Hajj Pilgrimage Fast Facts | CNN

Posted by Patria Henriques on Saturday, August 31, 2024
CNN  — 

Here’s a look at Hajj, an annual pilgrimage to Mecca in Saudi Arabia.

On average, more than two million Muslims a year perform the pilgrimage.

Facts

June 14-19, 2024 - The Hajj pilgrimage is expected to take place (dates may vary slightly for different countries depending on the sighting of the New Moon).

June 26-July 1, 2023 - The Hajj pilgrimage takes place with all Covid-19 restrictions relaxed.

Hajj, Hadj or Hadjdj - the spelling HAJJ is the preferred CNN style.

READ: A Journey through Hajj, Islam’s special pilgrimage

Other Facts

Performing Hajj is one of the five pillars of Islam.

Islam requires every Muslim who is physically and financially able to make the journey to the holy city of Mecca at least once in his or her life.

Muslim pilgrims perform the 'Tawaf' ritual around the Kaaba at Mecca's Grand Mosque before leaving the holy Saudi city at the end of the annual hajj pilgrimage on December 10, 2008. The official Saudi News Agency (SPA) reported that the most recent statistics put the total number of pilgrims this year at more than 2.4 million, almost 1.73 million from abroad and 679,000 from within the kingdom, mostly foreign residents. AFP PHOTO/KHALED DESOUKI (Photo credit should read KHALED DESOUKI/AFP/Getty Images) KHALED DESOUKI/AFP/AFP/Getty Images video

Hajj takes place two months and 10 days after Ramadan ends, during the Islamic month of Dhul-Hijjah.

The height of Hajj corresponds with the major Islamic holy day Eid al-Adha, which commemorates Abraham’s readiness to sacrifice his son on Divine orders.

The pilgrimage, conducted over five days, includes numerous detailed rituals including wearing a special garment that symbolizes human equality and unity before God, a circular, counter-clockwise procession around the Kaaba, and the symbolic stoning of evil.

hajj pilgrimage schams elwazer intv ctw_00010515.jpg video

Kaaba (Ka’bah), a cube-shaped structure draped in black silk, is the most sacred shrine of Islam and the chief goal of the pilgrimage.

There is a black stone enclosed in a silver ring in the eastern corner of the Kaaba. Muslims believe that the stone was given to Abraham by the angel Gabriel. Participants touch or kiss the stone to end the ceremony around the Kaaba.

People who have completed the pilgrimage may add the phrase al-Hajj or hajji (pilgrim) to their names.

Incidents/Stampedes

1987 - More than 400 people, mainly Iranian Shiite pilgrims, are killed in clashes with Saudi security forces during anti-Western protests in Mecca.

1990 - 1,426 pilgrims are trampled to death.

1994 - A stampede near Jamarat Bridge kills 270 pilgrims.

April 1997 - A fire in Mina, Saudi Arabia, tears through a sprawling, overcrowded tent city, trapping and killing more than 340 pilgrims and injuring 1,500.

1998 - One hundred eighty people die in a stampede near Mecca at the end of Hajj.

February 1, 2004 - A stampede kills 251 Muslim pilgrims and injures 244 more at a stone-throwing ritual which has been the source of deadly trampling in the past.

January 5, 2006 - A small hotel in Mecca collapses, killing at least 76 people. The hotel, Luluat Alkheir, is occupied by Asian pilgrims when it collapses.

January 12, 2006 - A stampede kills at least 363 people. The stampede, like others in the past, happens during the stone-throwing ritual in which the pilgrims stone a symbolic devil.

September 11, 2015 - Days before the start of the Hajj, 107 people are killed when a powerful storm topples a construction crane, sending it crashing through the roof of the Grand Mosque in Mecca. At least 238 others are injured, according to the nation’s civil defense authorities. The Grand Mosque is the largest in the world and surrounds the Kaaba.

September 24, 2015 - During the annual Hajj pilgrimage, a stampede kills more than 700 people and injures nearly 900 others, according to state media. The incident occurs during the ritual known as “stoning the devil” in the tent city of Mina.

May 30, 2016 - Iran bars its pilgrims from traveling to Mecca to take part in the Hajj pilgrimage after accusing Saudi Arabia of failing to guarantee the safety of its citizens.

June 22, 2020 - A statement from Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Hajj and Umrah states that as Covid-19 cases continue to grow globally, and because of the risks of coronavirus spreading in crowded spaces and from other countries, the Hajj will “take place this year with a limited number of pilgrims from all nationalities residing in Saudi Arabia only, who are willing to perform Hajj.”

July 28, 2020-August 1, 2020 - Only about 1,000 pilgrims perform the Hajj.

Worshippers walk around the Kaaba, Islam's holiest shrine, at the Grand Mosque in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, on Tuesday, July 20. Fayez Nureldine/AFP/Getty Image A Muslim pilgrim takes part in the symbolic stoning of the devil Tuesday while he practices social distancing in Mina. Amr Nabil/AP Saudi police officers stand guard as people walk around the Kaaba on Tuesday. Fayez Nureldine/AFP/Getty Images Muslims pray at the Namira Mosque on Monday. Fayez Nureldine/AFP/Getty Images A pilgrim prays at Mount Arafat on Monday. Amr Nabil/AP Thousands of pilgrims leave after prayers at the Namira Mosque on Monday. Amr Nabil/AP Saudi police guard the entrance to Mount Arafat on Monday. Fayez Nureldine/AFP/Getty Images A pilgrim walks in a corridor of a tent camp as a doctor works in a camp clinic in Mina on Sunday. Amr Nabil/AP Pilgrims pray in front of the Al-Safa mountain at the Grand Mosque on Sunday. Amr Nabil/AP Workers at the Grand Mosque disinfect the grounds around the Kaaba on Saturday. Amr Nabil/AP A woman receives calls July 14 at the National Center for Security Operations in Mecca. Amr Nabil/AP Sudanese workers disinfect tents in Mina as they prepare for Hajj pilgrims on July 14. Amr Nabil/AP Saudi workers embroider Islamic calligraphy, using either pure silver threads or silver threads plated with gold, as they prepare the Kiswa, or drape, that covers the Kaaba during Hajj. Amr Nabil/AP Tents are set up in Mina on July 13. Amr Nabil/AP Security personnel use smart screens to watch pilgrims at a reception center in Mecca on July 12. Amr Nabil/AP Workers set up accommodations for pilgrims at the Mina tent camp on July 12. Amr Nabil/APPrev Next

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