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Hajj Culminates With Devil Stoning

CAIRO – Over two million pilgrims continued on Tuesday, September 13, the symbolic stoning of the devil in what has been so far a safe and smooth hajj.

“The Saudis organize everything for us. We are truly at ease here,” Youssef Al Mehri, 24, from Oman told Agence France Presse

The first day of the three-day stoning ritual began Monday, September 12, the first day of `Eid Al-Adha, at Jamrat Al-Aqaba.

Chanting “Allahu Akbar (God is Greatest),” massive crowds of pilgrims advanced in waves around Jamrat al-Aqaba, the largest of three adjacent pillars, pleting Jamrat Al-Aqabah.

It began after the pilgrims slaughtered sacrificial animals and performed Tawaf Al-Ifadah.

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Massive crowds of pilgrims filed along a giant pedestrian bridge that houses the walls in the Mina valley, pelting Jamrat Al-Aqabah.

Pilgrims hurl seven pebbles from behind a fence or from an overhead bridge every day for three days at each of the three 18-meter (58-foot) high concrete pillars symbolizing the devil.

All roads leading to Mina, a city that only comes to life during the days of Hajj, were blocked as the crowds dressed in white flowed into the area.

They crowded into a five-storey structure, and from there tossed pebbles at one of three walls representing Satan.

“This year, they have organized the situation better,” Abdel-Rahman Badr, an Egyptian pilgrim, told Reuters.

“I feel happy to be conducting the Hajj rituals,” he added.

In previous years, jostling to perform the stoning before returning to pray at the Grand Mosque accounted for many of the frequent stampedes and crushes that had afflicted the Hajj.

This year, the Saudi government deployed thousands of security forces, civil defense staff and volunteers as well as modern technology including drones and electronic bracelets to ensure a safe pilgrimage.

Muslims believe Satan appeared on the same site to Prophet Abraham, son Isma’il and wife Hagar, who each three seven stories at the devil.

After the stoning ceremony, the pilgrims go to Makkah for Tawaf Al-Wadaa.

Muslims from around the world pour to Makkah every year to e perform hajj, one of the five pillars of Islam.

Hajj consists of several ceremonies, which are meant to symbolize the essential concepts of the Islamic faith, and to commemorate the trials of Prophet Abraham and his family.

Every able-bodied adult Muslim who can financially afford the trip must perform hajj at least once in a lifetime.

Muslims who perform hajj properly return to their homes having all their sins washed way as promised by Prophet Muhammad.