Tag: Medina

  • Saudi Government To Enforce Ban On Transgender People Performing Umrah

    Saudi Government To Enforce Ban On Transgender People Performing Umrah

    KARACHI: The Saudi government has enforced a ban forbidding transgender people from performing Umrah, reported Geo News on Tuesday.

    Transgender people particularly those willing to visit holy land with an aim to perform Umrah would not be issued travel visa.

    Saudi Consul General is said to have issued a notification in this regard, according to Geo News.

    Travel Agents Association of Pakistan has also been informed about the decision taken by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

    Motive for the ban was not immediately known.

     

    Source: www.thenews.com.pk

  • Cuaca Terik, Kering Cabaran Utama Jemaah Haji Singapura

    Cuaca Terik, Kering Cabaran Utama Jemaah Haji Singapura

    Kurang sehari sebelum bermulanya kemuncak ibadah haji, semua jemaah Singapura perlu bersiap sedia menghadapi cuaca yang semakin panas, lagi kering.

    Suhu di Padang Arafah semasa wukuf nanti dijangka mencapai sehingga 45 darjah Selsius, ketika jemaah haji akan paling terdedah kepada terik matahari di kawasan yang terbuka.

    Kalau cuaca waktu malam di Makkah boleh menjunam sehingga 30 darjah Selsius tetapi pada siang harinya suhu dalam musim panas sekarang boleh melebihi 40 darjah Selsius.

    Maka itu semua jemaah Singapura perlu membuat persiapan untuk tidak menghadapi pelbagai masalah yang berkaitan dengan keadaan panas terik dan kering.

    “Jemaah, cabaran mereka yang terbesar sekarang adalah masalah cuaca. Cuaca yang tidak menentu dan agak tinggi dan panas. Mereka juga perlu menyesuaikan diri kepada orang-orang yang baru mereka jumpa sebab cabaran kedua selain cuaca adalah manusia.

    “Dengan karenah manusia yang ramai, bagaimana untuk menjaga keselamatan diri. Yang ketiga adalah diri kita sendiri, bagaimana untuk mengawal diri sendiri kerana ini merupakan rukun Islam kelima, banyak memerlukan kesabaran,” ujar Ustaz Jallaluddin Hassan.

    Pada musim haji tahun lalu, lebih 1,000 kes strok haba atau “heat stroke” berlaku di kalangan para jemaah semasa kemuncak ibadah haji.

    Malah kajian Umrah dan Haji Arab Saudi menunjukkan musim-musim haji akan datang jatuh dalam musim panas bulan September, Ogos, Julai dan Jun di Saudi bagi tempoh 10 tahun akan datang.

    Maka itu, semua jemaah haji dinasihati agar menggunakan payung atau mengelakkan kawasan-kawasan terdedah seberapa mungkin.

    Keadaan disukarkan lagi oleh keadaan orang ramai yang sesak. Dianggarkan lebih dua juta orang akan menjalankan ibadah haji tahun ini.

    Jemaah Singapura seperti ramai jemaah haji merata dunia akan mula bergerak ke Mina untuk tarwiyah hari ini (9 September) dan ke Padang Arafah, esok (10 September).

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Saudi Arabia Identifies Bombers In Two Attacks This Week

    Saudi Arabia Identifies Bombers In Two Attacks This Week

    Saudi Arabia identified on Thursday suspects in two of the three attacks that struck the kingdom on the same day this week, including one outside the sprawling mosque where the Prophet Muhammad is buried in the western city of Medina that killed four Saudi security troops.

    In a statement released by the Interior Ministry late Thursday, authorities said the Medina bomber in Monday’s apparently coordinated attacks was 26-year-old Saudi national Na’ir al-Nujiaidi al-Balawi.

    Three suicide bombers behind a botched attack, also Monday, outside a Shiite mosque in the eastern region of Qatif in which no civilians or police were wounded, were identified as Abdulrahman Saleh Mohammed, Ibrahim Saleh Mohammed and Abdelkarim al-Hesni, all in their early 20s.

    It was not immediately clear what nationality or nationalities the three carried.

    The ministry said investigations following the attacks led to the arrests of 19 suspects, seven Saudi and 12 Pakistani nationals. No other details were immediately available.

    On Tuesday, Saudi Arabia identified the suicide bomber who struck outside the U.S. Consulate in Jiddah as a Pakistani resident of the kingdom who had arrived 12 years ago to work as a driver. It named him as 34-year-old Abdullah Qalzar Khan. It said he lived in the port city with “his wife and her parents.” The statement did not elaborate.

    In that attack, the bomber detonated his explosives after two security guards approached him, killing himself and lightly wounding the guards, the ministry said. No consular staff were hurt.

    No group has yet claimed responsibility for the attacks but their nature and their apparently coordinated timing suggested the Islamic State group could be to blame.

    Pakistan has condemned Monday’s attacks in the kingdom. There are around 9 million foreigners living in Saudi Arabia, which has a total population of 30 million. Among all foreigners living in the kingdom, Pakistanis represent one of the largest groups.

    The Saudi ministry said the attacker in the Medina assault set off the bomb in a parking lot after security officers became suspicious about him. Several cars caught fire and thick plumes of black smoke were seen rising from the site of the explosion as thousands crowded the streets around the mosque.

    Worshippers expressed shock that such a prominent holy site could be targeted.

    The Prophet Muhammad’s mosque was packed on Monday evening, during the final days of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, which ended on Tuesday. Local media say the attacker was intending to strike the mosque when it was crowded with thousands gathered for the sunset prayer.

    Saudi Arabia is part of the U.S.-led coalition fighting the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria, and the militant group views its ruling monarchy as an enemy.

    The kingdom has been the target of multiple attacks by the group that have killed dozens of people. In June, the Interior Ministry reported 26 terror attacks in the last two years.

     

    Source: abcnews.go.com

  • Saudi Arabia: Plans to Move Tomb of Prophet Muhammad May Spark Unrest

    Saudi Arabia: Plans to Move Tomb of Prophet Muhammad May Spark Unrest

    One of Islam’s most revered holy sites – the tomb of the Prophet Mohamed – could be destroyed and his body removed to an anonymous grave under plans which threaten to spark discord across the Muslim world.

    The controversial proposals are part of a consultation document by a leading Saudi academic which has been circulated among the supervisors of al-Masjid al-Nabawi mosque in Medina, where the remains of the Prophet are housed under the Green Dome, visited by millions of pilgrims and venerated as Islam’s second-holiest site. The formal custodian of the mosque is Saudi Arabia’s ageing monarch King Abdullah.

    The plans, brought to light by another Saudi academic who has exposed and criticised the destruction of holy places and artefacts in Mecca – the holiest site in the Muslim world – call for the destruction of chambers around the Prophet’s grave which are particularly venerated by Shia Muslims.

    The 61-page document also calls for the removal of Mohamed’s remains to the nearby al-Baqi cemetery, where they would be interred anonymously.

    There is no suggestion that any decision has been taken to act upon the plans. The Saudi government has in the past insisted that it treats any changes to Islam’s holiest sites with “the utmost seriousness”.

    But such is the importance of the mosque to both Sunni and Shia Muslims that Dr Irfan al-Alawi warned that any attempt to carry out the work could spark unrest. It also runs the risk of inflaming sectarian tensions between the two branches of Islam, already running perilously high due to the conflicts in Syria and Iraq.

    Hardline Saudi clerics have long preached that the country’s strict Wahhabi interpretation of Islam – an offshoot of the Sunni tradition – prohibits the worship of any object or “saint”, a practice considered “shirq” or idolatrous.

    Dr Alawi, director of the Islamic Heritage Research Foundation, told The Independent: “People visit the chambers, which are the rooms where the Prophet’s family lived, and turn towards the burial chamber to pray.

    “Now they want to prevent pilgrims from attending and venerating the tomb because they believe this is shirq, or idolatry. But the only way they can stop people visiting the Prophet is to get him out and into the cemetery.”

    For centuries Muslim pilgrims have made their way to Mecca in order to visit the Kaaba – a black granite cubed building said to be built by Abraham, around which al-Masjid al-Haram, or the Grand Mosque, is built, and towards which every Muslim faces when they pray.

    This pilgrimage, or hajj, is a religious duty that has to be carried out at least once in a lifetime.

    Many go on to make their way to the nearby city of Medina to pay their respects at the Prophet’s tomb.

    Al-Nabawi mosque around the tomb has been expanded by generations of Arabian rulers, particularly the Ottomans. It includes hand-painted calligraphy documenting details of the Prophet’s life and his family. Dr Alawi said the plans also call for these to be destroyed as well as the Green Dome which covers the Prophet’s tomb.

    The Prophet is venerated by both branches of Islam, Sunni and Shia. The strict Wahhabi sect is a branch of the Sunni faith, however, and removing the Prophet could further inflame tensions between the two groups .

    The current  crisis in Iraq has been blamed on the Shia former Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki’s sectarianism, which alienated the Sunni, leading to the uprising. Isis, also known as Islamic State, which holds swathes of Iraq and Syria, and which murdered the American journalist James Foley, is a Sunni organisation.

    Mainstream Sunni Muslims would be just as aghast at any desecration of the tomb as the Shia, Dr Alawi said.

    The Independent has previously revealed how the multibillion-pound expansion of the Grand Mosque has, according to the Washington-based Gulf Institute, led to the destruction of up to 95 per cent of Mecca’s millennium-old buildings. They have been replaced with luxury  hotels, apartments and  shopping malls.

    King Abdullah has appointed the prominent Wahhabi cleric and imam of the Grand Mosque, Abdul Rahman al-Sudais, to oversee the expansion project – necessary to cope with the huge number of pilgrims who now visit each year.

    Dr Alawi says the consultation document for the al-Nabawi mosque in Medina, by the leading Saudi academic Dr Ali bin Abdulaziz al-Shabal of Imam Muhammad ibn Saud Islamic University in Riyadh, has been circulated to the Committee of the Presidency of the Two Mosques.

    Several pages of the consultation document have just been published in the presidency’s journal. They call for the destruction of the rooms surrounding the tomb – used by the Prophet’s wives and daughters, and venerated by the Shia because of their association with his youngest daughter, Fatima.

    The document also calls for the Green Dome, which covers the tomb and these living quarters, to be removed, and the ultimate removal of the Prophet’s body to a nearby cemetery.

    The al-Baqi cemetery already contains the bodies of many of the Prophet’s family, including his father who was removed there in the 1970s, Dr Alawi said. In 1924 all the grave markers were removed, so pilgrims would not know who was buried there, and so be unable to pray to them.

    “The Prophet would be anonymous,” Dr  Alawi added. “Everything around the Prophet’s mosque has already been destroyed. It is surrounded by bulldozers. Once they’ve removed everything they can move towards the mosque. The imam is likely to say there is a need to expand the mosque and do it that way, while the world’s eyes are on Iraq and Syria. The Prophet Mohamed’s grave is venerated by the mainstream Sunni, who would never do it. It is just as important for the Shia too, who venerate the Prophet’s daughter, Fatima.

    “I’m sure there will be shock across the Muslim world at these revelations. It will cause outrage.”

    The Independent was unable to contact the Saudi Arabian embassy, but it said in a statement last year: “The development of the Holy Mosque of Makkah al-Mukarramah [Mecca] is an extremely important subject and one which the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, in its capacity as custodian of the two holy mosques, takes with the utmost seriousness. This role is at the heart of the principles upon which Saudi Arabia is founded.”

    Source: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/saudis-risk-new-muslim-division-with-proposal-to-move-mohameds-tomb-9705120.html

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