Ghana midfielder Sulley Muntari performed the sacred Islamic rite of Umrah over the weekend.
The
rites which is popularly known as the ‘minor pilgrimage’ is a
non-compulsory ritual undertaken by Muslims at any time of the year in
Mecca.
Muntari who plays for Saudi Arabian club Ittihad FC took
time off to make the short trip to the holy city to perform the Islamic
rite.
The former AC Milan star decided against being with his family for the Christmas festivities to perform the sacred rite.
Literally
meaning ‘to visit a populated place’, the performance of Umrah includes
Tawaf which is circling the Kaaba seven times in anticlockwise
direction.
Men are encouraged to do this three times at a hurried pace, followed by four times, more closely, at a leisurely pace.
There
is also the performance of a sa’i which means rapidly walking seven
times back and forth between the hills of Safa and Marwah.
This
is a re-enactment of Hajar’s frantic search for water while baby Ishmael
cried and hit the ground with his foot (some versions of the story say
that an angel scraped his foot or the tip of his wing along the ground),
and water miraculously sprang forth.
This source of water is today called the Well of Zamzam.
Then there is the performance of a halq or taqsir, meaning a cutting of the hair.
A
taqsir is a partial shortening of the hair, whereas a halq is a
complete shave of the head, except for women, as they cut a little
amount of hair instead.
These rituals complete the Umrah, and the pilgrim can choose to go out of ihram.
Although
not a part of the ritual, most pilgrims drink water from the Well of
Zamzam. Various sects of Islam perform these rituals with slightly
different methods.
The peak times of pilgrimage are the days before, during and after the Hajj and during the last ten days of Ramadan. |
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