab in Your Mosque: Step-by-Step Guide

Introduction

Starting a maktab is one of the most impactful things a mosque committee can do for its community. When a Deeniyat-affiliated maktab opens its doors, it gives the children of that neighbourhood access to structured Islamic education — often for the first time. But getting from intention to the first day of classes requires working through a series of practical steps: affiliating with Idara-e-Deeniyat, finding and hiring a qualified teacher, setting up a physical space, enrolling students, obtaining textbooks, and establishing the administrative systems that will keep the maktab running through the year.

This guide walks through that entire process, step by step, in practical terms — from the initial decision to open a Deeniyat maktab to sustaining it effectively across the academic year.


Step 1: Understand What You Are Setting Up

Before approaching Idara-e-Deeniyat for affiliation, the mosque committee should have clarity on a few foundational questions.

What type of maktab are you running?

A Deeniyat maktab is a part-time Islamic school that operates alongside regular secular schooling. It typically runs:

Session TypeTypical HoursBest For
Evening session4:00 PM – 6:00 PM or 5:00 PM – 7:00 PMSchool-going children
Early morning6:00 AM – 8:00 AMChildren with afternoon commitments
WeekendSaturday/Sunday morningsBusy urban families

You are not setting up a full-time madrasa. The Deeniyat model is specifically for children who attend government or private schools during the day.

Key decisions before you proceed

  • How many children in your neighbourhood are likely to enrol?
  • What age range are you targeting (typically 4–14 years)?
  • Mixed-gender maktab, or separate classes for boys and girls?
  • Is your mosque space suitable, or do you need to find an alternative?

Step 2: Contact Idara-e-Deeniyat for Affiliation

The next step is to formally contact Idara-e-Deeniyat to begin the affiliation process.

How to apply

  1. Write a formal letter or application to the nearest Idara-e-Deeniyat office (head office in Delhi; state offices in UP, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Kerala, and other major states)
  2. Provide details about your mosque or institution: name, address, existing facilities
  3. Indicate expected student numbers and planned session timings

Idara-e-Deeniyat will respond with guidance on affiliation requirements. In some areas, the process is facilitated through local Deeniyat-affiliated maktabs or the district-level office.

What affiliation gives you

What You GetWhat You Still Provide
Official recognition as an affiliated centreDay-to-day operations and management
Guidance on textbook procurementTeacher salary and recruitment
Access to annual examination systemFees, funding, and finances
Right to issue Deeniyat certificatesPhysical space and maintenance
Access to teacher training programmesStudent enrolment and records

Affiliation gives you the curriculum framework and examination system. You provide everything else.


Step 3: Hire a Qualified Teacher

The teacher is the most important element of your maktab. A good teacher transforms it; an unsuitable one — however well-intentioned — can undermine it.

Minimum qualifications

  • Completed the Deeniyat programme to at least Level 6 or the Muallim level, or
  • Holds a recognised Islamic education qualification from a Darul Uloom, Jamia, or equivalent institution, and
  • Can read and teach the Quran correctly with basic Tajweed

Qualities to look for beyond qualifications

  • Patience — working with young children requires exceptional patience
  • Punctuality and consistency — the maktab depends on the teacher being present every day
  • Communication skills — ability to explain Islamic concepts in simple, age-appropriate language
  • Willingness to keep records — attendance, student progress, fees

How to find a teacher

  • Ask your local Darul Uloom or Jamia for graduate recommendations
  • Contact your state-level Idara-e-Deeniyat office — they often maintain a register of qualified Muallim-certified teachers
  • Ask the wider Muslim community network
  • Post on local Islamic education networks or WhatsApp groups

Salary expectations

City / ContextTypical Monthly Salary
Small town / rural₹3,000 – ₹5,000
Mid-size city₹5,000 – ₹8,000
Major metro₹7,000 – ₹12,000

These figures reflect current realities in the sector — maktab teachers are among the most underpaid education workers in India. Committees should be honest about what they can afford, and establish a dedicated fund for teacher salaries rather than relying on ad hoc donations.


Step 4: Set Up the Physical Space

Minimum requirements

  • A room that comfortably accommodates your maximum expected student numbers
  • Adequate lighting (natural for morning sessions; electric for evenings)
  • Floor mats or low seating (traditional style) or chairs and low tables
  • A whiteboard or blackboard for the teacher
  • Storage for textbooks and student materials

Before day one

  • Books and materials for each enrolled student
  • An attendance register (paper or digital)
  • A simple notice board for timetables and announcements
  • Wudu facilities nearby (or clear guidance to the nearest bathroom)

Step 5: Procure Textbooks and Materials

Deeniyat curriculum textbooks are published by Idara-e-Deeniyat and available through:

  • Direct order from the head office in Delhi
  • Local Islamic bookshops in major cities (particularly UP, Maharashtra, Karnataka)
  • Deeniyat distributors in your state

Order the correct level books for each class group you plan to run. Do not assume all new students start at Level 1 — conduct a placement assessment first.

Placement assessment

Test each new student for:

  • Arabic alphabet recognition and pronunciation
  • Ability to read from the Quran (Nazra)
  • Knowledge of basic duas and kalimas
  • General Islamic knowledge

Place students at the appropriate level — this avoids boredom for advanced students and confusion for beginners.


Step 6: Enrol Students and Set Up Administration

Student enrolment campaign

Before the academic year begins (typically September–October in most parts of India), run a local enrolment drive:

  • Announce the maktab from the mosque (Friday khutba is highly effective)
  • Post notices on the mosque board and in local shops
  • Use community WhatsApp groups
  • Speak directly to parents after prayers

For each enrolled student, collect: full name, date of birth, parent/guardian name and contact number, current class in secular school, previous Islamic education (if any).

Administrative systems to set up from day one

SystemPurposeMinimum Tool
Attendance registerDaily record of presence/absencePaper register or app
Quran progress registerTracks Sabak, Sabak Para, Dhor, ManzilPaper or maktab app
Fee collection recordFees paid, outstanding, exemptedPaper ledger or spreadsheet
Teacher attendanceTeacher presence and substitutesPaper register

Most maktabs use paper registers — entirely workable. As the maktab grows, digital tools make this significantly easier. See Deeniyat App and Digital Tools and Moving from Registers to Digital.


Step 7: Set Your Fee Structure

Options

Free maktab model: Costs covered by mosque funds (zakat, sadaqah), community fundraising, or Waqf income. Ensures no child is excluded but depends on consistent donor generosity.

Modest fee model: Most maktabs charge ₹100–₹500 per month, which helps pay the teacher reliably and cover materials. This is sustainable without being a barrier for most families.

Best practice: Charge fees but maintain a clear fee-waiver process for families who genuinely cannot pay. No child should be turned away solely due to inability to pay.

For a more detailed treatment of fee collection systems, see Maktab Fee Collection in India.


Step 8: Run the First Day

  • Begin with a brief welcoming assembly: introduce the teacher, explain the rules, make children feel welcome
  • Keep the first session shorter than usual (30–40 minutes)
  • Ensure all students have their books and materials before the session starts
  • Send a welcome message to parents via WhatsApp or printed note with timetable, fee information, and contact details

Step 9: Sustain the Maktab Through the Year

FrequencyTask
MonthlyConfirm teacher salary paid; review fee collection; check attendance for concerning patterns
QuarterlyReview student progress; run a brief parents’ communication update
AnnuallyRegister eligible students for Deeniyat examination; distribute certificates; plan re-enrolment

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Hiring without verifying qualifications. Enthusiasm is not a substitute for knowledge. Always verify before hiring.

Irregular salary payments. Nothing undermines a maktab faster than a teacher not paid on time. Ensure funding is sustainable before opening.

No formal enrolment process. Ad hoc attendance without a register makes it impossible to track progress or prepare for examinations.

Ignoring parent communication. Parents who don’t know what their child is learning are less likely to enforce attendance or support the maktab financially.

Starting too large. It is far better to start with 20 enrolled students and do it well than to enrol 80 and struggle with space, staffing, and administration from week one.


Conclusion

Starting a Deeniyat maktab requires working through nine concrete steps — from understanding the model and affiliating with Idara-e-Deeniyat, to hiring a qualified teacher, setting up administration systems, and sustaining the maktab through the academic year. The process is manageable for any motivated mosque committee, and the impact on the local Muslim community can be profound.

Once your maktab is running, administrative efficiency becomes critical. Tracking student progress, managing fees, and keeping parents informed all take time — time that paper registers and WhatsApp groups consume inefficiently as your enrolment grows.

Ilmify is designed for exactly this stage. It handles student enrolment, daily attendance, Quran progress tracking (Sabak, Sabak Para, Dhor, Manzil), fee management, and parent notifications — all in one mobile-first platform built for mosque-based maktabs. Explore Ilmify →

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes — the mosque committee is typically responsible for hiring the teacher, providing the space, and managing finances. Affiliation with Idara-e-Deeniyat should be done with the committee’s formal approval.

It varies by state. In areas with an active state-level Deeniyat office, affiliation can be processed in a few weeks. Allow at least one to two months before your planned opening date.

Yes. Many mosque committees run separate girls’ maktabs with a female muallimat. The curriculum, examinations, and certification process are identical. Separate facilities should be provided where appropriate.

A qualified graduate of any recognised Darul Uloom or Jamia with the ability to teach Quran correctly is an acceptable substitute while you search for a Muallim-certified teacher. Avoid hiring someone with only informal Islamic education and no formal qualification.

Affiliated centres receive access to teacher training sessions and examination support. However, day-to-day operational support is limited — the organisation does not have the infrastructure to actively manage thousands of individual affiliated maktabs.

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Author

Rahman

Educational expert at Ilmify, dedicated to modernizing Islamic institution management through smart technology and holistic Tarbiyah.