National Post

CANADIAN MUSLIMS SKIP MECCA OVER TIFF WITH SAUDIS

Would-be pilgrims fear travel problems

- Michelle McQuigge

TORONTO • Members of Canada’s Muslim community say recent tensions between Ottawa and Saudi Arabia are affecting some people’s ability to perform what’s seen in the faith as a fundamenta­l religious right.

They say many currently embarking on hajj, a pilgrimage to the holy city of Mecca in Saudi Arabia, are anxious about their travel arrangemen­ts in light of the simmering spat, which has seen the country’s state airline cancel flights to and from Canada.

At least one travel agent also says some would-be pilgrims decided not to follow through on their travel plans after tensions between the two countries flared up unexpected­ly earlier this month.

The diplomatic dispute began when Canada’s Ministry of Global Affairs sent a tweet calling for

Saudi Arabia to “immediatel­y release” two women’s rights activists currently detained in jail.

The kingdom reacted by severing diplomatic ties, suspending future trade, recalling students from Canadian schools and cancelling the state airline’s operations in Canada.

People in contact with hajj participan­ts say the move involving the airline has complicate­d return travel plans for many, and add that they are anticipati­ng other post-pilgrimage issues.

“We are having a lot of problems,” said Syed Ahmed, Operation Manager at King Travel agency, which specialize­s in trips related to hajj and other religious occasions. “Almost we can say 25 per cent of people are asking for a refund.”

Ahmed said travellers booked with the Mississaug­a agency frequently flew to the kingdom using Saudia, the state airline that previously operated at least two direct routes from Toronto’s Pearson Internatio­nal Airport.

But Saudia cancelled those routes effective Monday, leaving travellers who used their services to reach the country with questions as to how they can return home.

Ahmed said Saudia has offered to cover the costs of transferri­ng tickets to other airlines, but said spaces — already at a premium during the hectic hajj season — are extremely hard to find.

But logistical arrangemen­ts are only part of the problem, according to Imam Syed Soharwardy, head of the Islamic Supreme Council of Canada.

Hajj, which officially gets underway later this week, looms large in the consciousn­ess of all practising Muslims, Soharwardy said.

All followers of Islam with the physical and financial means to make the pilgrimage are expected to do so once in their lifetime, he said. Those who undertake the trip to Mecca seek forgivenes­s of past sins and hope to draw closer to God.

The annual pilgrimage draws people from around the world to Saudi Arabia each year. The crowds, squeezed shoulder to shoulder in prayer five times a day, fill the city of Mecca and surroundin­g areas to perform a number of physically demanding and intricate rites.

Soharwardy said members of congregati­ons spanning from Montreal to Vancouver who are making the trip fear they won’t be in a fit state to deal with the hassles of shifting, uncertain travel arrangemen­ts.

“Whether the person is a very young man or woman or old man or woman, they get so tired because hajj is not easy,” he said. “Hajj is a very cumbersome, tiring ritual and some people get sick.”

Many, he said, also feel anxious about the prospect of travelling on a Canadian passport at a time when open suspicion of Ottawa seems to dominate among Saudi authoritie­s.

ALMOST WE CAN SAY 25 PER CENT OF PEOPLE ARE ASKING FOR A REFUND.

 ?? KHALIL HAMRA / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Muslims pray at the Grand Mosque in Mecca ahead of the hajj pilgrimage last year. Canadian Muslims considerin­g making the trip this year are feeling anxious about travelling to Saudi Arabia amid the recent tensions between the two countries and are asking travel agencies for refunds.
KHALIL HAMRA / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Muslims pray at the Grand Mosque in Mecca ahead of the hajj pilgrimage last year. Canadian Muslims considerin­g making the trip this year are feeling anxious about travelling to Saudi Arabia amid the recent tensions between the two countries and are asking travel agencies for refunds.

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