Pilgrimage: Islamic Faith And The Purpose of Holy Hajj
09 September 2016
By Dr. Abdul Ruff Colachal
Muslims need to be very very cautious about performing Holy Hajj. Many Muslims
keep performing Holy Hajj almost every year because they have money. Those
Muslims who follow the life of Prophet Muhammad (SAS) would perform Hajj only
once in life. Performing a second or subsequent Hajj would mean the first Holy
Hajj is cancelled which could be serious sin committed by Muslims unknowingly.
Those who have already performed Hajj more than once, therefore, better ask
for forgiveness of the Almighty. Allah is the kindest, most merciful.
HolyHajj Pilgrimage
Holy Hajj, to be performed once in life by all able bodied Muslims having
enough financial support, is one of four pillars of Islamic faith and it has a
definite purpose. Though rich Muslims perform Holy Hajj year after year, the
Prophet of Islam Muhammad (SAS) has performed only once in his life which
becomes binding on all of us to perform only once in life. Even second Hajj,
therefore, has no justification whatsoever. .
As Muslims from all over the world are preparing to perform the annual and
truly one time holy Hajj pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia, it is of paramount
importance for Muslims to know, along with the process of this important
pilgrimage but also the purpose of it so that the Haajis after the Hajj live
as the best possible humans as model Muslims for the society and humanity at
large so as to help them derive inspiration from them and benefit tremendously
this way.
Holy Hajj is the largest human gathering on earth for religious purposes. Over
three million registered pilgrims are taking part in the rituals which will be
over on a scheduled day every year. Many pilgrims, however, conclude the
pilgrimage one day earlier.
Hajj is performed annually by Muslims in Mecca, Saudi Arabia. Thousands of
Muslim pilgrims from all over the world, grouped by nationality, stone the
devil in Saudi Arabia's Mina valley on the scheduled day as the Hajj reached
its final stages.
Muslims of all ages and colours, men, women and children from 189 countries,
many of whom had saved up for years to make the trip, hurled pebbles at the
vast stone pillars that represent Satan, shouting ''Allahu Akbar (God is the
Greatest).'' They walked easily from one pillar to the next, moving in groups
by nationality and carrying their countries' flags so as not to be separated
in the sea of humanity. Generally no members get lost in the massive crowds.
Security forces are heavily deployed in the stoning area and first aid teams
remained on high alert around the three adjacent pillars representing Satan.
According to the authorities, 168,000 police officers and civil defence
personnel were mobilised for this year's hajj. For the stoning, they organised
specific times of day for groups of pilgrims to perform the ritual.
Ritual
In 630 CE, Prophet of Islam Muhammad (SAS) led his followers from Medina to
Mecca; it was the first Hajj to be performed by Muslims alone, and the only
Hajj ever performed by Muhammad (SAS) . He cleansed the Kaaba, destroyed all
the idols, and re-ordained the building as the house of God. It was from this
point that the Hajj became one of the Five Pillars of Islam.
Prophet Muhammad (SAS) was known to regularly perform the Umrah, even before
he began receiving revelation. Historically, Muslims would gather at various
meeting points in other great cities, and then proceed en masse towards Mecca,
in groups that could comprise tens of thousands of pilgrims. Two of the most
famous meeting points were in Cairo and Damascus. In Cairo, the Sultan would
stand atop a platform of the famous gate Bab Zuwayla, to officially watch the
beginning of the annual pilgrimage.
Ihram is the name given to the special spiritual state in which Muslims live
while on the pilgrimage. During the Hajj, male pilgrims are required to dress
only in the ihram, a garment consisting of two sheets of white unhemmed cloth,
with the top draped over the torso and the bottom secured by a white sash;
plus a pair of sandals. Women are simply required to maintain their hijab—normal
modest dress, which does not cover the hands or face. The Ihram is meant to
show equality of all pilgrims, in front of God: there is no difference between
a prince and a pauper. Ihram is also symbolic for holy virtue and pardon from
all past sins. A place designated for changing into Ihram is called a miqat
(like Zu 'l-Hulafa, Juhfa, Qarnu 'l-Manazil, Yalamlam, Zat-i-'Irq, Ibrahim
Mursia). While wearing the Ihram, a pilgrim may not shave, clip their nails,
wear perfume, swear or quarrel, have sexual relations, uproot or damage
plants, kill or harm wild animals, cover the head [for men] or the face and
hands [for women], marry, wear shoes over the ankles, or carry weapons.
The ritual is an emulation of Abraham's stoning of the devil at the three
spots where it is said Satan tried to dissuade the biblical patriarch from
obeying God's order to sacrifice his son, Ishmael. The ritual, which takes
place in the kingdom's usually-deserted Mina valley and comes to life only
during the annual pilgrimage, began with the Muslim Eid al-Adha holiday as the
faithful began by stoning the largest pillar, Jamrat al-Aqaba.
Associated with devil stoning, Mina used to be the most dangerous phase of the
hajj and the most problematic for the Saudi authorities, marred as it was by
deadly stampedes as well as fires in tent camps. In the past few years,
however, tents have been fire-proofed and gas canisters and cooking are now
banned. The stoning area has also been expanded to avoid overcrowding. Saudi
authorities have built a five-level structure around the three stoning sites,
allowing for a smooth flow of pilgrims who are only permitted to move in one
direction throughout the area to prevent congestion.
Pilgrims confess that there's a sweet feeling about getting tired during Hajj,
which Muslims who sincerely follow the Prophet of Islam, must perform only
once in their lifetime. ''Ever since I was a child I had dreamt of standing on
the Mount of Mercy in Arafat,'' where the Prophet Mohammed (SAS) is said to
have given his last sermon, one pilgrimage said with a smile. ''They were
purely spiritual moments. The trip to perform the hajj costs many poor
pilgrims all the money they had been saving small amounts for many (over 15)
years and some people say they finally sold all their jewellery to ''reach
this place.''
Background
The Hajj is based on a pilgrimage that was ancient even in the time of Prophet
Muhammad (SAS) in the 7th century. According to Hadith, elements of the Hajj
trace back to the time of Abraham (Ibrahim), around 2000 BCE. Abraham's wife,
Sarah, was unable to conceive, and upon her request, Abraham had taken their
female servant, Hagar, as a second wife. Hagar bore Abraham a son, Ishmael. It
is believed that Abraham was ordered by God to leave Hagar (Hajar) and Ishmael
('Isma?il) alone in the desert. Looking for shelter, food and water, Hagar ran
back and forth between the hills of Safa and Marwa seven times with her son.
In desperation, she laid the baby on the sand and begged for God's assistance.
The baby cried and hit the ground with his heel (some versions of the story
say that the angel Gabriel (Jibral) scraped his foot or the tip of his wing
along the ground), and the Zamzam Well miraculously sprang forth.
The Hajj is a demonstration of the solidarity of the Muslim people, and their
submission to God (Allah in the Arabic language). The pilgrimage occurs from
the 8th to 12th day of Dhu al-Hijjah, the 12th and last month of the Islamic
calendar. Pilgrims generally travel to Hajjin groups, as an expression of
unity. Some airlines have special packages for Muslims going to Mecca such as
the Haj subsidy. Ships also take pilgrims to Mecca.
Though Hajj is associated with the life of Islamic prophet Muhammad from the
7th century, the ritual of pilgrimage to Mecca is considered by Muslims to
stretch back thousands of years to the time of Abraham (Ibrahim). Pilgrims
join processions of hundreds of thousands of people, who simultaneously
converge on Mecca for the week of the Hajj, and perform a series of rituals:
Each person walks counter-clockwise seven times around the Kaaba, the
cube-shaped building which acts as the Muslim direction of prayer, runs back
and forth between the hills of Al-Safa and Al-Marwah, drinks from the Zamzam
Well, goes to the plains of Mount Arafat to stand in vigil, and throws stones
in a ritual. The pilgrims then shave their heads, perform a ritual of animal
sacrifice, and celebrate the three day global festival of Eid al-Adha.
Prior to Prophet Muhammad's era, each year tribes from all around the Arabian
Peninsula would converge on Mecca, as part of the pilgrimage. The exact faith
of the tribes was not important at that time, and Christian Arabs were as
likely to make the pilgrimage as the pagans. Muslim historians refer to the
time before Muhammad as jahiliyyah, the ''Days of Ignorance'', during which
the Kaaba contained hundreds of idols – totems of each of the tribes of the
Arabian Peninsula, with idols of pagan gods such as Hubal, al-Lat, Al-'Uzzá
and Manat.
Problems
However, not everyone was satisfied with the way their pilgrimage had turned
out. Not every pilgrim had enough to eat. Nearby, many pilgrims struggled to
reach the food and water a parked truck was offering free to pilgrims.
Performing Hajj was a hazardous journey for early pilgrims; Ibn Jubayr noted
the skeletons of pilgrims who had died of thirst during the journey. In the
seventeenth century a group of Egyptian pilgrims lost over 1,500 people and
900 camels. In 1924 around one-fifth of a group of Syrian pilgrims died and
two years later 12,000 are thought to have died during the journey.
In the past few years, however, tents have been fire-proofed and gas canisters
and cooking are now banned.
Walking wearily towards the pillars, an exhausted 63-year-old man told bluntly
''my trip has been bad.'' Abdullah Jad, as he identified himself, said a
company he had paid to organise his pilgrimage took his four-year savings and
provided nothing in return, leaving him homeless and penniless as he moved
across the holy sites. ''An office took the money and told me they will have
everything ready for me here,'' said Jad. But ''upon my arrival, I found out
that I had been fooled and that I had no transport and nowhere to stay,'' said
Jad, still dressed in his traditional white pilgrimage robes and carrying an
umbrella offered to him as part of an advertising campaign by a local telecom
company.
The old man's voice quivered as he said that he had been sleeping at the Grand
Mosque in Mecca and did not have enough money left to eat. Drenched in sweat,
Jad said the trip had cost him around 25,000 Egyptian pounds (nearly $4,000
dollars).
As many pilgrims prayed after and during the stoning, others were taking
pictures on their mobile phones of themselves next to the pillars. The
photographing was criticised by members of the security forces who said
through loudspeakers: ''How are you people stoning Satan and taking pictures
with him at the same time? That is the satanic mindset of Muslim even during
and after the Hajj.
What is missing in doing this nonsense is obviously the purity of Hajj intent.
Presumably, Muslim pilgrims want to make more profits after the Hajj and
expect God to help them in their material endeavor whereas Hajj is meant to
purify men and women of their devilish desires, end their material greed.
Profits are made even by non-Muslims without performing Hajj and Muslims need
not undertake this pilgrimage for profits.
Hajj should be used as a tool to advance personal private worldly material
ambitions, though politicians and others must be doing exactly that.
As a result, most of the pilgrims, if not all of them, rerun home not purified
but as guilty persons.
An Observation: Holiness of
Hajj
Hajj is final pillar of Islam and is obligatory for Muslims. Since it is
treated as the most important life achievement in this material world for the
individuals, Muslims are expected to be very very conscious and cautious about
the pilgrimage in full since Hajj is considered to be an asset made here in
the world for the life Hereafter.
Muslims would do better to remember that they cannot and should not even think
of overtaking the Prophet of Islam in any endeavor. Performance of holy Hajj
is a case in point. .
However, mere performance of Hajj does not automatically offer a passport to
Heavens as today's Muslims who spend money tend to believe. If the rich help
the genuine poor but committed Muslims to perform it, the benefits they can
reap by that service could be more than by other means. Why don't they trust
Islam?
The Hajj pilgrimage obtains the religious sanctity only if it is performed
with honest resources and proper ways, with full dedication and total and
unconditional submission to GOD- not as a show peace to impress the material
world.
One, however, doubts if religious spirituality is properly taken care of by
the holy Hajj pilgrims- before, during and after the pilgrimage. By repeated
pilgrimages by the wealthy Muslims and those who have made wealth by illegal
and immoral means have made the holy Hajj a mere formality – skeleton without
blood and flesh. .
Hajj is not a show of one's wealth, some Muslims keep going for life time Hajj
maybe just for fun. Though already rich by petrodollars, Saudi Arabs still
want more profits from the pilgrimages as well and hence they do not insist on
spiritual aspect of the Hajj and do not refuse permission to perform the Hajj
for a second time and more times.
Saudi Arabia should have evolved a system by which every Muslim in the world
gets a chance to perform Hajj before the death since Hajjis obligatory for
every Muslim if conditions are available to them. It is possible only if a few
steps are undertaken by Islamic world. Muslim community and the Mosque could
help those poor Muslims with financial support. Instead of repeatedly
performing Hajj year after year, the rich people could wholeheartedly extend
money to the needy because that we believe Hajj performed by these poor and
needy would be in their name too. It is possible only if a few steps are
undertaken by Islamic world.
When Muslims do not offer Friday Juma prayer twice, how can we presume that
the most important obligatory Hajj could be performed several times? It is the
mischief of Saudi Arabian rulers and rich Muslims of the world who encourage
the rich to perform Haj more times.
It is time Muslims change their own rules of Hajj in order to suit their
mindset.
Muslims should not try to justify their multitimes Hajj pilgrimage in any
manner. They should have broad heart to accept their mistakes committed
deliberately or unknowingly and return to the right path of Islam as shown by
out Holy Prophet in his own life .
Muslims are free to visit Mecca and Medina as many times as they want, even
perform Umrah every month if they have the resources but performing Hajj more
than once could amount to a serious crime. If the rich Muslims want to offer
their resources to Saudi Arabia they are welcome to do it. But better they
spend their huge resources on mosques, Islam, Muslims and funding the Hajj
pilgrimages. Obviously, they could be blessed by Allah.
It is true many Muslims have plenty of resources and they go for the Hajj
every year – at times as special guests of the king of Saudi Arabia who
accepts huge sums and valuable gifts as service charges from the ''state
guests''. That is not correct approach to Islamic faith.
Since one time Hajj is the only proper format, those who have resources s
could use the resources for positive propagation of Islam and promotion of
Muslim interests, even helping those who have are practicing Muslims with no
such resources. That would perhaps bring the Haji closer to what he intents by
a Hajj.
Behaviour of those Muslims who have performed Hajj is very important for the
Muslim society. They are required to commit themselves to the Cause of Islam
and Muslim society by continuing to do good work for the Muslim community.
Those who do this know they are definitely the favourites of the Almighty. .
Pilgrims should make sure they do not make the devil happy by their
carelessness. When parameters other than self-purification – like business,
photography, videography etc – chosen by the pilgrims themselves the
pilgrimage becomes unworthy! Significance of entire pilgrimage is lost. Such
pilgrimage could backfire too!
Fear of wrath of God is somehow missing among Muslims. The attitude ''so
what?'' could even harm the pilgrims after the Hajj.
As God is not shared with others for worship, similarly, hajj is not linked to
other non-spiritual matters. Almighty would not want Muslims to use stolen
type money for Holy Hajj. The money should be properly earned- a fact the
Saudi officials hide in order to promote Hajj as a tourism package.
It is essential to remember that after stoning the devil, the pilgrims should
see the devil does not come after them.
Without any sense of spirituality, very often Hajj also remains a mere
formality. Saudi Arabia that hosts the Hajj should ensure that the Pilgrimage
is a meritorious effort by Muslim community!