The Prophet Muhammed warned his companions against epidemics. He said if you hear of an outbreak of a plague in a land, do not enter it. In the Holy Qur’an, Allah says, ‘and do not kill yourselves.’

It’s worth recalling that there is a much greater horror approaching due to Covid-19.  We are racing to the edge of disaster, far worse than anything that’s happened in human history. Hani Nasira, an Egyptian academic and writer said if a decision is imposed to halt the Hajj 2020, such a decision will be wise and in full compliance with the Islamic Shariah.

If Saudi Arabia is forced to put the Hajj on hold in July 2020, it will not be without precedent. According to a report published by the King Abdul Aziz Foundation for Research and Archives (Darah), the first time the Hajj was interrupted was in 930 AD when the Qarmatians, a syncretic branch of Sevener Ismaili Shiite Islam that revolted against the Abbasid Caliphate, attacked pilgrims on the eighth day of Hajj.


The report says the Qarmatians, convinced that performing the Hajj was an act of idolatry, killed more than 30,000 pilgrims that year, desecrated Makkah’s Zamzam well with corpses, and ran off with the Black Stone of the Kaaba back to Hajr (Qatif nowadays), their capital on the Arabian Gulf at that time.


On account of the bloody assault, the Hajj was not performed for another 10 years, according to the Darah report.


The next disruption happened in 968 AD, says the report, citing Ibn Kathir’s book “Al-Bidaya wan-Nihayah.” It said a disease spread inside Makkah and claimed the lives of many pilgrims. At the same time, camels used for transporting pilgrims to Makkah died owing to a scarcity of water. “Many of those who managed to reach Makkah safely could not live long after Hajj for the same reason,” according to the Darah report.


Among those who came to Makkah to perform the Hajj in significant numbers were Egyptians. But in 1000 AD, they could not afford to undertake the journey because of the high cost of living in the country that year.


Some 29 years later, no pilgrims from the East or Egypt came for the Hajj. According to the Darah report, in 1030 only a few Iraqi pilgrims managed to reach Makkah to perform the Hajj.


Nine years later, Iraqi, Egyptian, Central Asian and north Arabian Muslims were unable to perform the Hajj.Dr. Emad Taher, head of the history department at King Abdul Aziz University, said the reason was political unrest and sectarian tensions.
Similarly, no one performed the Hajj in 1099 owing to fear and insecurity across the Muslim world as a result of wars.

Some five years before the Crusaders seized Jerusalem in 1099, lack of unity among Muslim rulers of the Arab region meant that no Muslims could manage to reach Makkah to perform the Hajj.

In 1168, Egyptians found themselves locked in confrontation with Kurdish Commander Asaduddin Shirkuh, who was hoping to extend the Zangid dynasty to Egypt. The situation naturally did not allow Egyptians to perform the Hajj.


The pilgrimage was again disrupted in the 13th century. The Darah report says no people from outside the Hijaz region could perform the Hajj between 1256 and1260.


French leader Napoleon Bonaparte’s military campaign in the Ottoman territories of Egypt and Syria from 1798 to 1801 made the standard routes to Makkah unsafe for pilgrims.

More than two centuries on, a global pandemic Covid-19 has cast a huge shadow of uncertainty on the Islamic pilgrimage.

Mohammad Ayaz Barkati provided this Urdu news on my FB messenger