Muslim pilgrims flood Mina as Hajj begins
25 October, 2012
MAKKAH: The annual Hajj pilgrimage started in earnest Wednesday, with more than two million Muslims thronging roads on foot and by bus for a five-day journey of faith most have spent their entire lives waiting for.
The pilgrims, among them some 1.75 million who have travelled from across the world to be in Saudi Arabia for the rituals, began leaving the holy city of Makkah at dawn on Wednesday headed for the holy sites of Mina, Muzdalifah and Arafat. In the arid valley of Mina, a pit-stop en route to Mount Arafat, pilgrims will spend the Wednesday night in government-provided tents and buildings, passing the time in prayer and reflection.
The passage to Mina marks the official launch of the Hajj on the eighth day of the Islamic calendar month of Dhul Hijja. The day is known as Tarwiah (Watering) as pilgrims in the past stopped at Mina to feed their animals and stock up for the following day's trip to Mount Arafat.
Men dressed in the white shrouds symbolising resurrection chanted in unison as they marched towards Mina, "I am responding to your call, God." The women, dressed from head to foot revealing only their faces and hands, echoed the religious chant. Sweaty and exasperated, 55-year-old Indonesian pilgrim Laila Soharti said she was "trying to get to Mina before the roads start getting too crowded." "We are thrilled to be heading towards God's most sacred spots on earth," she told AFP.
In Mina, the desolate plain that only comes to life during the five days of Hajj, men and women separate for the night, sharing tents with fellow pilgrims of the same sex. For Akram Hussein, a 42-year-old Iraqi on his first pilgrimage with his family described the Hajj as "great days in which we must follow in the footsteps of our Prophet Muhammad (PBUH)."
"If he chooses that we die here we will be very happy as well since it means we'll go to heaven," he told AFP soon after arriving in Mina. The pilgrims' stay in Makkah has so far been incident-free, with some 25,700 members of civil defence deployed throughout the kingdom's holy cities. In Mina, 100 civil defence teams are on call, ready to deal with emergencies.
Interior Ministry spokesman Mansur al-Turki said that around 85 percent of the pilgrims will head to Mina while the rest will head straight to Mount Arafat. The pilgrims will mostly walk or catch a bus for the duration of the journey, though about a quarter of the faithful will travel on the Mashair Railway. More than 18,500 buses will also be used to carry pilgrims, while vehicles carrying less than 25 people will not be allowed access into the three holy sites.
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