REFLEKSI:  Less money less confortable, no money no honey  and no funny. Money 
is the rich men heaven.


http://www.arabnews.com/?page=1&section=0&article=88124&d=13&m=10&y=2006&pix=kingdom.jpg&category=Kingdom


            Friday, 13, October, 2006 (21, Ramadhan, 1427)


                  Hotel Prices Force Many Pilgrims to Live Away From Haram
                  Galal Fakkar, Arab News 
                    


                  JEDDAH, 13 October 2006 - The fashion in building luxury 
hotels and expensive residential towers in the immediate vicinity of the Grand 
Mosque in Makkah has forced many Umrah pilgrims to seek accommodation far away 
from the Haram.

                  Affluent pilgrims who can afford to pay SR10,000 a night - a 
price that extortionately increases during the last days of Ramadan - find the 
expensive facilities provided by luxury hotels both appealing and convenient 
leaving a bulk of low-income pilgrims to find cheap lodging far from the Grand 
Mosque.

                  High profile international hotels such as the Makkah Hilton, 
the Dar Al-Tawhid International, the Intercontinental, the Sheraton, the 
Metropolitan and Radissons have occupied some of the prime spots around the 
Grand Mosque. Some of the residential towers are 60-story high and the boom in 
luxury hotels being built over the past 15 years have sent the price of land 
close to the Grand Mosque skyrocketing. 

                  On the other hand 80 percent of Umrah pilgrims - who belong 
to the middle class, lower middle class and the working class - mostly end up 
taking accommodation at places far from the Haram during the Umrah season. In 
fact some people are reported to be able to only find affordable rooms at 
locations up to 10 kilometers away from the Haram - including the Rasifa, the 
Ring Road and the Aziziah districts of Makkah.

                  A worker at the courtyard outside the massive prayer complex 
said that with poorer pilgrims taking up hotels far away, many people end up 
sleeping and squatting in and around the Grand Mosque. "The aged pilgrims find 
it very hard to go to their rooms, which tend to be very far away, and return 
to the Haram for every prayer. Praying at the Grand Mosque as much as possible 
is the goal of every pilgrim. So they prefer to rest at a place close to the 
Haram during the intervals between the prayers," he said.

                  Hassan Al-Badwi, a 60-year-old Moroccan pilgrim said, "My 
tour operator in Tangiers told me that my rooms in Makkah and Madinah would be 
close to both Harams. Having arrived in Makkah I found that my room was on top 
of a hill 1.5 kilometers away from the Haram. My rheumatic legs give me hell 
when I walk this distance. It is hardly possible for me to go there and come 
back for each prayer."

                  Al-Badwi added that it was his life-long desire to perform 
the daily five prayers at the Grand Mosque in Makkah. "I don't bother going to 
my room after each prayer. If my room was closer then I would have gone there 
to rest," he said, adding that he found it difficult to visit the public 
lavatories located close to the Grand Mosque.

                  Nafisa Al-Fayoumi, an Egyptian pilgrim, said she has rented a 
hotel room three kilometers away from the Grand Mosque and so stays in the 
courtyard outside the Grand Mosque from Asar until the Taraweeh prayers (late 
at night). "Umrah has become expensive. I have to get a taxi to travel to and 
from my hotel everyday. If I go by foot then I end up losing my way," said 
Nafisa. 

                  She added that the aged women who have come for Umrah with 
her were not capable of attending the prayers at the Haram because of the 
distance between their lodgings and the Haram. Ayman Al-Safdi, a Syrian Haj and 
Umrah organizer, appealed to investors and hotel companies close to the Haram 
to make part of their constructions affordable to lower income groups as well. 
"They should make accommodation to all people - the rich and the poor. The rich 
pilgrims only account for 20 percent of the total number of pilgrims.
                 
           
     


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