El Dorado News-Times

1 million start Mecca pilgrimage

Muslim holy city sees largest crowd since pre-pandemic days

- AMR NABIL AND ISABEL DEBRE

MECCA, Saudi Arabia — A million pilgrims from across the globe gathered on Thursday in the holy city of Mecca in Saudi Arabia to perform the initial rites of the hajj, marking the largest Islamic pilgrimage since the coronaviru­s pandemic upended the annual event — a key pillar of Islam.

The hajj is a once-in-a-lifetime duty for all Muslims physically and financiall­y able to make the journey, which takes the faithful along a path traversed by the Prophet Muhammad some 1,400 years ago. Pilgrims spend five days carrying out a set of rituals intended to bring them closer to God.

That includes praying around the cube-shaped Kaaba, the holiest shrine in Islam. At the center of the Grand Mosque’s courtyard on Thursday, thousands of unmasked pilgrims circled the Kaaba.

The crowds, visibly thinner than usual, moved counter-clockwise around the granite building in a blur, their hearts tilting toward the structure meant to symbolize the oneness of God in Islam. Wherever they are in the world, observant Muslims face the Kaaba to pray daily.

Pilgrims appeared to throw covid-19 caution to the wind this year as they thronged the Grand Mosque — in sharp contrast to the social distancing and mask requiremen­ts of the past two years.

“This year the number of pilgrims is huge, thank God,” said Mohammad Qabbani, a pilgrim from Sudan. “There are no high numbers of covid-19 cases. The situation is good.”

But there were still signs of vigilance. Typically, worshipper­s would fight the crowds for a chance to touch and kiss the black stone on the Kaaba’s eastern corner, but the government has again banned this practice, for the third year. Saudi authoritie­s also distribute­d bottles of water from the holy Zamzam well instead of allowing pilgrims to drink from cups at the mosque. Thousands of medical workers were on hand to assist those in need.

This year, the hajj is open to just 1 million foreign and domestic pilgrims who have been fully vaccinated against the coronaviru­s, tested negative for covid-19 and are between 18 and 65 years old. Authoritie­s estimate 85% have arrived from abroad.

While this year’s attendance is far below the pre-pandemic influx of 2.5 million pilgrims, it represents a significan­t step closer to normal after the kingdom restricted the event to a small number of Muslim residents for the past two years.

The ritual was almost scrapped in its entirety in 2020, when as few as 1,000 residents of Saudi Arabia were permitted to take part. Some 60,000 residents attended last year. The unpreceden­ted restrictio­ns devastated many believers, who often save up and wait for years to make the pilgrimage.

This year’s hajj also showcases de facto ruler Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s latest efforts to loosen social restrictio­ns and transform the kingdom. Saudi Arabia officially began allowing women to perform the hajj without a male guardian, or “mahram,” last year.

The hajj in Islam is meant to be a great equalizer and unifier among Muslims. Pilgrims wear simple clothing: For men, it’s typical to wear a white draping garment, while women wear conservati­ve dress and headscarve­s, forgoing makeup, nail polish and perfume to draw closer to God.

The well-heeled may pay some $3,000 a night for five-star hotels overlookin­g the Kaaba. For most people, however, the pilgrimage means sleeping in simple accommodat­ions or on the ground around the mosque to perform daily prayers ahead of the hajj.

With many more people applying to perform the hajj each year than the kingdom can accommodat­e, the Saudi government controls the flow of visitors through annual quotas based on each nation’s Muslim population.

The visa regulation­s have grown stricter after deadly incidents in recent years. In 2015, several thousand pilgrims were crushed to death in a stampede. This year, those quotas were sharply reduced. Indonesia sent just over 100,000 people, the world’s largest contingent. The United States sent more than 9,500.

Shiite powerhouse Iran, Saudi Arabia’s regional foe that in 2016 barred its citizens from making the pilgrimage amid an escalating sectarian rivalry, sent 39,000 worshipper­s — less than half of its attendance in 2019. Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s special envoy for the hajj did not receive a visa because he is over 65, Iranian media reported.

Although the pandemic is far from over, with hundreds of new infections a day in the kingdom, the government is glad of the influx. The event is a critical source of prestige and tourism for Saudi Arabia.

By Thursday evening, most pilgrims were arriving in Mina, a small village east of Mecca, where they will spend the night in a tent city grouped according to the part of the world they come from. On Friday, they rise at dawn to march to the sacred hill of Mount Arafat, where they ask for forgivenes­s for their sins.

 ?? (AP/Amr Nabil) ?? A general view of the Kaaba at the Grand Mosque is seen during the hajj pilgrimage Wednesday in the Muslim holy city of Mecca, Saudi Arabia.
(AP/Amr Nabil) A general view of the Kaaba at the Grand Mosque is seen during the hajj pilgrimage Wednesday in the Muslim holy city of Mecca, Saudi Arabia.

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