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  • 25
    Oct
    2012
    8:18am, EDT

    'Mountain of Mercy': Hajj pilgrims make early-morning ascent

    Alaa Badarneh / EPA

    Muslim pilgrims arrive to pray at the Mountain of Mercy (formally known as Mount Arafat) during the Hajj, in Arafat, Saudi Arabia, on October 24, 2012.

    As the sun rose on Thursday morning, hundreds of Muslim pilgrims prayed on a rocky hill known as the Mountain of Mercy, located on the Plain of Arafat near Mecca.

    Saudi authorities say around 3.4 million pilgrims — some 1.7 million of them from abroad — have arrived in the holy cities of Mecca and Medina for this year's hajj pilgrimage. 

    Hassan Ammar / AP

    Muslim pilgrims pray on a rocky hill called the Mountain of Mercy, on the Plain of Arafat near the holy city of Mecca, in the early hours of Thursday, Oct. 25, 2012.

    Hassan Ammar / AP

    A pilgrim cries as he prays at sunrise on a rocky hill called the Mountain of Mercy on Oct. 25, 2012.

    Hassan Ammar / AP

    Pilgrims climb the Mountain of Mercy on Oct. 25, 2012.

    Hassan Ammar / AP

    Muslim pilgrims head to Mount Arafat ahead of the hajj main ritual in the holy city of Mecca on Oct. 24, 2012.

    Click here to see previous PhotoBlog posts on the hajj.

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    47 comments

    Muslims only believe in receiving mercy for themselves, but certainly never show any mercy to anyone else. What a sham.

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    Explore related topics: middle-east, muslim, religion, saudi-arabia, world-news, hajj, mecca, mount-arafat, mountain-of-mercy
  • 23
    Oct
    2012
    6:06am, EDT

    Millions descend on Mecca for Hajj pilgrimage

    Fayez Nureldine / AFP - Getty Images

    Muslim pilgrims wait for the start of prayers at the Grand Mosque in the Saudi holy city of Mecca on October 22, 2012.

    Muslim pilgrims are descending in droves on Mecca for the hajj pilgrimage, which Saudi Arabia insists will not be affected by instability rocking the region. 

    Stormy skies greet pilgrims at Mount Noor in Mecca

    The annual Islamic pilgrimage, which officially begins on Thursday, October 25, draws three million visitors each year, making it the largest annual gathering of people in the world.

    Hajj is among the five pillars of Islam and is required of all able-bodied Muslims at least once in their lifetime.

    -- Agence France Presse, The Associated Press

    Hassan Ammar / AP

    Muslim pilgrims leave the Grand mosque after the noon prayer in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, on Oct. 22, 2012.

    Alaa Badarneh / EPA

    A view of the Royal Hotel Clock Tower located near the Haram Sharif Mosque during sunset, as seen from the top of the Jabal-al-noor ('Mountain of Light' in Arabic), four days before the Hajj 2012 pilgrimage, near Mecca, Saudi Arabia, on October 21, 2012.

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    1 comment

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    Explore related topics: middle-east, muslim, religion, saudi-arabia, world-news, hajj, mecca
  • 24
    Sep
    2012
    8:12am, EDT

    How religious pilgrimages support a multi-billion dollar industry

    Pascal Pavani / AFP/Getty Images

    A Catholic pilgrim looks at Virgin Mary statues in a gift shop during the Feast of the Assumption on Aug. 15, 2011 in the Sanctuary of Our Lady in the French pilgrimage city of Lourdes.

    By Holly Ellyatt, CNBC

    LONDON -- International religious pilgrimage: the business of devotion and divinity, miracles and mysticism for millions of worshippers. It is both a life-affirming contemplation for the faithful and the lifeblood of the communities surrounding popular shrines.

    Global “pilgrimage tourism” encompasses a multitude of businesses from tour operators and shrine administrators, to road-side souvenir stalls and pilgrims’ hostels.

    Religious travel generates at least $8 billion a year for shrine-centered economies and provides employment for thousands, according to academics — and being able to measure the celestial and spiritual elements of pilgrimage in monetary terms is far from a modern phenomenon; it’s as ancient as the act of spiritual travel itself.



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    “Pilgrimage has always been commercial, as has religion,” Manchester University professor Ian Reader told CNBC. “The roots of tourism are in pilgrimage, as the first package tours in Europe were organized by Venetian merchants controlling the Mediterranean. They ran tours to the Christian Holy Land in medieval times.”

    Read more business news on CNBC.com

    Reader is an expert on the economics of pilgrimage. His book, “Pilgrimage in the Marketplace,” will be published in 2013.

    "The contributions of pilgrims to local economies cannot be underestimated,” he stressed. “I have seen estimates that in the early 2000s, pilgrimage to San Giovanni Rotondo in Italy [the mystic saint Padre Pio's pilgrimage site] brought the town in $56.8 million in revenue — and it sustains the local economy.”

    The business of saints
    Indeed, destinations such as Lourdes or San Giovanni -- that have built their identity around their shrines -- call it religious branding. Entire towns are dedicated to the business of saints. Souvenir stalls, restaurants, hostels and tour operators owe their existence to the 100 million pilgrimages that take place every year.

    As with much in the spiritual world, measuring the financial impact of pilgrimage is more art than science. Tourist revenues are subject to seasonal variations, and often the businesses surrounding shrines are reluctant to be seen as mercenaries.

    Gideon Lewis-Kraus joins MSNBC's Dylan Ratigan to talk about his new book "A Sense of Direction: Pilgrimage for the Restless and the Hopeful," as they discuss self-fulfillment through travel.

    However, tourism scholar S. Vijayanand, author of “Socio Economic Impacts in Pilgrimage Tourism,” published in the International Journal of Multidisciplinary Research in January 2012, estimates that pilgrimage tourism is worth up to $8 billion a year globally.

    It’s not just spending by tourists generating economic activity. Host countries also benefit from tourist-related infrastructure projects.

    Saudi Arabia has just approved a development plan costing $16.5 billion to improve transport facilities -- including a new rail line dubbed "Mecca Metro" -- for the annual 2.5 million pilgrims that visit Mecca on Hajj, the once-in-a-lifetime pilgrimage duty for all able-bodies Muslims.

    Slideshow: Pilgrimage to Mecca

    Yahya Arhab / EPA

    Muslims begin the four-day hajj celebration that draws around 2.5 million worshippers each year to Mecca, Saudi Arabia.

    Launch slideshow

    Tourist revenues also provide much of the cash flow for the Roman Catholic Church.

    The Holy See — the church as an economic entity — recorded a budget shortfall of $19 million in 2011.

    But the Vatican City State — the guardian of the Church’s structures and Museums, including the Sistine Chapel — enjoyed a budget surplus of nearly $22 million, thanks to the fervor of tourists.

    The big business of illegal gambling

    The Vatican might be the heartland of Catholicism’s papal leadership but devotees in search of spiritual succor may opt for Lourdes, the site of a Marian apparition – the name for appearances of Mary -- that now boasts one of the biggest shrines in the world.

    “The entire economy of towns such as Lourdes is, in effect, based on pilgrimage,” Reader tells CNBC.

    'Souvenir circus'
    Indeed, in 2010 Lourdes’ administrators recorded employment of 30 full-time chaplains, 292 full-time lay employees and a further 120 seasonal employees, accounting for nearly four percent of the area’s total population.

    They’re assisted by more than 100,000 volunteers who look after the needs of visitors, many of whom journey to Lourdes in search of miracle recoveries from crippling ailments and disabilities.

    Whatever solace pilgrims draw from their sojourn, they return in the way of hard currency. Some 90 percent of Lourdes' $23 million  budget is derived from visitor donations.

    Some commentators on Catholicism, such as New York Times journalist Jason Horowitz, have bemoaned the commercialism of popular shrines and souvenir stalls, describing the rows of plastic saints or cigarette lighters emblazoned with a benevolent and beatific face as belonging to a “souvenir circus.”

    Why fewer Americans are starting new businesses

    But Reader of Manchester University disagrees. “Souvenirs are an intrinsic part of the pilgrimage market — without them there would be fewer pilgrims, and pilgrim places would be less lively. My studies show a livelier place attracts more pilgrims.”

    The United Nation's World Travel Organization reckoned in 2007 that religious tourism, albeit a loose category, was the “fastest growing part of the travel business.”

    Indeed in 2007, the Vatican’s pilgrimage office, the Opera Romana Pellegrinaggi, was so keen to encourage the laity to visit shrines that it struck a five-year contract with Italian cargo airline Mistral Air and started pilgrimage charter flights around the globe under the slogan “I’m searching for your face, Lord.”

    Depression, suicides rise as Euro debt crisis intensifies

    Branding and advertising may be a very modern way of reaching today’s pilgrims but the faithful have taken to the road seeking salvation since the Crusades, said Reader.

    Fast-forward a millennium, however, and the competition for pilgrims is heating up with hundreds of pilgrimage tours operating online vying to entice millions of would-be pilgrims to undertake a religious journey.

    Devotees less devout?
    Priests or other religious scholars often oversee the tours, adding a sense of depth and veracity to the journey. However, one priest told the National Catholic Reporter that the religious experience might be diluted by modernity and indeed, the travel.

    Modern pilgrims are keener on capturing the moment on their smartphones than quietly savoring the spiritual experience, said Friar Caesar Atuire lamenting the “kind of absenteeism that's becoming very pronounced even in our pilgrimages.”

    That points to a whole new target group for tourist operators marketing shrine-related packages. If devotees are perhaps becoming less devout, as it were, perhaps their more secular brethren could come to see the cultural attraction of many religious sites.

    The European Commission has recently issued a report that seeks to promote pilgrimage routes as “Cultural Routes”: journeys for everyone, adherent or atheist.

    Read more international coverage from NBC News

    Penelope Denu, administrator of the commission’s “Cultural Routes,” told CNBC that these pilgrimage routes are not only the preserve of the ardent devotee. “More and more people are now doing these routes that have no religious connection,” she said.

    Secular and cultural use of pilgrimage routes such as of the Camino de Compostela in Spain means that hundreds of thousands of visitors no longer carry the symbols of a religious pilgrim, such as a “pilgrim’s passport” or oyster shell -- a symbol synonymous with Santiago-St. James-of Compostela, to whom the route is dedicated -- along the journey.

    Business is booming for hostels and firms that line the 485-mile route — an economic success that hasn't gone unnoticed by Eurovia, an association for the establishment of European pilgrimage routes, or the Italian State, which has funded a relaunch for an Italian pilgrimage route with a $12.9 million grant. 

    The association is attempting to promote the lesser-traveled Via Francigena, the ancient 1,240-mile pilgrimage route from Britain to Rome that it believes could rival Spain’s Camino.

    Georg Kerschbaum, president of Eurovia, told CNBC that the route is becoming more and more popular, spurring the development of infrastructure, such as sleeping accommodation, along the route.

    “The Via Francigena would definitely benefit the local economy — you will get people passing through villages that would never usually be visited,” he said. “Little shops can then survive as pilgrims use the route. It’s amazing for the economy.”

    Kershbaum adds that even though the Via Francigena is still not so well known, even if only 500 people a year walked it, “that would be 500 more tourists than there were before.”

    Professor Reader notes that “commerce has been intrinsic in pilgrimage from the outset.”

    Indeed, from the relics of religion traded for over 2000 years to the modern souvenir stalls of Lourdes or the shrine of “Our Lady of Guadalupe in Mexico,” the booming business of pilgrimage looks set to stay.

    “One should not think that there is a distinct separation of ‘religion/pilgrimage’ and ‘money' .... Religion and pilgrimage and money go hand in hand,” Reader concluded.

    This article, "Religious Sojourns Fuel Multibillion-Dollar Business," originally appeared on CNBC.com.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Report: Iran commander warns of 'World War III'
    • Religious pilgrimages: a multi-billion dollar industry
    • Ancient land of 'Beringia' gets protection from US, Russia
    • Officials see Iran behind cyber attacks on US banks
    • Stay informed: Sign up for our newsletter

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook


    51 comments

    Most religion is nothing but pure BS! It is about money and power, nothing else. And our government lets these jerks prey on the rest of us, tax free...sickening. Down with TAX FREE religion! Why am I FORCED to support something I do not believe in? That is not freedom. That is not democracy. The re …

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    Explore related topics: business, italy, spain, muslim, catholic, christian, hajj, mecca, pilgrimage, featured
  • 10
    Dec
    2011
    6:40pm, EST

    2,080 lashes for Saudi man who raped daughter

    By The Associated Press

    RIYADH, Saudi Arabia -- An official Saudi newspaper says a man convicted of raping his daughter has been sentenced to receive 2,080 lashes over the course of a 13-year prison term.

    The court in the holy city of Mecca found the man guilty of raping his teenage daughter for seven years while under the influence of drugs.

    The Okaz newspaper reported Saturday that the man will receive the lashes in stages throughout his prison sentence. The man's name was not published.

    Saudi religious police say the girl's uncle tipped them off to the crime.

    Lashing is one of the penalties available to the clerics who serve as judges in Saudi Arabia and issue rulings according to the kingdom's strict interpretation of Islamic law.

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    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    510 comments

    Wondering what worse hell her life will now be now that it's out she's no longer a virgin...isn't she considered "damaged" property?

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