Sunday 22 December 2024

14 August 2023

Official Urges Hajjis to Make Most of Pilgrimage.

The representative of Leader of the Islamic Revolution in Hajj and pilgrimage affairs called on Iranian pilgrims who are going to make the pilgrimage this year to make the most of the spiritual journey.


Speaking at an educational program held for the pilgrims at Tehran’s Azadi Stadium on Friday, Hojat-ol-Islam Seyed Ali Qazi-Askar noted that such an important journey will not be repeated easily.

He said God forgives the pilgrims after Hajj and they start a new life.

“Thus, they should strive to benefit from every moment of the journey.”

Hojat-ol-Islam Qazi-Askar further referred to the participation of Iranian pilgrims in Hajj last year, after a year of suspension, and said the 2017 Hajj was desirably held.

There had been some attempts to dissuade the country’s Hajjis from going on the pilgrimage last year but the attempts failed and the Iranian Hajjis had one of the best pilgrimages, he added.

“This year, too, the conditions are favorable and we hope the pilgrimage will be organized better than that of the previous year.”

Like last year, more than 85,000 Iranian pilgrims will make the pilgrimage this year.

In May, Head of Iran’s Hajj and Pilgrimage Organization Hamid Mohammadi said dispatching Iranian Hajj pilgrims to Saudi Arabia will begin on July 16.

He said they will be sent to the kingdom in 576 batches, each consisting 85 to 160 individuals.

He added that the Iranian pilgrims will stay in Saudi Arabia between 28 and 45 days, depending on the conditions at Madinah and Jeddah airports.

In 2017, some 85,000 pilgrims from Iran travelled to the holy sites in Saudi Arabia for Hajj.

A year earlier, more than 1.8 million pilgrims attended Hajj, but Iranians stayed at home after tensions between Riyadh and Tehran boiled over following a deadly crush of people during the 2015 pilgrimage.

On September 24, 2015, thousands of people lost their lives in the deadly crush after Saudi authorities blocked a road in Mina during a ritual, forcing large crowds of pilgrims to collide.

The crush was the deadliest incident in the history of the pilgrimage. According to an Associated Press count based on official statements from the 36 countries that lost citizens in the disaster, more than 2,400 pilgrims were killed in the incident.

Saudi Arabia claims nearly 770 people were killed, but officials at Iran’s Hajj and Pilgrimage Organization say about 4,700 people, including over 460 Iranian pilgrims, lost their lives.