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5
To Perform Hajj
(pilgrimage to the
Ka'bah)
In many verses,
the Quran alludes to life being a journey toward the
Creator.
“Verily, we belong to God, and, verily, to Him we
are returning.”
“Everything in the heavens and
in the earth belong to God; and to God all things will
be returned.”
“And unto Allah leads the
[straight] Way, but there are ways that deviate.”
“Hasn’t he had news of what
was in the books of Moses and Abraham…that your Lord,
He is the [final] goal?”
“[The believers say,] ‘We
hear, and we obey, [we seek] Your forgiveness, our
Lord; and to You is the end of all journeys.’”
A scholar from
the second generation of Muslims was asked, “What will
it be like to go before Allah?” He answered, “For some
it will be like a reunion with a long-lost loved one.
For others it will be like a runaway slave being
dragged back to his master.”
Hajj is a
reminder that life is a journey. You disentangle
yourself from the routine of life and forego the
comforts and familiarity of home. You expose yourself
to uncertainty, inconvenience - maybe even danger - in
search of a spiritual gain.
Of course,
pilgrimage is a feature of many or most religions. One
of the things that makes Hajj unique is that
this pilgrimage is made to the first house ever built
for the worship of the One God. Allah says in the
Qur’an,
“The first House [of worship] appointed for
mankind was that at Bakkah (Mecca), a blessed place, a
guidance to the peoples.”
“And remember [that]
Abraham and Ishmael raised the foundations of the
House.”
The fact that
Abraham built the Ka’bah (The greatest Islamic mosque)
means that it is quite ancient, but this verse implies
that Abraham and Ishmael raised the House on
foundations that were already there, which would make
it even older. The physical environment of Mecca is
devoid of anything that people naturally take delight
in. It is a forbidding landscape of searing desert and
black mountains that remind one of the surface of the
moon. So the motive for coming there has to be
spiritual, not worldly.
Many of the
actions commemorated in Hajj are based on
actions done by Abraham, his son Ishmael and his wife
Hagar. Their actions were expressions of the readiness
to sacrifice everything for the pleasure of God. Thus
Hajj affirms the continuity of God’s religion,
the religion of all the prophets, and reminds the
participants that the willingness to sacrifice is a
key feature of a believer’s personality. Hajj
also becomes a form of training in patience and
endurance. For the pilgrimage to be accepted a person
must refrain from arguments and fighting. When more
than two million people are crowded together there is
bound to be jostling and long waits to use toilets,
bathe, etc. It is a marvel that so many people gather
every year without the brawls and rampages so common
in rock festivals and other types of gatherings. The
reward for performing Hajj properly and
refraining from arguments, fights and lewd behavior is
that the pilgrim will return home as free of sin as
the day his mother gave birth to him. Muslims do not
believe in original sin or inherited sin, so that
means all his sins will be forgiven.
Another
difference between Hajj and other pilgrimages
is that no other gathering is so universal. Virtually
all of the world’s races, ethnic groups and languages
are represented. People literally come from every
continent on earth, except, perhaps, Antarctica. God
told Abraham:
“And proclaim the Pilgrimage among men; they
will come to you on foot and [mounted] on every kind
of camel, lean on account of journeys through deep and
distant mountain highways, that they may witness
things of benefit to them.”
They come
together in a spiritual environment that emphasizes
their common humanity. The men all wear two unsewn
pieces of white cloth that erase the distinctions of
wealth, education and status. The huge assembly of
people on the plain of Arafah reminds the pilgrims
that all humanity will be assembled on a featureless
plain on the Day of Judgment. The white garments of
the men are reminiscent of the funeral shroud.
It was the
experience of Hajj that caused Malcolm X to
reconsider the racist teachings he had embraced and
propagated as the leading spokesman of the so-called
Nation of Islam. He had never had an encounter with a
white person in America that did not reinforce his
view that white people were devils. Yet at Hajj
he saw people of every shade of brown, yellow, red and
white eating together from the same plate, sleeping
side by side and worshipping the same God as brothers
and sisters. What a difference from America, where
white Christians and black Christians worshipped Jesus
in segregated churches! When he came back to the U.S.,
he announced that he had been wrong about some of his
conclusions. He held out hope that there was a
possibility for white and black people to live
together peacefully in America, if they were to accept
the real Islam
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