Hajj begins
More than two million Muslims from around the globe started the hajj pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia yesterday, one of the world's largest annual gatherings in a country undergoing unprecedented change.
The ultra-conservative kingdom -- where religion remains a guiding force amid dramatic social and economic reforms -- has mobilised vast resources for the six-day journey, one of the five pillars of Islam.
"It's the dream of every Muslim to come here to Makkah," Frenchman Soliman Ben Mohri said.
"It's the ultimate journey. What worries me is the return to my normal life. For the moment, I am in a dream," the 53-year old told AFP.
Every Muslim is required to complete the hajj journey to Islam's holiest sites at least once in their lifetime if they are healthy enough and have the means to do so.
Tens of thousands of security personnel have been deployed for the pilgrimage, which was struck by its worst ever disaster three years ago when around 2,300 worshippers were crushed to death in a stampede.
This year, the Saudis have launched a "smart hajj" initiative, with apps to help pilgrims with everything from travel plans to medical care.
The interior ministry said on Saturday that the number of pilgrims arriving in Makkah had already surpassed the two million mark, mostly from abroad including large contingents from Egypt, India, Pakistan and Bangladesh.
Wearing the simple white garb of the pilgrim, most of the faithful began moving from Makkah to the nearby Mina valley yesterday.
They will spend the night there in fire-resistant tents in the desert, where temperatures top 40 degrees Celsius (104 Fahrenheit).
Thousands of buses and vehicles carrying the pilgrims lined the eight kilometre (five-mile) road from Makkah to Mina. Many pilgrims made the journey walking under the scorching sun.
For the Muslim faithful, hajj retraces the last steps of the Prophet Mohammed (pbuh) and also honours the Prophets Ibrahim and Ishmael.
It ends with the Eid-ul-Azha feast, which is marked by the slaughter of sheep, a tribute to Ibrahim's sacrifice of a lamb after Allah spared Ishmael, his son.
POLITICAL CLIMATE
Earlier in Makkah pilgrims performed a ritual walk seven times around the Kaaba, a black masonry cube wrapped in a silk cloth embroidered in gold with Koranic verses at the centre of the Grand Mosque.
The shrine is the point towards which Muslims around the world pray.
Today, pilgrims will climb Mount Arafat for the climax of the hajj, praying and reading the Koran.
The Prophet Mohammed (pbuh) delivered his final sermon from the rocky hill to Muslims who had accompanied him on his final hajj, according to Islam.
After sunset, pilgrims will head to Muzdalifah, halfway between Arafat and Mina, where they will stay at least until midnight.
They gather pebbles to perform the symbolic stoning of the devil on the eve of the Eid-ul-Azha feast.
Although the kingdom's young de facto leader, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, has spearheaded change in the kingdom, religion remains a key force in Saudi Arabia.
The oil-flush kingdom ended its ban on women driving in June and has boosted female employment in a male-dominated society.
But the reforms have been accompanied by a widening crackdown on dissent, with more than a dozen women's rights campaigners detained in recent weeks. Some have been released.
The hajj also comes more than a year into the worst political crisis to grip the Gulf, pitting Saudi Arabia against Qatar.
Saudi Arabia -- the world's largest exporter of oil -- and its allies accuse Qatar of cosying up to both Sunni Islamist extremists and Shia Iran, Riyadh's main rival.
They have cut all ties with Qatar -- which denies the charges -- and banned all flights to and from Doha.
Qatar said yesterday that its citizens were unable to take part in the hajj because of the diplomatic dispute.
Saudi authorities have said Qatari pilgrims are still allowed into the kingdom for the hajj.
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