For the 1.8
billion Muslims around the world, the Hajj is a spiritual pinnacle.
Each year, up to three million pilgrims descend on the Saudi Arabian
city of Mecca -- the epicenter of the Muslim world -- to seek
redemption, to forgive and to be forgiven.
To
go through the six steps of the Hajj, pilgrims walk in massive
processions, shoulder-to-shoulder with Muslims from more than 80
different countries. Together they share meals, prayers and very
close living quarters.
Wrapped
in white cloth, worshippers embark on the five-day pilgrimage,
considered one of the five pillars of Islam. All Muslims who are
physically and financially able are required to make the journey to
Mecca at least once in their lifetime.
Entering Mecca
Many
Muslim pilgrims, known as hajjis, converge on the city weeks before
the start of the Hajj rituals.
Worshippers
wear special white garments -- men wrap themselves in seamless,
stitchless cloth, while women wear a simple white dress and
headscarf. The clothing is said to symbolize human equality and unity
before God.
Pilgrims
begin the Hajj
with a circular, counter-clockwise procession around the Kaaba, a
cube-shaped structure that Muslims believe the Prophet Abraham from
the Old Testament constructed. It's the most sacred shrine of Islam.
The
Prophet Muhammed made the first Islamic pilgrimage in the year 628
AD, when he set out to Mecca with 1,400 of his followers. Though
Mecca is considered to be a city for all Muslims, non-Muslims are
denied entry at all times.
Saudi
authorities manage the entry and exit of pilgrims through strict visa
applications and have a dedicated Hajj ministry, employing 40,000
workers. In the last ten years, 24 million Hajj pilgrims have visited
the city. Thousands of civil servants are deployed to the pilgrimage
each year.
A global tent city
"Groups
of West Africans in colorful garb, almost singing verses from the
Quran. Old Chinese couples, groups of blonde Europeans and Americans;
it felt as if we were watching the entire world walk past,"
wrote CNN's
Schams Elwazer who covered the pilgrimage for CNN in 2005, 2006
and 2007.
Sermon on the summit
For
the third major Hajj ritual, Muslims gather at Mount Arafat, where
the Prophet Muhammed is believed to have delivered his last sermon.
Upwards
of a million pilgrims sit on the mountain, blanketing the site in
white, while umbrellas used to shield the worshippers from the sun
provide flashes of color.
This
is the climax of the pilgrimage where Muslims perform day-long
prayers, incantations and recitations from the Quran. It is not
uncommon to see worshippers shed tears as they reach this peak of
spiritual cleansing.
Coming together
Mecca
is the only Islamic holy site where men and women all pray together
and perform all the Hajj rites together. In most mosques, women and
men are assigned separate areas for worship, and when one room is
available, women are expected to pray behind the men.
Authorities
only segregate men and women at the Hajj in terms of sleeping
arrangements.
According
to the Brookings
Institute's study on Hajj pilgrims, hajjis report more positive
views of women's abilities and a greater concern for their quality of
life after performing the pilgrimage. They are also more likely to
favor educating girls and encourage female labor participation.
Dress
codes for women are strict and even a wisp of hair escaping from the
required headscarf can prompt frowns, or worse, from the crowds.
Stoning
the devil
During
the "stoning of the devil," pilgrims lob rocks at three
pillars, known as the "Jamarat," symbolizing the rejection
of the devil's temptation.
The
ritual marks the beginning of the four-day Eid al-Adha holiday, known
to Muslims as the "big Eid."
Muslims
celebrate the Adha -- the Arabic word for "sacrifice" -- by
slaughtering sheep and distributing the meat to the poor.
This
is also the most dangerous part of the pilgrimage. People stream back
and forth between the pillars and the Kaaba, posing a major crowd
control challenge for organizers. Many have been wounded or killed by
stones thrown from further back within the crowd.
Two
years ago, over 700 people were killed and nearly 900 were injured in
a stampede while performing this ritual.
Since
then, Saudi authorities have spent millions of dollars renovating the
area, making it multi-layered instead of a flat plain, and renovating
the pillars.
Becoming
a Hajji
After
five days, the Hajj comes full circle and worshippers return to The
Grand Mosque for their final prayers.
For
pilgrims and Saudi civil servants alike, the end of Hajj is the time
to return to family and celebrate the remainder of Eid al-Adha.
At
home, the pilgrims are greeted with fanfare. Congratulations from
neighbors pour in and their homes are usually decked out in festive
lighting.
The
hajji now has a somewhat elevated social status. A person who has
completed the pilgrimage can add the phrase al-Hajj or hajji
(pilgrim) to their name.
Credit:
Tamara Qiblawi and Kara Fox, CNN
Graphics
by Henrik Petterson, CNN
Islam's Special Pilgrimage
Reviewed by E.A Olatoye
on
September 11, 2017
Rating:
Religion rituals
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