A Dialogue With An Iranian Diplomat
20 October 2016
By Dr. Khaled M. Batarfi
IN Paris, I met an Iranian diplomat during one of the UN functions. He was
friendly, diplomatic and conversational.
Since it was Haj time, the conversation was mostly about the event, but we
tried to steer away from current affairs and Saudi-Iran relations.
The man was well-cultured and informed. He was also philosophical and shared
my stand that our religious differences are exaggerated, politicized and
exploited. We agreed and differed on other issues, though.
In his opinion, Makkah and Madinah have lost their heritage and spirituality
because of the expansions and redevelopment of surrounding areas.
He thought we are modernizing and commercializing the scared lands and
destroying their roots in history.
''Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) had the advantage over other prophets
(peace be upon them) of leaving material proofs of his existence — such as
remnants and artifacts,'' he says.
''Much of these evidences are destroyed during mosques' expansions and area
developments. You should have left everything as it was during the Prophet's (pbuh)
life. Today, I can't go to the holy lands because I can't stop looking at the
high rises and huge mosque buildings, with all modern life facilities. That is
an irresistible distraction,'' he complains.
''If accommodation of large numbers is the issue, you could allow only those
pilgrims that can be absorbed. To make it harder for so many to come, they
should come in camel caravans. Easy transportation makes it possible for
anyone to visit many times in his lifetime — some come every year!
''That's too much, It's enough that one does Haj once. It is only obligatory
for those who afford it — financially and physically. And, please, don't tell
me you can't regulate this because you did disallow Iranian pilgrims this
year.''
First, I corrected his claim that Saudi Arabia prevented Iranian Haj. It was,
as he should have known, the decision of his government, not ours.
They, alone, refused to accept what the rest of the Muslim world agreed on —
not to mix religion with politics in Haj. Iranians (and Shiites) from other
parts of the world, who agreed with the rest of us, and came in peace, were
welcomed.
Then I addressed his other concerns, saying that I wish his romantic ideas
were realistic and logistically possible. But if we had kept Makkah and
Madinah the way they were 1,400 years ago when the whole Muslim population was
in the thousands, it would not be possible to absorb, provide and serve
millions of Hajis. That is after using the quota system and allowing
repetition only once every 5-year.
The same could be said about the Shiite holy places in Najaf and Karbala. On
Ashura Day, this year, more than 600 thousands Iranians went for ''Haj''
there, using and enjoying modern transportation and facilitates.
Imagine if the tombs and surrounding areas were kept at their original state
when the entire population was in a few thousands, would they have
accommodated a fraction of the visiting millions? And, by the way, no one
there is riding camels or living in tents, today, including the ayatollahs and
mullahs!
Naturally, the holy mosques were expanded during different stages in history,
starting from Caliph Omar's project to that of the Ummaiad, Abbasi and the
Ottoman caliphates.
Ours was the latest and greatest project so far, because after WWII and the
advancement of transportation, air travel in particular, the number of
pilgrims shot from tens of thousands in the 1940s to millions in the new
millennium. Not to mention the natural increase in the population of Makkah
and Madinah.
So imagine if we have not rebuilt the holy mosques and places! If we have not
developed the metropolitan cities! If we insisted on the old ways of living
and transportation, as suggested? Would you be able to perform Haj and Umrah?
As for spirituality, if you are seeing with your heart and feeling with your
soul, you won't even notice modern architecture or be easily distracted. If
not, then I agree with your decision, brother, don't come again!
— Dr. Khaled M. Batarfi is a Saudi writer based in Jeddah. He can be
reached at kbatarfi@gmail.com. Follow him at Twitter:@kbatarfi
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