Diabolic Digest

Bite-sized muse and views.... A damn site better than other reads.

Part III

A Meccan tragedy

 

Spurred by both spiritual and secular curiosity, Andy Scott jumped at the chance to go to Mecca on Hajj and exercise his dormant acquired religion. In this final episode, tragedy strikes as the Hajj winds up.

 

December 2004

 

At 9.30, my colleague’s phone rang. There had been some accident down at the Jamarat, the pillars symbolising Satan, he said.

 

I called the office then ran down there as fast as I could with my notebook, pen and phone. The area was packed with people but it was impossible to get to the upper level, on the bridge, because security police had blocked access.

 

I asked a policeman what had happened. Absolutely nothing, he claimed. I asked a medic at one of the portable clinics around the area. At least 100 people had perished in a crush on the bridge earlier. My God, I thought. But he wasn’t going to give me his name. I asked another one. At least 200, he said. All I could do was tell the office what I had and try and find people who might have been there or in the vicinity when it happened.

 

When I’d done as much as I could do, I headed back up the steps and the road. I heard there was much consternation among the Information Ministry officials that we had published that the numbers of dead were of that order. “They’re not supposed to say it’s that much yet,” one knowledgeable source in Jeddah had said. They would admit the truth, but in their own good time.

 

The feast of sacrifice

That would prove to be in another two hours – Madani, the Minister of Pilgrimage Affairs, was to hold a news conference. Today was Eid al-Adha and, on this day, most pilgrims took off their robes and the men shave or cut their hair seriously short. It was in that unrobed state that they did the rest of their stone-throwing.

 

Owing to the rush of the morning’s events, I hadn’t managed to shower and change. The minister’s revelation was that 244 people had died (rising to 251) in the stampede and 244 were injured. “There were more than 400 metres of people pushing in the same direction (which) resulted in the collapse of those next to the stoning area and those behind. That led to panic,” he said.

 

But he also said some odd things, suggesting a certain resignation and even nonchalance. The deaths represented “less than one percent of one percent of the pilgrims” and “no matter what research work we do, incidents do happen”, “it’s bad lack rather than any lack of follow-up”. “I confirm that all preparations were made, but God’s intentions are sometimes unknowable.”

 

Blame game

The problem, he said, was pilgrims who had not come on organized trips, but rather were expat labour in the kingdom who had come on their own steam – illegally, since Hajj requires special visas and permits. Many may have done the pilgrimage last year and stayed on in the kingdom illegally.

 

These people were moving around Mecca carrying all their gear with them and that gear had got in the way of other pilgrims on the top of the bridge as hundreds of thousands surged ahead. Most of the dead were Indonesians, Pakistanis and other Asian nationalities. But there was clearly another problem: pilgrims knew how to get onto the bridge but there was no clear process for getting off.

 

 
The bridge filled up with more and more people at a far faster rate than they were able, willing or encouraged to get off. Most pilgrims seemed largely unperturbed, but some seemed a bit wary during the stoning rituals on the rest of Sunday and on Monday. “I’m not frightened, but you have to be careful,” said Indian pilgrim Mohammed Seif, who complained that some pilgrims were still aggressively pushing their way to the pillars.

 

 

Fateful end

“You can stone any time, you don’t have to do it all at once,” he said, which was the view that Saudi clerics were finally prepared to endorse in statements made in the aftermath of the tragedy.

 

“In the end it’s fate,” said Saudi pilgrim Hussein Ahmed. “What can you do with millions of people in the same spot?” And Egyptian Ilhami Osman, who spoke to me as if I was a foreign intruder, as if I was putting on an act that he saw through, said: “Praise be to God, if you die on the Hajj, you are considered a martyr.”

 

Indeed, this was true. They say that many of the old and infirm who come on the pilgrimage do so in the hope or expectation that at this spot they will die. “I pray to God that he will give every Muslim a chance to do this,” said Sudanese pilgrim Yassin Tahir. Nigerian Mohammed Ahmed, an expat labourer in Saudi Arabia, who was on his third pilgrimage, said: “I thank God. It has been a great religious experience for me. It gets better and better every time.”

 

The scribe and the pilgrim

These were stock responses and they ignored the stress of the experience, but honestly reflected the elation the Muslim has at carrying out Hajj. It was what I felt, despite the troubles, not least the trouble of having to write about it and the pressure that that added to my own battle to overcome the feeling of being an outsider.

 

As I write, a culture correspondent is talking to a Moroccan intellectual on an Arab television channel about “the traveller” and the motive behind the desire to travel. “I never saw any design or picture of the citadel in Marrakesh in all its seven centuries in existence except in Orientalist drawings,” the thinker observes. “They wanted to know the dimensions.”

 

I’m sure that’s what some of those pilgrims who I accosted for comments, or some of the ministry officials thought. However, in all ,experience there is that which we choose to make known and that which we don’t.

 

Erasing the T word

The big T word still dominated outside in the real world, with King Fahd and Crown Prince Abdullah issuing a message to Muslims to keep fighting terrorism. “Terrorism is corruption on earth and seeks aggression, destruction and fighting God, his Prophet and Muslims. God abhors anarchists and forbids aggression and has laid down the most severe punishment for aggressors,” they said.

 

“Such acts must be confronted and their falseness exposed so they do not sway the ignorant. They are results of sick minds and deviant ideologies alien to Islam’s laws and principles.”

 

At the Jamarat, meanwhile, police blared warnings via megaphones and helicopters hovered in the sky to try to avert a fresh disaster. On Monday evening, I went down there with a colleague to throw stones and get my hair shaved at the make-shift barbers shop set up alongside the bridge.

 

Braving the crush

The crush that evening was as bad as ever. It was astounding. Tens of thousands of Muslim pilgrims, crowded into the base of a narrow mountain pass to stone the devil, as God commanded, despite the ever-present danger of being crushed to death. Like others, we went at midnight thinking the crowds will be more merciful, but a mini-city of pilgrims had claimed most of the space around the bridge, severely limiting access to the pillars.

 

We headed underneath the bridge where there was a bit more space. A bulldozer had found its way through and was clearing away a mountain of small stones around the base of one of the pillars, dredging up dozens of plastic sandals and slippers thrown by women in anger.

 

The booklets handed out to pilgrims explained: “Some believe they are throwing stones at the devil himself, so they do it with anger and insults, but we are only asked to do the Jamarat in order to remember God. Some throw big stones, shoes or pieces of wood, but this is going too far and the Prophet forbade it.”

 

“USA” had been removed from the central pillar, though the clearing of the stones had revealed “Bush” written at the base of another. Men crowded in to get a good shot at the pillar while women strained at the back to hit the target.

 

Close shave

Although we moved away quickly once we’d finished, we weren’t in safety yet. The way back to the steps that take you up to the road on the mountainside was completely packed because East Asians camped out on the roadside took up most of the space. Police on the other side did nothing about it. “What can we do?” one smirked like it was a comedy when we asked him about this chaos.

 

There were even young boys and girls sitting on the road begging. “Something given for the sake of God!” they shouted, pointlessly. No one was giving. At some point in the middle of this melee, I thought I would never get out alive. The key is to stay calm. Despite everyone’s best efforts to maintain good spirits on the pilgrimage, tempers frayed.

 

The Quran enjoins Muslims to exemplary behaviour in the sacred Utopia of Hajj: “Let there be no obscenity, immorality or argument during Hajj, whatever good you do God will know about it.”

 

But with immense numbers the ritual now draws, it becomes a severe stretch on even the most pious’ good manners. It’s amazing to think there were only 20,000 people here in the eary 1930s, and now two million: 1.4 million from outside and the rest from within Saudi Arabia.

 

Bad manners

That evening at the Jamarat some people’s behaviour was hard to excuse. A Yemeni man charged from the front with a woman in a wheelchair gasping for breath. An Egyptian came from behind on a motorbike. “I didn’t think there would be crowds here,” he announced with an inane grin on his face. “Is there anywhere here that isn’t crowded?” I said back, flatly.

 

Men from Gulf countries tries to protect their fully veiled wives, though the smells, the pushing and the shoving had all but left their modesty in shreds. The standard call for making your way through the crowds was “Tareeg, Ya Haj!” – “Please pilgrims, gang way!” – but it was useless in a situation like this, in this mass of Arabs, Asians, Africans and the odd Westerner.

 

As we eventually neared the stairway, we found that the ground was covered in compressed garbage – two days worth of plastic cups, bits of fruits, wrapping paper, and hair after pilgrims had shaved.

 

“This isn’t Islam,” I heard an Egyptian fuming in disgust. “These are people who don’t have homes in the first place.” In a way he was right, I thought to myself. Our complaints were the complaints of the relatively prosperous about the ways of the poor. It was such an odd sight: the campers sat there silently staring at the mass of people before them.

 

A policeman finally erupted at them. “Get out! Go!” he screamed at the front row. They scurried away without so much as a whimper, gathering up their mats, pots and pans and small parcels of food. Suddenly the ideal of a microcosmic world without social or cultural distinctions or a word raised in anger was exposed for the fallacy, even if a beautiful fallacy, that it essentially was.

 

 

Between ideal and reality

In pilgrimage, anthropologists say, you have a perfect community of believers, it is about seeking forgiveness at the place on Earth where God will most appreciate your efforts to obtain that. These are major themes of Islamic literature on the meaning of Hajj and, from my experience of the event, I would say they are both promoted by the Saudi authorities and cherished by the pilgrims.

 

But the logistics of the pilgrimage make it almost impossible for individuals to stick to polite behaviour and, in fact, results in behaviour that would require the forgiveness of God and ironically this happens in the overzealous, even selfish, pursuit of his favour and forgiveness on the pilgrimage!

 

Secondly, the divisions of class and culture are always lurking just beneath the surface. The Saudi authorities frown on those who don’t do things their way and, in particular, Asians who are, in any case, treated with some contempt in Saudi society.

 

Further, there is a danger that the Hajj is being reduced to simply a set of actions emptied of meaning, an empty shell. Tired pilgrims are herded from one section to the next. But this is encouraged by the fact that the rituals of pilgrimage at Mecca are so many and so demanding.

 

Unifying pillar

The Hajj really is more than just a pilgrimage but a mega-pilgrimage, or a number of pilgrimages rolled into one. The circuit the pilgrim moves around is well over 10 km long and, as we’ve seen, involves heading back into Mecca on the third day before returning to the Mina area to complete the stone-throwing ritual.

 

Put simply; the pilgrimage in Islam is absolutely exhausting and surely always was. Muslims implicitly acknowledge this when they congratulate each other on completing the Hajj because it is recognised as a major physical achievement to do it. In fact, the infirm are exempted from ever having to perform the Hajj, which is, of course, one of the five pillars of Islam incumbent upon every Muslim.

 

Scholars have noted that the Hajj appears to merge into one a number of customs and practices of ancient Arabia and suggested a meaning to their amalgamation. Malise Ruthven explains this particularly well in his Islam in the World. “The central ritual of Islam, the Hajj, was arranged out of existing cultic practices. The actions themselves were almost unchanged, but their meaning was transformed to fit a new, vastly expanded, cosmic vision. The result was a religious and ideological tour de force,” he writes.

 

Ancient roots

Anthropologists have seen in the individual rites ancient cults connected with the seasons –for example, the day at Arafat was a rain-making cult, stone-throwing at Mina was to cast down the sun god, Muzdalifa was associated with the thunder god Quzah (Saudi Arabia, to this day, has an annual “rain prayer” given in the mosque in Mecca).

 

But the timings were altered and wrenched from their old context, demonstrating the uselessness of the pagan gods, and placed in the timeframe of the lunar calendar. Visiting and circumambulating the Kaaba is another well-attested pre-Islamic custom. The idea of Mecca as a sacred precinct may also have its origins in a pre-Islamic neutral zone where tribal warring was put aside.

 

At pilgrimage, we come to buy salvation through our presence and our suffering, which is of a piece with the extensive commercialism going around the pilgrimage. Thankfully, there’s much honesty about this in Islam, and no one bothers to rail against the “consumerism” of pilgrimage – all the shops, trinkets and souvenirs – and I even feel guilty about indirectly suggesting such to that camel boy Nayef when I asked him how much money he made for giving rides.

 

In any case, his answer didn’t even make it into the final version of the story as my editors chucked it out. But ideologically, the striking and most important point about Hajj is that it forms the focal point of a culture that is neither East nor West, a world whose centre of gravity is definitely not Mediterranean, European or Western. It brings together.

 

If there was no Hajj and it was not in Mecca, one wonders whether the Arabs and Islam would be what they are today. The early qibla in Islam was Jerusalem – it was to Jerusalem that Muslims were enjoined to face in prayer. The decision to move it to Mecca was momentous; to this distant corner in the rough hills of the Arabian Peninsula we turn in prayer, and to this distant corner Muslims head to circle a mysterious ancient object imbued with God’s presence day after day, but most of all during those five days of Hajj in the lunar calendar that tricks the certitude of the seasons.

 

 

 

ãAndy Scott is a writer and journalist in the Middle East.

 

ã2004 K. Diab. Unless otherwise stated, all the content on this website is the copyright of Khaled Diab.