Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts

Friday, 24 February 2023

Top ten tips for Umrah 🕋

Below are ten practical tips to help you make the most of your Umrah and your stay in and around Al-Masjid Al-Haraam.
  1. Carry your hotel name on you. Each person in your group should have their hotel name and address written on them. It's very easy to get separated from your group during Tawaf or Sa'ee. You want the peace of mind that everybody in your group can make their own way back to the hotel should they get separated.
  2. Keep your footwear on when doing Tawaf and Sa'ee. Unless you're used to walking long distances bare foot on hard surfaces, doing so will cause strain to your feet and legs and hamper your ability to do follow-up Tawafs and/or Umrahs.
  3. Carry plasters and antiseptic wipes on you during Tawaf and Sa'ee. Individuals pushing wheelchairs are careless and often hit and cut those in front of them. I hope you never have to administer the plasters and wipes that you're carrying but, sadly, it's likely you will.
  4. Protect yourself against the sun. Pack sunglasses, sun cream and a light coloured scarf or umbrella. Take these items with you on each daytime trip to the Masjid. Remember not to wear the sun cream whilst in the state of Ihram.
  5. Set off early for prayer. Leave half an hour before the Adhan at least to get a place inside the Masjid or the extension.
  6. Use the first floor for Nafl Tawafs. The ground floor is currently exclusive for those doing Umrah. The roof is currently off limits for Tawaf due to construction works.
  7. Use the Mosque extension for a more tranquil prayer. There is always plenty of space inside and it is nicely carpeted. The ground and first floors of the main Mosque are currently exclusive for Umrah and Tawaf. As a result, they are quite disruptive to pray in.
  8. Ask the cleaners for help and advice. Avoid asking the Saudi guards for help and advice. Asking the Saudi guards for advice is like asking a Magic 8 Ball for advice.
  9. Avoid getting mobile data if you can. Entering the Masjid without internet is a great way to maximise your time inside and to have a detox from all the distractions online and outside.
  10. Install the Maps.ME app on your mobile device. Download the offline map for Saudi Arabia in the app to get a better visual layout of the Masjid and the surrounding area than what is available with Google Maps.

Saturday, 22 December 2012

Mathaabah - a place of returning

wa idh ja3alnaa-al-bayta mathaabatan-li-nnaasi...

"And when We made the House (the Ka3bah at Makkah) a Mathaabah (a place of resort) for mankind..." (Al-Qur'an, 2:125)

The word 'Mathaabah' in the verse above is used denote a place to which one returns again and again. And how fitting this word is when one of the undeniable privileges the Ka3bah enjoys is its being a place where people assemble from all over the world, and to which they long to return to timelessly.

Indeed, a person never has enough of visiting the Ka3bah and he parts every time with a greater desire to return. How spectacular this power to draw millions of people is when one thinks how little Makkah has to offer by way of landscape, and how little the Ka3bah has to offer by way of architecture and artistry!

Some even go on to say that a sign of one's Hajj being accepted is that, on parting, they find in their heart this desire to return and to present themselves at the Ka3bah once more.

(Paraphrased commentary of Mufti Muhammad Shaafi'ee's Ma3aariful Qur'an)

Hajj 2013 for me insha-Allah!!

Friday, 1 October 2010

Man in his wanderings

"If water stands motionless in a pool it grows stale and muddy, but when it moves and flows it becomes clear: so, too, man in his wanderings."

I sent this quote out (attributed to 'an old Kurdish nomad' in Muhammad Asad's book 'The Road to Mecca') a few days back on my regular text-out and got this reply back - a saying of the Tablighis - "fil harakah, barakah (in movement there is blessing)", which could equally be worded "al-barakah fil harakah (the blessing is in movement)" or perhaps even "al-harakah lil barakah (movement for blessing)". Nice saying! Here's another, found/quoted in the book 'Jesus, Prophet of Islam', about how the desert wilderness removes false senses of security from a person and teaches him to rely on Reality alone: "In the barrenness of the wilderness, all other support falls and one is laid bare to the One God, the Power, the Constant Source of all life, and the Root of all security." Sweet!! :)>

Saturday, 18 August 2007

Experiences from Hajj

Given less than a page to pen some of my experiences from last year’s Hajj, this is going to be tough task indeed. Two weeks, every day as packed as the next; do I tell you about the rituals, the people or the places? Maybe I should advise on patience and knowledge; how not to crack and miss the point of it all? Or perhaps I should go deeper and tell you about the opened hearts on the plains of Arafat and the lifted spirits on the mountains of Mina and Muzdalifah?

Let me start with my return. Hair shaved, heels cracked, body exhausted and carrying a slight cough, sounds tough, right? Well, that's the thing exactly. This is no ordinary trip. Think last ten days of Ramadan: Your spirit comes to life and carries you. Eager to cleanse your soul and clear your slate, you are surer and more sincere than ever. The result? You return with firm resolutions, focused targets, far-reaching goals and fearing a slackness that overcame your former self. You return as sinless as a newborn baby… and just as tired with a good few daytime naps to catch up on.

That's what you come back with. As for setting off, it all begins when you trade your clothes for two simple white sheets, and thus you enter the state of Ihram; time to focus, find that inner peace and channel out all negative energies. No more swearing, backbiting or lying; not that you would anyway. Instead, you moisten your tongue with the remembrance of Allah: "O my Lord, Here I am at Your service, Here I am. There is no partner with You. Here I am. Truly, the praise and the provisions are Yours, and so is the dominion and sovereignty. There is no partner unto You."

You arrive in Makkah to perform Umrah ahead of the days of the Hajj rituals. The overwhelming numbers don't quite hit you until you set off from your hotel room for your first prayer in the Sacred Mosque. A 10-minute walk away, you set off 20-minutes early to make it there ahead of time. Excited to catch that first glimpse of the Ka'bah (the square stone building in the Sacred Mosque), the hub of your life, you rush on only to get stuck a great distance from the Masjid in a massive swarm of bodies settled on their prayer mats for the coming prayer. So your first prayer is on the street and not even on the marble surrounding the Masjid! That first glimpse of the Ka'bah will have to wait and you make a note to self: "Set off for the Masjid an hour ahead of prayer time, for any chance of getting in."

A little later, with the crowds dispersed somewhat, you excitedly find your way to the Masjid. Nothing can prepare you for the mesmerisation that awaits so I will not even attempt to describe the feeling. Fixated on the Ka'bah, lost in thought, you stand there supplicating in gratitude for this opportunity. Nothing can break this intimate encounter. Well, actually, nothing except the guard that comes along, pats you on the shoulder and tells you to move along because you're blocking the passageway. 

With that first glimpse complete and having returned to your senses, it's now time to perform your Tawaf (circling of the Ka'bah). Despite the crowds, you jump in on the ground floor and find yourself being whisked along; round and round the Ka'bah, the focus of your faith and the centre of the Islamic movement. You, and the thousands of believers circling the Ka'bah with you at that point in time, have gathered from all around the globe for no other reason than the worship of One God. And so it begins, as you walk with all those around you, you glorify Allah like never before and supplicate to Him with a complete submission. 

With each cycle, stuck in the crowds, sun beaming down, Ihram being adjusted and flung in your face repeatedly by the man in front, continuously being run over by rigidly formed bodies of Turks, Indonesians and Malaysians (you'll understand when you get there!), the intensity increases, the annoyances begin to add up and you find yourself starting to lose concentration and a bit of cool. But despite it all, you take a deep breath and shake it off; refusing to allow these small annoyances to build up and spoil your Tawaf, you keep smiling, anger not and keep sight of the higher purpose: "O my Lord, Here I am at Your service, Here I am. There is no partner with You. Here I am. Truly, the praise and the provisions are Yours, and so is the dominion and sovereignty. There is no partner unto You."

That's a page complete and I haven't even started telling you about Madinah or the Hajj rites. I did start by saying that this was a tough task. I guess I'll have to continue next time. Between now and then, if you've got the money, health is not a problem and you're convinced that it is an experience of a lifetime, then start your preparations now and get out there… this year!

(Written for Issue 16 of Noor Ul Islam's Noor Magazine)