Iranians had been advocating this idea of shared responsibilties for a holy site like Makkah and Madina which are frequented by Muslims from all over the world due to religious obligation...
PETROLEUM AND THE PILGRIMAGE
Senior Correspondent, Religion Dispatches
Follow Haroon on Twitter at @hsmoghul. We welcome your comments at ideas@qz.com.
PETROLEUM AND THE PILGRIMAGE
Mecca belongs to all Muslims, and Saudi Arabia shouldn’t be allowed to run it
Haroon MoghulSenior Correspondent, Religion Dispatches
Petroleum and the pilgrimage. The two combined give Saudi Arabia the
chance to punch well above its weight, affording one of the world’s most
regressive regimes the chance to exercise an outrageous influence on
Islam. It’s time to think of alternative arrangements.
It
might seem obvious to you why Saudi Arabia is bad for Islam. Because
the House of Saud controls Mecca, the direction of Muslim prayer and
location of the hajj pilgrimage,
and Medina, where the Prophet Mohammed built the first Muslim society,
died and is buried, the Kingdom is linked to Islam. And vice versa.
Though there is only one Muslim-majority country in the world where women can’t drive,
because it is the country that rules over Islam’s holy land, it is
assumed that Islam does not want women to drive. Because it is one of
the few Muslim-majority countries that suffers an absolute monarchy, it
is presumed Islam prefers unaccountable government too.
In so many ways, Saudi Arabia stains
the reputation of Islam. But Saudi Arabia has another kind of influence
on Islam. Every year, millions of pilgrims descend on Mecca to circumambulate the Ka’ba,
the cubical shrine we believe was built by Abraham to honor God, and
restored by Mohammed to His worship. Many are from poor countries, and
are visibly bedazzled by Saudi conspicuous consumption, the magnificence
of the wealth on display, the awesomeness and indescribable hugeness of
the great mosques that have been constructed to accommodate their
numbers.
I know how many feel. God has given the Saudis money beyond measure, and
power over His holy land; this must mean God approves of their Islam.
And what an Islam it is. The official Saudi interpretation of Islam, Wahhabism,
was born in violent revolt not only against Shi’a Islam, and the strong
traditions of spirituality embedded in Shi’a and Sunni Islam, but even
against the Sunni Ottoman caliph. Far from being the world’s leading
Sunni power, Saudi Arabia has usurped the mantle of Sunni Islam, helped
in its power projection by its small population, great wealth, and the
collapse of its erstwhile rivals. (The Ottomans, after all, are long
gone.) Saudi Arabia uses oil money to push its Wahhabism onto the Muslim
world, and to change Mecca and Medina too.
In recent decades, the Saudis have
rebuilt much of Mecca and Medina. Some of this has been necessary. Some
of this has been very good. But some of it has come at a great cost to Islam’s dearest relics, monuments and oldest mosques, which have been bulldozed without the least concern.
To be fair, some of the criticism
levelled at Saudi Arabia for these urban transformations is
unreasonable. Think about it this way: Thanks to modern technology, and
rising standards of living, millions of people not only want to go to
Mecca, but can afford to.
It’s no longer a journey of months, but of days, even hours. They speak
different languages, represent different customs, and all want to not
only worship in the same mosque, but get to the Ka’ba at the center of
it. While it is nice to imagine Mecca and Medina could retain the
features and architecture of old cities, it is also fanciful. When you
are dealing with traffic flow in the hundreds of thousands, slippery
stones and narrow alleys aren’t just problematic.
They can be deadly.
Too,
skyscrapers might ruin the alleged vibe of an ancient city, but as
every modern urbanist knows, building up is often the only realistic
option. So it’s not surprising, or terrible, that Saudi Arabia has built
the world’s third-tallest skyscraper
right outside the Great Mosque of Mecca. But the bigger question is:
Why is it the first-ugliest building in the world? In an age of cell
phones and, God help us, a religion that features a regular call to
prayer, what is the purpose of attaching a gaudy clock to the top? The
biggest question: These high towers are part of the progressive income
stratification of a city dedicated to a leveling religion. We’re all
equal on the pilgrimage, wearing the same robes, praying side-by-side,
but then when we get to our hotels, the stratification resumes. There’s
far too much money in Mecca, squeezing out the average pilgrim, and even
worse, this money has been introduced even while sacred history is
wiped away. So while, yes, the needs of modern religious life might mean
old mosques, shrines and historical sites are in the way, that doesn’t
demand destroying them.
Flush with ample funds, the Saudis could have easily rebuilt Islam’s sacred heritage elsewhere.
They haven’t even tried. They appear to
be going to war with Islamic history, probably so that nothing is left
that might challenge the idea that Wahhabism is an intrusion into
Islamic history, and not faithful to it.
If you think the Islamic State’s war on antiquities is horrifying, you
are right. But it is not exceptional. It has its roots in a perverse and
excessive iconoclasm, which has seen Saudi Wahhabist mandates literally
crush, demolish, smash, erase, and break down the very sites and
landscapes that Muslims worldwide know so well. If you think I am
exaggerating, don’t. Several years ago, I helped lead a small group of
American Muslims on a pilgrimage to Mecca and Medina. We had a Saudi
guide with us who, during our bus tour around Mecca and Medina, refused
to let our driver stop at mosques of historical significance, because he
thought we might cross the line and worship in a manner unbecoming of
an austere and hardheaded Wahhabist. He treated us like children.
Which,
of course, none of us were: Wahhabists, or children. (In revenge, I
spent the ride back happily pointing out sites of Ottoman significance,
while describing the House of Saud’s unseemly alliance with non-Muslim
powers against their fellow Muslims.) My fellow pilgrims were incensed.
They had paid, scrounged up and saved, and here they were, in their holy
city, and they weren’t allowed to stop at, for example, the mosque
where Mohammed was commanded by God to turn away from the first
direction of prayer, Jerusalem, to the current direction of prayer,
Mecca. (It matters if you’re Muslim.) They felt outraged. They felt they
were denied the chance to experience their Islam because someone else
had decided their interpretation of Islam mattered more.
And that is precisely the point. Mecca and Medina
are ruled by Saudi Arabia, but they belong to the Muslim world. They
are our collective sacredness. They shouldn’t be an individual
possession. Islam is a very egalitarian religion. (As some Muslims joke,
people who dislike organized religion should join Islam, because we’ve
mastered disorganization.) Islam has few hierarchies, and those that
exist are not widely shared. Why then does a regime which represents a
sliver of Muslims, exports and enforces an ideology that is historically
antithetical to Islam’s rich traditions of pluralism, spirituality and
cosmopolitanism, allowed to control our holy cities? Why don’t everyday
Muslims get a say?
This is, for the moment, a matter of conjecture. The European Union
includes some of the world’s wealthiest, most progressive and secure
societies. Yet before the refugee crisis, they are hopelessly divided,
and their cooperation pushed backwards. If Europe now can’t do it, how
can the present Muslim world manage to come to any kind of alternative
arrangement, some more inclusive shared administration of its common
properties? The Muslim world is deeply and badly divided; it is hard to
imagine how any kind of cooperative agreement could ever be reached, and
also, depressingly, not difficult to conceive of other Muslim-majority
governments who would make a different kind of mess out of Mecca and
Medina.
As
it is, Saudi Arabia has the wealth to pour into subsidizing the
pilgrimage, and Muslim piety in the Holy Land, in a way few other
countries can.
But for how long? Years back,
pilgrimage was the preserve of the lucky few. It was too far, too risky,
too expensive. My own great-great-grandfather began a travelogue
describing his own journey from northern India to Mecca, but he died on
the return trip. Today, we have Snapchat hajj channels. Aircraft make
the world much smaller. News travels fast. Muslims live all over the
world. What I mean to say is, in the past, the idea that Mecca and
Medina belonged to all of us was deeply felt, but at best an
abstraction. In the years to come, it will be harder for Saudi Arabia to
deny the desire of the world’s Muslims to see their holy cities reflect
their pieties, and to cease the imposition of a view of Islam which is
not only deeply alienating to the rest of the world, but deeply
unpopular within the Muslim world.
How that happens is anyone’s guess. But
it will happen. I’d say hell or high water, but in the case of a sacred
desert, neither seems quite right. But not as wrong as what is
happening to the center of my sacred universe.
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