Pilgrims Stone Satan in Saudi Hajj Ritual

A00581633.jpgTEHRAN (Fars News Agency)- Around two million Muslims massed in the holy Saudi city of Mina on Wednesday for the symbolic stoning of the devil, one of the high points of the annual hajj.

Amid tight security, with helicopters hovering overhead and a fleet of ambulances standing by, the human tide converged on the area for the stoning of pillars which will continue on Friday.

The Saudi Gazette newspaper said 10,000 troops had been deployed in Mina to beef up security and control pedestrian traffic on Jamarat Bridge, from where many throw their stones.

Saudi authorities have built a third level on to the bridge complex to ease the pressure, allowing more than 200,000 faithful an hour to cast pebbles they collected the previous day.

“By casting my pebbles I am saying that I will not give in to Satan’s worldly temptations,” said one middle-aged Arab, who identified himself as Jassem.

According to tradition, Mina is the place where Satan appeared first to Abraham, to his son Ishmael, and to Ishmael’s mother Hagar. The word Mina is a derivative of an Arabic word meaning “wish,” since it was here that Adam wished for heaven.

After the stoning, the pilgrims celebrate Eid al-Adha, literally the day of sacrifice, when animals, normally sheep but also goat, cows and camels, are sacrificed, in remembrance of Abraham’s readiness to sacrifice his son to God.

The Saudi government prefers hajjis to buy coupons instead of directly buying and sacrificing a beast, to avoid meat being wasted. Sheep sacrificed through coupon purchase are frozen and then distributed among the needy in the Islamic world.

This year the coupons cost around 105 dollars each. Last year, according to official figures coupons worth more than 74 million dollars were sold.

The hajj reached its climax on Tuesday when the faithful – men clad in a two-piece seamless white cloth, the women covered except for the hands and face – spent the day praying for forgiveness.

“In total, 2,454,325 pilgrims, including 1,707,814 from outside the kingdom, are performing the pilgrimage this year,” said the Saudi news agency SPA, quoting official figures.

Earlier, Saudi Interior Minister Prince Nayef bin Abdel Aziz said the pilgrims had come to Saudi Arabia from 181 different countries, with their number increasing three percent on last year.

Among this year’s pilgrims was Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, invited by Saudi King Abdullah to become the first president of the Islamic republic to take part.

His pilgrimage has an added political significance because of strengthening ties between two regional powers.

This year’s hajj ends on Friday.

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