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Hajj goes virtual for families of lucky pilgrims

31 July 2020, MVT 10:04
Mulism pilgrims praying on Mount Arafat, also known as Jabal al-Rahma (Mount of Mercy), southeast of the holy city of Mecca, during the climax of the Hajj pilgrimage amid the COVID-19 pandemic on July 30, 2020. Muslim pilgrims converged today on Saudi Arabia's Mount Arafat for the climax of this year's hajj, the smallest in modern times and a sharp contrast to the massive crowds of previous years. PHOTO: STR / AFP
31 July 2020, MVT 10:04

Faridah Bakti Yahra travelled alone to Mecca when she won the lottery of a lifetime to join this year's hajj, the smallest in living memory, but her family is relishing the experience virtually.

Thanks to her smartphone, and the 5G towers that loom over the holy city, the Indonesian housewife is sharing every step of the pilgrimage with her husband and three daughters back home in the Saudi coastal city of Khobar.

"I am so happy he joined me virtually, spiritually, with my daughters also. May my dear husband come here together with me again for hajj -- inshallah (God willing)," the 39-year-old told AFP.

In the first days of the pilgrimage, many of the faithful were seen holding their phones aloft to snap selfies and livestream their progress to friends and family back home.

Super high-speed 5G technology was rolled out in Mecca last year, allowing pilgrims to transfer data at breakneck speeds, and the network is now prevalent across much of Saudi Arabia.

But this year the shared religious experience has even greater resonance, with the gathering scaled down from more than two million people to just a few thousand, and at a time when many prayers are being offered for a world gripped by the novel coronavirus pandemic.

Digital worship

In recent years, the hajj has been at the centre of an acceleration in the growth of digital worship, with a slew of religious apps and tablet Korans.

Some pilgrims now prefer reading Koranic verses from their smartphones -- rapidly replacing traditional printed holy books.

But the tech is not limited to reading on screens and sharing stories. It has rapidly evolved to offer pilgrims the possibility of performing religious duties from their homes.

Online platforms have emerged allowing worshippers to virtually perform the year-round umrah, or minor pilgrimage, which usually takes only a few hours.

The service is based on the concept of outsourcing the pilgrimage -- asking someone in Saudi Arabia to perform umrah on their behalf, and experiencing it through a live virtual reality tool.

Some Islamic clerics support the idea, while others say only the sick are entitled to such an option.

And the situation is different with the hajj, a journey made over several days that requires walking for kilometres, praying for hours, and sleeping outdoors.

Some of this year's pilgrims have reported that performing the pilgrimage on such a small scale has been an intensely spiritual experience.

"I am praying for my husband to get back to work again," Yahra said.

"And I pray for the situation to get back to normal again, for the pandemic to stop, and for coronavirus to be gone."

Khobar, Saudi Arabia | AFP

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