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Muslims make a pilgrimage to the sacred city at least once in their lifetime if they have the physical and financial means
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ARAFAT,
Saudi Arabia, February 10 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - More
than two million Muslim pilgrims began pouring into the plains of
Arafat on Monday, February 10, for the climax of the annual hajj,
praying for forgiveness and for Iraq to be saved from a threatened
U.S. attack, as Iraqi pilgrims vent their anger at the U.S. plans to
attack Iraq and at the silence of Arab leaders.
"Most
Arab leaders are not doing their job. Many have remained silent"
on the ongoing U.S. military buildup in the region, said 60-year-old
Said Mahmud.
"At
this delicate juncture, they are required to support Iraq by deeds and
not by words alone," Mahmoud told Agence France-Presse (AFP) from
the Iraqi pilgrims' camp on Mount Arafat.
Some
15,000 Iraqi pilgrims are taking part in the annual hajj this year,
some 9,000 of whom traveled to Saudi Arabia by plane.
The
Iraqi camp is just several hundred meters (yards) away from a camp
housing some 7,000 American Muslims who came for the hajj this season,
3,000 less than last year because of heightened tension in the region.
"Arab
leaders must understand that the United States will attack their
countries one by one after finishing the job in Iraq," warned
Khaled Ahmad, 70.
"Arab
and Muslim leaders must be held responsible for this vicious
crime," of the potential U.S. strike against Iraq, Ahmad said.
The
Iraqi pilgrims said that the main goal of any U.S.-led attack on their
country would be to wrest control of the Gulf's abundant oil wealth.
"It's
a pre-planned conspiracy against Iraq and Arabs. The Americans want to
control the oil in the Gulf region," where more than 70 percent
of proven world reserves are located, said Kazem Hussein, a
45-year-old teacher.
"It's
a crusader war against Muslims and (U.S. President George W.) Bush has
mentioned something like this," he said.
Iraqis
also prayed for their country to be spared the ruins of war, saying
the people had suffered enormously during numerous wars and biting UN
economic sanctions in force since August 1990.
Defiant
anti-U.S. slogans with portraits of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein
decorate the outer fence of the Iraqi hajj camp on Mount Arafat,
separated by a 20-meter (yard) road from the Palestinian camp.
Palestinian
and Iraqi pilgrims both said they felt they were victims of a wider
U.S.-Israeli conspiracy in the Middle East.
"We
wish to see the Iraqis victorious. We hope to see the U.S. army
defeated and destroyed because they have no business being here,"
said Sami Dawood, 40, a Palestinian merchant from the West Bank town
of Tulkarem, whose store was demolished only last week by Israeli
troops.
The
pilgrims arrived from Mina, some seven kilometers (4.5 miles) away
from Mecca, by foot, in buses and in small vehicles and pick-ups, to
the pilgrimage's most significant site.
"Here
I am Allah, answering your call; there is no God but you," the
sea of humanity, all dressed in white, chanted as they approached
Arafat, where the Prophet Mohammad delivered his last sermon 14
centuries ago.
Standing
on Mount Arafat before sunset on Monday is the high point of the hajj,
and pilgrims who fail to make it here on time must repeat their
pilgrimage in future.
Many
pilgrims prayed for peace and for Iraq to be saved and emerge
victorious in its confrontation with the United States over its
alleged weapons of mass destruction.
"May
God protect Iraq and its people. They are my brothers. May God make
Iraq victorious against its enemies," 40-year-old Khalil
el-Ghandur from Egypt said.
"I
pray for peace for all peoples on earth. I don't want war. I don't
want to see my country taking part in military actions. Iraqis are my
Muslim brothers," said Omer Dogan, 27, from Turkey.
‘Break
The Silence’
Others
vented their anger on Washington and urged Arab and Muslim countries
to break their silence and help defend Iraq, which is finding itself
increasingly in the sights of a huge U.S. military buildup in the
Gulf.
"America
wants to control the Arab world and its wealth. We are all soldiers
for Iraq. All Arab countries must unite and do something. We are all
Muslim brothers and have the same blood," said Faruq Ahmad, a
50-year-old engineer from Syria.
"Death
to America, (U.S. President George W.) Bush and Israel. They are
enemies of Islam," screamed Habib Pivali, a 46-year-old nurse
from Iran.
"America
wants the Arab oil. Washington is certainly the enemy of
Muslims," said Yavuz, 30, from Turkey.
Many
pilgrims headed straight for the 70-meter (230-foot) high Mount of
Mercy (Jabal al-Rahma), where they will pray for mercy in a symbolic
re-enactment of Prophet Mohammad's only pilgrimage.
Saudi
Arabia's Grand Mufti, Sheikh Abdul Aziz al-Sheikh appealed in remarks
published Monday to pilgrims "not to politicize the pilgrimage
and refrain from demonstrations or raising slogans."
Official
figures indicate 1.431 million pilgrims have come from outside Saudi
Arabia and up to 600,000 from various parts of the kingdom. They have
been joined by around 200,000 Mecca residents.
Thousands
of police, soldiers and paramilitary troops were stationed along the
routes to Arafat as helicopters hovered overhead.
Saudi
Arabia “Forgot” To Supply Tents For 40,000 Pilgrims
Meanwhile,
Saudi officials apparently “forgot” to supply tents for 40,000
Turkish pilgrims who were supposed to spend the night in the Mina
valley outside the holy city of Mecca, Anatolia news agency reported.
An
official from the Turkish Union of Travel Agencies, which was
organizing the pilgrimage trip of 45,000 Turks, was quoted as saying
in Mecca that they were trying to resolve the problem.
"The
money for tents to be given to the Turkish pilgrims was paid in
advance. But enough tents were provided not for 45,000, but 5,000
people. As an explanation for this situation, Saudi authorities said
they had forgotten," Mustafa Canerli told Anatolia.
This
year's hajj is being overshadowed by serious security concerns over
growing U.S. threats to attack neighboring Iraq and there were some
reports that the U.S.
urged a fast end to the pilgrimage for war sake.
The
semi-official widely-circulating Egyptian daily Al-Ahram reported on
Saturday, February 8, that the Saudi authorities decided to cut short
rituals of Hajj (pilgrimage) as “necessary” measure taken in
accordance with a fatwa (religious edict) to that effect.
The
reported announcement raised questions whether there is an American
request for an evacuation of the pilgrims amid great prospects for
launching a military offensive against Iraq after Eid Al-Adha (Day of
Sacrifice), an Islamic celebration marking the end of Hajj.
Arafat
is a small plain, some 250 meters (yards) above sea level, surrounded
with high mountains from all directions. Pilgrims stay the day under
thousands of tents and in the open.
Many
trucks, parked by the side of the road, were distributing food and
water free to pilgrims.
At
sunset, pilgrims will descend to nearby Muzdalifa, a few kilometers
away, where they will stay the night and collect small rocks to stone
the devil in Mina on Tuesday which is the first day of Eid al-Adha
(the feast of sacrifice).
Muslims
make a pilgrimage to the sacred city at least once in their lifetime
if they have the physical and financial means. The Hajj is one
of the “five pillars” of Islam, and thus an essential part of
Muslims’ faith and practice.
The
Hajj consists of several
ceremonies, meant to symbolize the essential concepts of the
Islamic faith, and to commemorate the trials of Prophet Abraham and
his family.