About
two million Muslims from around the world have been moving out of Saudi
Arabia's holy city of Mecca on their annual pilgrimage, or Hajj.
The event, which takes
them in the footsteps of Mohammed to the barren plain of Mina and the
slopes of Mount Arafat, is the biggest yearly mass movement of people
on the planet.
It will take years for everyone to forget 11
September and the identities of the perpetrators
 |
|
Hasan Ahmed
Egyptian pilgrim |
This year's Hajj has been
overshadowed by the fallout from last September's attacks on the
United States and the war in Afghanistan.
But the passion of the
believers, for whom the pilgrimage is meant to cleanse the soul, was
as fervent as ever as they drove in their hundreds of thousands out of
the city.
Traffic
jams continued into the night |
There were mile-long
traffic jams as buses left Mecca, some with pilgrims riding on top
after a day spent waiting in the scorching Saudi sun.
"At thy service, my
God, at thy service," they chanted in clouds of dust and smog,
heading for the city of white tents pitched in the desert.
Obligation
For all the efforts of
Muslim leaders to distance themselves from 11 September, many in the
West still associate the violence - however nebulously - with Islam,
as the BBC's religious affairs correspondent Mark Duff reports.
But the journey is a
once-in-a-lifetime obligation for every physically-able Muslim who can
afford it and about 1.35m of the pilgrims are from outside Saudi
Arabia.
The
Hajj will end in celebratory feasting
|
They include about 200,000
people from the world's biggest Muslim nation, Indonesia, and about
10,000 American Muslims - an increase on last year despite earlier
fears that many Americans would be deterred from going.
Arriving pilgrims faced
stringent security checks, including digital eye tests, as they
entered Saudi Arabia on their way to Mecca.
One Egyptian pilgrim,
Hasan Ahmed, acknowledged the damage done to his religion by the
suicide hijackers who were mainly Saudi by nationality.
"A few crazy men give
all of us Muslims such a bad name," he said.
"It will take years
for everyone to forget 11 September and the identities of the
perpetrators."
But there was militant
feeling among some of the pilgrims, too, with one, Ahmed Magbour from
Egypt, calling for the "crushing" of Islam's enemies, the
Associated Press news agency reports.
Security concerns
The concentration of so
many people in a relatively small area has in the past proved a recipe
for disaster.
Fire and stampedes have
claimed the lives of hundreds of people over the years.
The people and government of Iran condemn...
the aggressive and barbaric nature of the US administration
 |
|
Message by Ayatollah Khamenei, Iranian
spiritual leader, to the pilgrims |
But it is the potential
for political unrest that is of greatest concern to the Saudis this
year.
In 1987 some 400 people
died during clashes between security forces and Iranian pilgrims
protesting against Israel and the United States.
This year, a message
issued by the Iranian spiritual leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, to the
pilgrims accuses Washington of using 11 September as a "pretext
for coercive policies".
Pilgrims
come from all over the Muslim world |
The Saudi authorities have
insisted that they will not tolerate any attempt to exploit the Hajj
for political purposes.
One senior Saudi security
official boasted that security was so good this year that police and
guards inside Mecca were unarmed.
"In other places of
the world police are heavily armed even in sports events," said
Brigadier Mansour Turki.