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Hajj: Not a two-week
vacation
By Sachiko Murata and William C. Chttick
The Hajj is a set of rituals that take place in and around Mecca
every year, beginning on the eight and ending on the thirteenth
day of the last lunar month, Dhu'l-Hijja (The Month of the
Hajj). Mecca was a sacred center long before Islam, and
according to Muslim belief, Adam himself built a sanctuary at
Mecca. Eventually it was rebuilt by Abraham, and by the time of
the appearance of Islam, the Kaaba (cube) had long been a place
of pilgrimage for the Arab tribes. The Koran and the Prophet
modified and resanctified the rituals performed at the Kaaba,
making them a pillar of the religion.
Muslims are required to make the Hajj once in their lifetimes,
but only if they have the means to do so. To understand some of
the significance of the Hajj, one needs to remember that
steamships, airplanes, and buses are products of the past
hundred years. For thirteen hundred years, the vast majority of
Muslims made the journey to Mecca on foot, or perhaps mounted on
a horse or a camel. It was not a matter of taking a two-week
vacation, and then back to the office on Monday morning.
Rather, for most Muslims the Hajj was a difficult journey of
several months if not a year or two. And once the trip was made,
who wanted to hurry? People stayed in Mecca or Medina for a few
months to recuperate and to prepare for their return, to meet
other Muslims from all over the Islamic world, and to study.
Often they stayed on for years, and often they simply came there
to die, however long that might take.
Today, one can go to Mecca in a few hours from anyplace in the
world. Some people decide to do the Hajj this year because they
did Bermuda last year. In the past, most Muslims had to fulfill
strict conditions in order to make the journey. In effect, they
had to be prepared for death. They had to assume that they would
never return, and make all the necessary preparations for that
eventuality. One of the conditions for making the Hajj is that
people have to pay off all their debts. If a man wanted to make
the Hajj, but his wife did not want to accompany him, he had to
make sure that she was provided for in the way in which she was
accustomed. He had to see to the provision of his children as
well, and anyone else for whom he was responsible.
Traditionally, the Hajj was looked upon as a grand rite of
passage, a move from involvement with this world to occupation
with God. In order to make Hajj, people had to finish with
everything that kept them occupied on a day-to-day basis. They
had to answer God's call to come and visit Him. The Hajj was
always looked upon as a kind of death, because Koran repeatedly
describes death as the meeting with God, and the Kaaba is the
house of God.
The Hajj, in short, was a death and a meeting with God, and the
return from the Hajj was a rebirth. This helps explain why the
title "Hajji" ("one who has made the Hajj") has always been
highly respected throughout the Islamic world.
Hajjis were looked upon as people who were no longer involved
with the pettiness of everyday life. They were treated as models
of piety and sanctity, and no doubt most of them assumed the
responsibilities toward society that the title implies, even if
some took advantage of the respect that was accorded to them.
Excerpted from the book "The Vision of Islam" by Sachiko Murata
and William C. Chttick. |
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