Saturday Star

British Muslims head for Mecca

Pilgrims from the West are often younger than those from the rest of the Muslim world

- SEÁN MCLOUGHLIN

MORE than two million Muslims are currently gathering in Mecca ahead of the annual Hajj, which begins on Sunday. As long as they are fit and financiall­y able, the pilgrimage is an obligatory act of worship that followers of Islam owe to God once in their lifetime. Re-enacting the faith-testing ordeals of Ibrahim (Abraham, the Biblical founder of monotheism) and his family, Muslims believe that an “accepted Hajj” will cleanse them of all their sins. Their hope is to return home as pure as the day they were born.

But until the introducti­on of modern transport systems, most Muslims beyond the Arab world had little expectatio­n of completing this fifth and final pillar of Islam. Before the mid1950s, the number of overseas pilgrims rarely exceeded 100 000 and modern Saudi institutio­ns were still developing. Yet by the early 2000s, the total number of Hajj pilgrims had passed the two million mark, reaching a recent peak of just over three million in 2012.

New opportunit­ies for pilgrimage in the jet age have put immense pressure on the infrastruc­ture of Mecca. Hundreds have lost their lives during periodic disasters including fires and stampedes, most recently in 2015. Hajj organisers and guides I have interviewe­d compare overseeing the pilgrimage to hosting the Olympics every year.

But the kingdom’s Vision 2030, published by Crown Prince Salman in 2016, underlines that the Islamic tourism market has a significan­t role to play in diversifyi­ng Saudi Arabia’s non-oil-based economy.

While the strategy is focused mainly on the Umrah (the year-round, non-obligatory minor pilgrimage), a $50 billion (R725bn) investment in new transport and other infrastruc­ture also aims to double the size of the Hajj by the end of the next decade.

A look at Hajj-going among British Muslims in an age of globalisat­ion underlines the growing role of the market for religious tourism in shaping the organisati­on of the pilgrimage.

At an industry event I attended earlier this year, The Council of British Hajjis, suggested that this niche sector of the UK economy is worth around £150m (R2.8 billion) (£310m including Umrah).

Unlike all Muslim-majority nations, Muslim minorities in the West are not restricted to a Hajj quota of 1 000 pilgrims per million of population. Relatively prosperous, literate and increasing­ly socially mobile, they are generally free to perform the pilgrimage at a time of their choosing. Pilgrims from the West are also often younger than those in the rest of the Muslim world. The number of British Muslims performing Hajj each year rose from 759 in 1968 to around 25 000 by the mid-2000s – about twice the rate of UK Muslim population growth for the same period. About 100 000 now go annually for Umrah.

In the West, secular government­s play no direct role in organising Hajj. Until the 1990s, there were also just a few companies formally arranging Muslim pilgrimage­s in Britain. So most UK Muslims travelled to Saudi Arabia as individual­s or as part of a small community group.

But during the early 2000s, in a bid to improve services to pilgrims, the Saudi authoritie­s insisted that anyone organising Hajj should form a registered company and be properly licensed.

By the mid-2000s, they also made buying a “package” from one of these organisers the only way for Muslims in the West to perform Hajj.

RISING PRICES

Today there are around 117 UK Hajj organisers licensed by Saudi Arabia. Each is responsibl­e for its own annual quota of 150-450 Hajj pilgrim visas. British Muslims now have plenty of choice in terms of package options. But UK pilgrims wanting to perform Hajj in 2018 probably spent as much as £5 000 to £6 000 on their package. At an industry event last spring, I was told that a top company selling half their packages for £9 500 per person sold out in six weeks. Even an “economy” Hajj this year cost more than £4 000. Overall, the cost of Hajj-going has increased by around 25% in recent years.

Long-establishe­d pilgrim welfare charities such as the Associatio­n of British Hujjaj (establishe­d 1998) complain that high prices reflect UK organisers’ profiteeri­ng. But the bigger picture is that the restructur­ed Hajj industry in Saudi Arabia is increasing­ly privatised and commercial­ised. The 2 to million Muslims arriving to the city of Mecca for one key week in the calendar create a huge demand for travel, accommodat­ion and other services. And for all its investment­s in pilgrimage infrastruc­ture, the Saudi government does not control the pricing of flights, rents and so on. Certain local subsidies are being reduced and Saudi VAT and municipali­ty taxes have increased recently, too.

Members of the UK’S newly formed Licensed Hajj Organisers national trade associatio­n (establishe­d 2016) are in a risky business. In the tourism industry, payments are usually made in arrears, but UK Hajj organisers often make large down payments before packages are even sold. And because they lack the bargaining power of large Muslim government­s, Hajj organisers in the West can pay a premium for some services. Political and economic instabilit­y, such as wars in the Middle East and the negative impact of Brexit on the pound, also affect pricing.

REGULATION AND THE FUTURE

The new leadership of Licensed Hajj Organisers are keenly aware of the complex issues faced by the Hajj and Umrah industry. Few UK Hajj organisers can sell their entire quota without maintainin­g relationsh­ips with networks of sub-agents. Spot checks for “Hajj fraud” by Trading Standards suggest that long selling chains and a lack of proper documentat­ion can encourage “over-selling” and even criminal scams.

That there is a new willingnes­s in the trade to hold fellow organisers to account in this regard is clear from a new code of conduct launched by Licensed Hajj Organisers before Hajj this year. At the same time, many Hajj organisers still argue that the European Package Travel Regulation­s, intended to regulate “package holidays”, cannot account for the logistical and business complexiti­es of Hajj.

Transforma­tions in the organisati­on of Hajj-going in Britain represent only a local case study of challenges the Hajj and Umrah industry is facing worldwide. Piety and commerce have always existed cheek-by-jowl in Mecca. But the developmen­t of a consumer-capitalist model of religious tourism on the scale envisaged by Saudi Arabia is unpreceden­ted. Great chains of buying and selling as well as believing now connect Muslims to the birthplace of Islam. But there are major issues to resolve For some, this suggests a need for greater internatio­nal governance of the Hajj and Umrah. – The Conversati­on

■ Mcloughlin is Professor of the Anthropolo­gy of Islam, University of Leeds

 ??  ?? Artist Kamel Baksh’s personal take on the more formal views of Makkah and Madinah which typically grace British-muslim front rooms.
Artist Kamel Baksh’s personal take on the more formal views of Makkah and Madinah which typically grace British-muslim front rooms.
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