Hajj
(Pilgrimage to Mecca)
The fifth pillar of Islam is to make a
pilgrimage (Hajj) to Makkah, in Saudi Arabia, at least once
in one's lifetime. This pillar is obligatory for every Muslim,
male or female, provided that he/she is physically and financially
able to do so.
Prerequisites for performing the Hajj
are to be a Muslim, to be free, to be an adult or mature enough,
to be of sound mind, and to have the ability to afford the journey
and maintain one's dependents back home for the duration. The
reward for the Hajj is nothing less than Paradise.
The Hajj is the ultimate form of worship,
as it involves the spirit of all the other rituals and demands
of the believer great sacrifice. On this unique occasion, nearly
two million Muslims from all over the globe meet one another
in a given year. Regardless of the season, pilgrims wear special
clothes (Ihram) - two, very simple, unsewn white garments -
which strips away all distinctions of wealth, status, class
and culture; all stand together and equal before Allah (God).
The rites of Hajj, which go back to the
time of Prophet Abraham who built the Ka'bah, are observed over
five or six days, beginning on the eighth day of the last month
of the year, named Dhul-Hijjah (pilgrimage). These rites include
circumambulating the Ka'bah (Tawwaf), and going between the
mountains of Safa and Marwah, as Hajjar (Abraham's wife) did
during her search for water for her son Isma'il. Then the pilgrims
stand together on the wide plain of Arafah and join in prayers
for God's forgiveness, in what is often thought of as a preview
of the Last Judgment. The pilgrims also cast stones at a stone
pillar which represents Satan. The pilgrimage ends with a festival,
called 'Id al-Adha, which is celebrated with prayers, the sacrifice
of an animal, and the exchange of greetings and gifts in Muslim
communities everywhere.