Editor's Note:
This article, part two of a series of five reports, originally appeared in the online edition of
The Christian Science Monitor
and is reprinted to mark the current Hajj in Saudi Arabia. Also check the SUSRIS
Special Section "Hajj 2008" on the web site. (Link
below)
On
Hajj, Battling Sin and Doubt
Millions
of Muslims from around the world are attending the hajj
(pilgrimage) in Saudi Arabia.
By
Faiza Saleh Ambah
[Part 2 of 5]
FRIDAY,
JAN. 29, MINA, SAUDI ARABIA - For
the next five days I'm asked to concentrate only on God.
"We're not going to talk about guys, or gossip or
anything," Reem warns me. "I'm going to take advantage
of the next five days and I don't want the two of you to distract
me," she says, but I think she means mainly me.
Consider
hajj a short board meeting, says my cousin Allal.
"Concentrate on prayers and God and trying to be a better
person during the next five days and forget everything else."
As we
head to our rooms to get ready for ihram (state of
hajj-related sacredness; also the pilgrims' garb), she looks
closely at my hands. "Is that nail polish? And on your feet
too?" She shakes her head in consternation and fetches cotton
and nail polish remover.
"Hurry
up, we don't have much time."
As I
pass the cotton over my nails, I try to get into the right frame
of mind. Alone in my room, I pack my purse, removing my lipstick,
perfume, and blush. Then I cut my nails, bathe, and wash my hair.
As I go through my ihram preparations I try purposefully to
shed the worldly and concentrate on the Godly.
I
look in the mirror as I put on my white head scarf, T-shirt,
pantaloons, and white robe and talk myself into a spiritual
immersion to accompany the physical transformation.
Suddenly
the smile of a man I recently had dinner with comes to mind. I
shoo the image away but continue to trip over my thoughts as I try
to clear my mind of everything but God.
"It's
all right," says Reem. "Just do your best and try to get
your thoughts back on track." Soon it's time for the hajj
intention prayer before we set off. "You remember how, don't
you?" she asks.
I
don't answer and she lays out a prayer rug in front of us.
"Repeat to yourself what I say out loud."
The
Koranic verses are as familiar to me as the voice of my mother and
father. But the prostrations are not. With a sideways glance, I
follow Reem's choreography closely, checking to see whether she
will go down halfway, her hands on her knees, or if it's time for
us to prostrate fully with our forehead on the floor.
I
make it without major mistakes.
The
sun is gentle as we set off for Mina, where we will spend the
night. On the way, I see cars and buses and pickup trucks loaded
with men in the ihram. I feel close to those strangers, and
it reminds me of the feeling of belonging when I was a child and
we would go to the beach with my uncles in a caravan of five cars.
We reach Mina several hours later and are led to our first-class
accommodation; luxurious prefabricated structures with open
tent-like awnings for ceilings and portable bathrooms with sink,
shower, and toilet. With my cousin and his wife's family there are
10 of us sharing four rooms and a living room with a computer,
television, telephones, and Internet access. But these lodgings
are atypical.
A
dozen pilgrims often share one room and many sleep outdoors on
mats if the weather permits. After a nap, I decide to go out
exploring with my nephew. Taghreed, a heavy smoker who left her
cigarettes behind on purpose, gives me money when I head out.
"Marlboro Lights please," she says, then gives me a
'Don't cross me' look.
My
nephew Saleh and I put on our badges, which get us back into our
camp and help us find it if we get lost, and head off. The tiny
city of Mina, a valley partly enclosed by a range of mountains, is
like a huge picnic ground. There's a festive air to the city,
which comes alive one week out of the year, as cars compete for
space on the roads and bridges and highways with the huge crowds.
Families spread colored mats on the sidewalks and other open areas
as they read, relax, sleep, and eat. A man on a bicycle sells blue
face masks, which a lot of the police officers and hajjis are
wearing this year. A peddler hawks Hajj Mats with Inflatable
Pillow Made in China to passersby. I hear Urdu, Hindi, Turkish,
Arabic, and English as we stroll.
After
sundown prayers, mosques around the city are broadcasting Koranic
verses, sermons, and information about the hajj. The message: If
you make it through the next three to five days without sinning or
harming yourself or anyone, you will have accomplished a
successful hajj. There's an aura of anticipation in our camp;
tomorrow everyone will get a chance to have their sins forgiven
and have their prayers answered, and they want to get it right. In
the women's lecture room, in a tent near ours, the Islamic scholar
is asked about cigarettes. Harmful, she says. And men who look at
you? Try to avoid their gaze, she advises.
Back
in my room, I hear a preacher talking over the loudspeakers about
the meaning of the Day of Standing Together Before God, or Yawm
al-Wukuf, which takes place the next day. "God will forgive
us all our sins. We will be as sinless as the day we were
born," are the last clear words I hear before he breaks down
weeping. Soon I hear a second broadcast from another mosque.
I ask
Taghreed what she's going to pray for the following day, but I can
hardly hear her for the cacophony of the competing sermons blaring
from the loudspeakers.
The
lectures are over after the final evening prayers and Taghreed
finishes her list of names of family and friends she wants to pray
for. Reem, who's already done, contemplates what she's going to
ask for herself. "Tomorrow I'm going to forgive everyone who
has ever harmed me because I expect God to forgive me
everything," she says.
An
Egyptian sheikh comes over to talk to us and I ask him about the
significance of the Day of Standing Together Before God.
"This is God's favorite time and place. He has asked us to
come to Him with our prayers at Mount Mercy in Arafat on the ninth
day of this month. He has said he will forgive all our sins on
this day."
"Why?"
I ask. "What's so special about tomorrow?"
"When
you love someone, you do as he says, and we love God and follow
what he asks us to do. We don't have to understand before we do
it, we will understand later. It's a matter of putting faith over
curiosity and human nature."
The
sheikh's answer sounds familiar. You will only know once you
believe.
I am hoping that despite
my doubts and curiosity, I will be considered enough of a believer
to reap rewards at the plain of Arafat, though I'm not sure
exactly what. As an outward sign of my good intentions, I refuse
to kill the large mosquitoes that are sticking their noses through
my robe and biting my calves, so that I don't break my ihram.
Previously
published by the Christian Science Monitor and reprinted with
permission.
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