Step 1- Mikat
   
  
   
  ARRIVAL AND CHANGE: The Purifying Rite of Ihram

The first rites of the Hajj take place at one of the border stations on the 
edge of Mecca's sacred territory. A pilgrim arrives here as a person identified 
by a name, social position, race, nationality, and a daily way of life. Before 
crossing into Hajj territory, the pilgrim leaves all this behind, intentionally 
adopting the universal identity of a person dedicated to God. To mark this 
profound change of perspective, men and women exchange their distinguishing 
clothes for more uniform garments: Men put on two strips of unadorned white 
cloth, women adopt more modest forms of their usual dress. The clothes act as a 
leveler. They de-emphasize the differences that separate people—race, wealth, 
social position—and underscore the humanity all of us share as we stand before 
God.

  Step 2-City of Meeca
   
  
   
  
   
   
  THE HAJJ RITES IN MECCA: Circling the House of God, Walking between Hagar's 
Hills, Drinking from the Zamzam Well.

MECCA: The Hajj rites continue in Mecca, a spiritual crossroads that has 
attracted pilgrims since pre-recorded times. Muslims believe that Abraham 
visited Mecca and helped his son Ishmael build a house of worship, the Kabah, 
here. Many centuries later Muhammad was born in Mecca. The first Muslim 
community emerged within its walls. Today, Mecca is a modern city of more than 
a million people. The Kabah still occupies the town center. The enormous 
open-air mosque that surrounds it is the focal point of the next stage of the 
Hajj.

Inside the mosque walls, every pilgrim performs several simple rites. First, 
you circle the Kabah seven times in a counter clockwise direction. This rite, 
called Turning or Tawaf, is a form of prayer performed only in Mecca. Going 
around the shrine's draped walls, you literally place God's House at the center 
of your life.

Pilgrims now cross the mosque to a long corridor on its southern side. The 
corridor, or Masa'a, runs between two foothills enclosed within the building. 
Here pilgrims walk back and forth seven times at a brisk pace in a rite called 
Sa'y or Running that imitates the steps of Hagar, Ishmael's mother in the 
Torah, who rushed between the hills in search of life-giving water for her 
infant son. The story and the rite express the effort required in a person's 
search for salvation. The sudden appearance of a well in this desert landscape 
is the core of a miracle that Muslims believe saved Hagar and saved a branch of 
Abraham's family in Mecca. Not accidentally, this rite places a mother's story 
at the heart of the Hajj.

The Zamzam well that saved Hagar and Ishmael is within the mosque, too. Each 
pilgrim sips from its water as a reminder of the real results of spiritual 
effort and to be connected with the foundations of a religious tradition that 
emphasizes the worship of one God.
   
  Step 3- Mina Valley - Plain of Arfat
   
  
   
   
   
  THE HAJJ RITES IN THE DESERT: Mina Valley, Plain of Arafat

At this point, the Hajj becomes a moveable ritual, stopping four times along a 
circular fifteen-mile route through a desert landscape ringed with granite 
hills.

On the eighth day of the pilgrimage month, pilgrims all leave the city and 
troop five miles east, into Mina Valley. Here, a tent city of enormous 
proportions fills the valley for miles around. Pilgrims pass the night in Mina, 
leaving behind the comforts of civilization and further dissolving class and 
cultural distinctions, as everyone becomes a wayfarer.

On the morning of the ninth day, the exodus pushes another five miles east, to 
the Plain of Arafat. Here the high point of the Hajj takes place in the form of 
a group vigil, called the Day of Standing Together (Yawm al-Wakuf). At Arafat, 
pilgrims are transported into a timeless frame of mind: Arafat is the location 
where, Muslims believe, Adam and Eve were reunited after leaving Eden. This is 
a place set aside for spiritual reunion, where pilgrims come to seek pardon, 
reclaim their faith, and re-collect their spirit. Muslims often refer to this 
portion of the Hajj as a rehearsal for the Day of Judgment.


  Step 4- Muzdalifah
   
  
   
  THE HAJJ RITES IN THE DESERT: Muzdalifah

At sundown, the Hajj population moves en masse to a nearby open plain, called 
Muzdalifa. Here, pilgrims participate in a meditative nightlong vigil. They 
rest, pray, read, eat, and share their experiences in a quiet period. Many also 
collect the pebbles they will throw at the "Jamarat" pillars in the morning. At 
dawn, the Hajj is on its way again.
   
  Step 5- Mina Valley , Mina encampment, Mecca
   
  
   
   
   
  RETURN TO MINA VALLEY AND CONCLUSION OF THE HAJJ

On the 10th day, starting at dawn the pilgrims circulate back to Mina Valley.

Three pillars stand at the center of Mina Valley. In the next three days each 
pilgrim will pass by them three separate times, performing a rite called the 
Stoning, in which you cast small pebbles at a series of three pillars 
representing Satan. This athletic activity engages each pilgrim, physically and 
symbolically, in resisting temptation and warding off wrong.

At Mina pilgrims are free to exchange the Hajj garments for their usual dress. 
Many mark this transition by having their hair cut.

Now a three-day feast begins to celebrate the end of Hajj. Muslims around the 
world join in this celebration.

During this period pilgrims may return again to Mecca. Before leaving the city 
for home, they perform the seven turns around the Kabah one last time. The 
formal Hajj is completed now. It is up to each pilgrim to carry its spirit back 
home.

   
  Keep Remember Me and My family into your Prayers,
  Minahil Ali.

  



 

       
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