The Asian Age

In smartphone age, the Haj is for sharing

- NADERA BOUAZZA

Arm outstretch­ed, Abdul Rahman sweeps his mobile phone across the vista of Mecca, the Great Mosque dazzling in the sun, so his son in Tanzania can experience the pilgrimage to Islam’s holiest sites.

He may be thousands of kilometres away and on another continent, but thanks to his father’s smartphone and video sharing app, 18-year-old Nabil might as well be standing right next to him.

“Some day I hope I can make the pilgrimage,” he says on the screen, his father wearing a broad smile.

Abdul Rahman is one of the more than 1.7 million foreign pilgrims travelling to Mecca in Saudi Arabia for this year’s Haj, which began on Wednesday.

For the faithful it is a deeply spiritual journey, which for centuries every capable Muslim has been required to make at least once in their lifetime.

In the age of smartphone­s, social media and live video streaming, it’s now also an experience to be shared in real time.

“I’m showing him live... How happy we are, how lucky we are,” Abdul Rahman tells AFP, showing off imo, the applicatio­n he uses for video calls.

Across the holy city, pilgrims from around the world can be seen with their arms extended, showing off their surroundin­gs to friends and family back home.

Travel agencies in charge of organising trips to the Haj are now offering packages that include mobile internet so they can avoid roaming fees.

In a shopping centre where the faithful flock to buy souvenirs, one pilgrim is scanning the images on his phone.

He stops at a selfie and hesitates — what effect to choose, black-and-white or retro? He puts it away when the call to prayer sounds and the pilgrims roll out their carpets between escalators and boutiques to pray.

Later, on an upper floor of the shopping centre, Mohammed Ismaelzad, a 26-year-old pilgrim from Mali, is looking over the images on his phone, deciding which ones to post on his Instagram or Facebook accounts.

He has photograph­s of Mecca’s Masjid al-Haram — the Grand Mosque that is the largest in the world — and of the Kaaba, the black masonry cube at its centre.

 ?? — AFP ?? Pilgrims take a selfie at the Grand Mosque in Mecca early on Wednesday, the eve of the start of the annual Haj pilgrimage.
— AFP Pilgrims take a selfie at the Grand Mosque in Mecca early on Wednesday, the eve of the start of the annual Haj pilgrimage.

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