Just two days before the official start of Haj, around 1 million faithful performed Friday prayers at the Grand Mosque as the imam who officiated called for a peaceful and quiet Haj.
Sheikh Saleh bin Mohammed Al-Taleb also called on Muslims to unite and end disputes.
Authorities stepped up preparations as police closed most entrances to the Grand Mosque to vehicles, turning traffic in the area around the site into a menacing experience.
“I am very excited and extremely happy. I feel I am a very lucky person that I am performing Haj,” said Hamza Suleiman, a 56-year-old civil servant from Malaysia.
“I registered for Haj 10 years ago and my turn came this year. I really want to come here every year,” he told AFP in the Grand Mosque courtyard.
Egyptian businessman Ahmad Al-Bahrawi, who is performing Haj for the sixth time, accompanied by his wife, said: “it’s an entirely different feeling that cannot be described when I enter the Grand Mosque and look at the Kaaba.” The pilgrimage starts on Sunday and ends on Oct. 18.
Mohammed Shuaib wears a mask as he walks amid a flood of the faithful, but his wariness about the deadly MERS virus that has struck Saudi Arabia doesn’t seem to be widely shared. “Prevention is better than cure,” said the 67-year-old Algerian pensioner as he removed his mask to speak to AFP after performing noon prayers. But the overwhelming majority of those around him have no masks, and some said they never even heard of the MERS coronavirus. “We heard that the coronavirus is deadly and people in this case should protect themselves,” said Shuaib, accompanied by his nephew, who also wore a mask.
Most of the pilgrims interviewed seemed unmoved over the disease and were not wearing masks. “We depend on God,” said middle-aged Ahmad Mahmoud from Egypt.
All systems go as Haj set to begin with unity message
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