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What Are The Five Pillars
Of Islam?
Hajj or Pilgrimage
The pilgrimage
to Makkah (the hajj) is an obligation only for those who are
physically and financially able to do so. Nevertheless, over
two million people go to Makkah each year from every corner
of the globe providing a unique opportunity for those of different
nations to meet one another.
The annual hajj begins in the twelfth month of the Islamic year
(which is lunar, not solar, so that hajj and Ramada-n fall sometimes
in summer, sometimes in winter). Pilgrims wear special clothes:
simple garments that strip away distinctions of class and culture,
so that all stand equal before God. |
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The rites
of the hajj, which are of Abrahamic origin, include going around
the Ka'bah seven times, and going seven times between the hills
of Safa and Marwa as did Hagar (Hajir, Abraham's wife) during her
search for water. The pilgrims later stand together on the wide
plains of 'Arafat (a large expanse of desert outside Makkah) and
join in prayer for God's forgiveness, in what is often thought as
a preview of the Day of Judgment.
The close of the hajj is marked by a festival, the 'Id al Adha,
which is celebrated with prayers and the exchange of gifts in Muslim
communities everywhere. This and the 'Id al Fitr, a festive day
celebrating the end of Ramada-n, are the two holidays of the Islamic
calendar.
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