Muslim pilgrims pray, shirk blazing sun, as haj reaches peak

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Muslim pilgrims make their way to Mount Arafat in the high point of the haj pilgrimage on June 5.

Muslim pilgrims make their way to Mount Arafat in the high point of the haj pilgrimage on June 5.

PHOTO: EPA-EFE

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MOUNT ARAFAT, Saudi Arabia – Muslim worshippers prayed on Mount Arafat in the high point of the

haj pilgrimage

on June 5, as the authorities urged them to avoid the hottest hours of the day after tragedy struck in 2024.

Thousands of white-robed pilgrims recited Koranic verses from dawn on the 70m rocky rise near Mecca, where the Prophet Mohammed is believed to have given his last sermon.

But numbers thinned by mid-day following official warnings for pilgrims to stay inside between 10am and 4pm, a year after 1,301 people died in temperatures that hit 51.8 deg C.

“I came here early to (avoid) the sun and later I will pray inside my tent,” said 54-year-old Adel Ismail, from Syria.

The Saudi authorities have taken several steps to reduce the risk from heat at the haj, which has drawn 1.5 million pilgrims to one of the world’s hottest regions.

Shaded areas have been expanded by 50,000 sq m, thousands more medics are on standby and more than 400 cooling units have been deployed, the Haj Ministry said last week.

The Saudis have also cracked down on unregistered, non-fee paying pilgrims, who lack access to the full amenities and made up more than 80 per cent of the deaths in 2024.

Ice packs were handed to people walking towards Mount Arafat, with some placing the small bags on their heads.

With temperatures reaching 42 deg C, officials ushered people away if they spent too long in one place near the bouldered hill, which has fans spraying mist and cool air at its foot.

‘I don’t think about the sun’

After sunset, the pilgrims will head to Muzdalifah, halfway between Arafat and the sprawling tent city of Mina, where they will gather pebbles for the symbolic “stoning of the devil” on June 6.

Despite the heat, they were generally delighted to be performing the haj, one of the five pillars of Islam that must be completed at least once by all Muslims with the means.

“I don’t think about the sun or the temperature or anything like that,” Ahmed, a 44-year-old from Egypt, said. “Because standing in Arafat is a great thing and a beautiful day, and as you can see, all the pilgrims” are doing it.

Ali, 33, from Pakistan, said he felt “blessed” to take part.

“This is something that I used to see every year on the TV screen during haj and I always thought: ‘I wish I could be here’,” he said.

Through tears of joy, Ms Iman Abdel Khaleq said she had wanted to perform the haj for 10 years and was overwhelmed with emotion as she arrived at Arafat.

“It’s a big dream for me that I had almost given up hope of realising,” the Egyptian woman in her fifties said from the foot of the mount.

High-tech haj

Along with the anti-heat measures and thousands of extra personnel, Saudi Arabia is also using an

arsenal of high-tech tools

to help better manage crowds.

More than 15,000 cameras run through artificial intelligence software are monitoring the holy sites and walkways during an event that has a history of deadly stampedes.

Officials have also clamped down hard on unregistered pilgrims looking to sneak into Mecca, using raids, drone surveillance and a barrage of text alerts.

Late on June 5, a Haj Ministry source said the measures have succeeded in preventing overcrowding at the holy sites so far.

Hajj permits are allocated to countries on a quota basis and distributed to individuals by a lottery.

But even for those who can obtain them, the steep costs prompt many to attempt the haj without a permit, even though they risk arrest and deportation if caught.

Saudi Arabia earns billions of dollars a year from the haj, and the lesser pilgrimage known as umrah, undertaken at other times of the year. AFP

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