Publish dateSaturday 15 June 2024 - 11:37
Story Code : 292027
Pilgrims from all over the world pray on Mount Arafat in Hajj
More than 1.5 million Muslims will pray on Mount Arafat in soaring temperatures on Saturday, in the high-point and most gruelling day of the annual Haj pilgrimage.
Afghan Voice Agency (AVA) - Monitoring: Worshippers from all over the world will climb the rocky, 70-metre (230-feet) hill, about 20 kilometres (12 miles) from Makkah, where Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) gave his last sermon.
The desert summer heat is expected to hit 43 degrees Celsius (109.4 degrees Fahrenheit), creating challenges especially among the elderly during a day of prayer and reciting the Holy Quran.
Haj, which takes at least five days to complete and is mostly outdoors, “is not easy because it is very hot”, said Abraman Hawa, 26, from Ghana.
“We have sun… but it is not as hot. But I will pray to Allah at Arafat, because I need his support,” she added.
Saudi authorities have urged pilgrims to drink plenty of water and protect themselves from the sun. Since men are prohibited from wearing hats, many carry umbrellas.
More than 10,000 heat-related illnesses were recorded last year, 10 per cent of them heat stroke, a Saudi official told AFP this week.
Haj, one of the world’s biggest religious gatherings, is increasingly affected by climate change, according to a Saudi study that said regional temperatures were rising 0.4°C each decade.
But Mohammad Farouk, a 60-year-old Pakistani pilgrim, was not put off by the Gulf kingdom’s scorching summer sun.
Haj is “very important for me as a Muslim”, he said.
Financial windfall
The enormous crowds of worshippers spent the night in a giant tented city in Mina, a valley several kilometres outside Makkah, Islam’s holiest city.
Many of them were tightly packed in the air-conditioned tents, lying close together on narrow mattresses.
They were grouped by nationality and price, depending on how much they had paid for their Haj packages — usually several thousand dollars.
After Arafat they will head to Muzdalifah, where they will collect pebbles to carry out the symbolic “stoning of the devil” ritual in Mina on Sunday.
The Haj follows the path of Prophet Muhammad’s final pilgrimage, about 1,400 years ago.
It is an important source of legitimacy for the Al Saud dynasty, whose monarch has the title “guardian of the two holy mosques”, in Makkah and Madina.
It is also a major financial windfall for the conservative country, which is trying to develop religious tourism as part of a drive to reduce its dependence on crude oil.
The kingdom received more than 1.8m pilgrims last year for Haj, around 90pc of whom came from abroad.
It also welcomed 13.5m Muslims who came to perform Umrah, the small pilgrimage that can be done all year round, and aims to reach 30m by 2030.
This year’s Haj takes place in the shadow of Israel’s offensive in Gaza, after eight months of bloodshed that is an open wound for many in the Muslim world./Dawn
https://avapress.com/vdcb55b5zrhb9gp.4eur.html
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