These breathtaking pictures show how millions of pilgrims are arriving in Mecca for Islam's annual haj pilgrimage which starts tomorrow, as Saudi authorities warned they will stop any disruptive protests over the conflict in Syria.
The Grand Mosque, the focal point of the Islamic faith, was already teeming with joyful pilgrims at dawn yesterday, wearing the simple white folds of cloth prescribed for haj, many of them having slept on the white marble paving outside.
‘I feel proud to be here because it's a visual message that Muslims are united. People speaking in all kind of languages pray to the one God,’ said Fahmi Mohammed al-Nemr, 52, from Egypt.
Big
event: Muslim pilgrims circle the Kaaba as they pray inside and outside
the Grand Mosque in Mecca. The annual pilgrimage draws three million
visitors each year
Huge
gathering: Muslim pilgrims perform their evening prayers in the Grand
Mosque on Monday. The annual haj pilgrimage is one of the five pillars
of Islam
Policing: Saudi authorities warned they will stop any disruptive protests over the conflict in Syria
Pigrimage:
The Grand Mosque, the focal point of the Islamic faith, was already
teeming with joyful pilgrims at dawn on Monday, wearing the simple white
folds of cloth prescribed for haj
Haj
must be performed at least once in their lifetime by all Muslims
capable of making the expensive, difficult journey, a duty that applies
equally to Sunni and Shi'ite Muslims at a time of tension between
Islam's main sects.Saudi leaders have emphasised it is a strictly religious occasion and they are prepared to deal with any troublemaking.
‘If anything happens it will be brought under control,’ Interior Minister Prince Ahmed said on Saturday after attending a Mecca march-past where troops paraded water cannon, teargas launchers and even truck-mounted machine guns.
Authorities are keenly aware of past episodes of violence at haj, such as in 1979, when attackers seized the Grand Mosque, beginning a two-week siege that left hundreds dead.
Despite Saudi Arabia, which is mostly Sunni, locking horns with regional rival Iran, which is mostly Shi'ite, over the conflict in Syria and other disputes, the minister played down the risks of politically motivated disruption.
Extraordinary
scenes: Muslim pilgrims leave the Grand Mosque (left) after performing
the evening prayers (right), in the holy city of Mecca on Monday
Observance:
Muslim pilgrims circle the Kaaba and pray at the Grand Mosque during
the annual haj pilgrimage in the holy city of Mecca on Monday
Father
and daughter: A Muslim pilgrim leaves the Grand Mosque with his child
after performing the evening prayers, in the holy city of Mecca on
Monday
All ages: Muslim pilgrims attend to perform their evening prayers in the Grand Mosque in the holy city of Mecca on Monday
‘I
don't think there will be any repercussion on the security of the
pilgrimage as a result of what is unfortunately happening in Syria and
elsewhere,’ Prince Ahmed said.Saudi Arabia, the birthplace of Islam, has backed rebels fighting Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, an ally of Iran, at a time of already tense relations between Riyadh and Tehran.
Assad and Iranian leaders have both accused Turkey and Gulf Arab countries of arming the rebels, while Riyadh has accused Tehran of stirring unrest in Bahrain and instigating protests among Shi'ite Muslims in Saudi Arabia.
Iran has denied those charges and both sides have said they are keen to avoid trouble during haj, mindful of 1987 clashes between Iranian pilgrims and Saudi security forces that led to hundreds of deaths.
In the years since, Saudi authorities have tolerated small protests by Iranians in their part of the massive camp where most pilgrims stay. Prince Ahmed said Tehran had assured Riyadh that Iranian pilgrims would cause no disruption this year.
Afterwards: Muslim pilgrims leave the Grand Mosque after performing their evening prayers in the holy city of Mecca on Monday
All
together: Haj must be performed at least once in their lifetime by all
Muslims capable of making the expensive, difficult journey
Maintaining
safety: Saudi leaders have emphasised it is a strictly religious
occasion and they are prepared to deal with any troublemaking
Beginning:
Wednesday is the first official day of the pilgrimage, with Muslims
following a set form of rites laid out by the Prophet, and it culminates
on Friday
However,
Egyptian cleric Yusuf al-Qaradawi last week called on Muslims to
ostracise Iran and Russia during haj over their backing of Assad,
stoking an already tense atmosphere.In his Friday sermon the imam of Mecca's Grand Mosque, Saleh bin Abdullah Hamid, also railed against the violence in Syria, calling on God to ‘be against the forces of oppressors’ there.
Pilgrims said they were praying for an end to the fighting.
‘I pray for the Syrian Muslims to be saved from the oppression they are being subjected to,’ said Abdullah Abdulrahman Mohammed, 69, from Iraqi Kurdistan, a father of 12 who had just performed Friday prayers.
Last year nearly 3million pilgrims performed the haj, with roughly a third from inside the conservative kingdom. The Saudi authorities said there have so far been 1.7million arrivals from abroad and about 200,000 from inside Saudi Arabia.
Mecca's merchants, famed across the Arab world, are already doing a thriving trade as pilgrims stock up on souvenirs such as prayer beads and mats, Korans, dates, gold and zamzam water, pumped from a holy well.
Amazing
numbers: The Saudi authorities said there have so far been 1.7 million
arrivals from abroad and about 200,000 from inside Saudi Arabia
Participant: Muslim pilgrims leave the Grand Mosque after the noon prayer in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, on Monday
Avoidance
of trouble: Authorities are keenly aware of past episodes of violence
at haj, such as in 1979, when attackers seized the Grand Mosque
Together as one: The extraordinary gathering was said by some of the faith to be a visual message that Muslims are united
‘The first time I saw the Kaaba I cried with joy. I prayed for myself and all Muslims,’ said Nafisa Rangrez, 36, from Gujarat in India, who had waited five years for a haj visa.
All Muslims must face towards the Kaaba, the huge black cube at the centre of the Grand Mosque, five times a day for prayer, making a visit to the sanctuary a powerful experience. Pilgrims must circle it seven times when they arrive in Mecca.
Tomorrow is the first official day of the pilgrimage, with Muslims following a set form of rites laid out by the Prophet and culminating on Friday with the Feast of the Sacrifice, Eid al-Adha, a holiday across the Islamic world.
‘I would love to live here for the rest of my life. There's no such place in the entire world. This is a blessed country,’ said Ziad Adam, 23, a theology student from Kenya.
Saudi Arabia's king is formally titled Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques and the ruling family has long based its claims to reign on its guardianship of Islam's birthplace.
Over the past decade it has spent billions of dollars expanding the Grand Mosque and building new infrastructure to avert the stampedes and tent fires that marred past pilgrimages with hundreds of deaths. The last deadly stampede was in 2006, when 360 people were crushed to death.
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