Cambodian Muslims Coming to Saudi Arabia to Visit Me!

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General Mackevili
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Cambodian Muslims Coming to Saudi Arabia to Visit Me!

Post by General Mackevili »

I just found out that over a thousand Cambodian Muslims (Cham) are in Saudi Arabia RIGHT NOW to see me and bring me care packages from the kingdom!

Oops, I should have told them I'd be here in India. Oh well, next time.

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A record number of Cambodian Muslims are undertaking the expensive – and arduous – journey to Mecca to take part in the hajj this weekend.

In the days before she set off for the holy city of Mecca, 57-year-old Moe Vansi busily prepared a supply of rice and vegetables, home comforts in a foreign land. She brushed up on her Islamic law and endured rounds of vaccinations.

“She almost cried when she got on the plane,” said her son Meas Sokeo, a smartly dressed NGO worker who paid for her trip, one of the five pillars of Islam that all Muslims must complete, after saving up for seven years.

More than 1,000 Cambodian Muslims are among the crowds in Saudi Arabia this weekend to perform the hajj, walking between the hills of Safa and Marwah, kissing the Black Stone and drinking from the Zamzam Well.

Some 2 million faithful from all over the world converge on Mecca each year for the ancient pilgrimage, which began on Thursday and will last until the sighting of a new moon.

“Hajj” means “effort” in Arabic. And it is, as well as a spiritual effort, a physical one. Navigating crowds hundreds of thousands strong in baking heat, perils range from heatstroke to injury from pebbles hurled at towers symbolising the devil.

For Cambodian pilgrims, most of who speak neither Arabic nor English, and many of who are in their old age, the experience can be fraught.

“Last year, we lost two. They have not been found,” said Nazy Saleh, president of the Cambodian Muslim Media Center. The elderly pair are believed to have wandered away from their group and gone missing.

At least two more elderly participants died.

Each year, Saleh goes to Phnom Penh airport, where crowds of Cham Muslims gather to see off friends and family. “When they fly they might feel sick – sometimes it is their first time to board a flight,” he said. “They are very surprised.”
But despite the risks and expense, the number of Cambodians making the pilgrimage is on the rise. “There are around 1,000 hajjis this year; if [some] were not stuck, maybe more than ever,” said Saleh, referring to a group of more than 100 who were stranded in Kuala Lumpur last week.

“There are some problems with visas because of the new regulations,” said Saleh. “[Saudi Arabia] plans to have a quota. Next time, there will be 1,000 people from Cambodia only. Because in Mecca, if you open to everyone, there are too many.”

Sokeo’s mother was among the stranded group, though she has now made it to Mecca. She was lucky.

“Some of them already spent $3,200, but they could not get a visa,” Sokeo said. “If Allah blesses us, we can go.”

Muslims who want to complete the hajj have two options: apply for sponsorship or cough up the money to pay for the trip, usually as part of a package tour lasting 40 days and costing upwards of $3,000 a head.

Saudi Arabia, one of the Arab states that exert a strong influence on Cambodia’s 500,000-strong Cham Muslim community, funds some 40 hajjis each year. Not only are the air tickets paid for but, the government issues free passports.

Selections are made by the local authorities, and most of those awarded are to government and NGO employees, according to Saleh.

“Nepotism is there, but it is small,” said Farina So, head of the Cham Oral History project at the Documentation Center of Cambodia (DC-Cam).

As incomes rise, many are choosing to pay for a private trip, she continued. “The increased need for spirituality; the negative effect of globalisation – with development, people commit a lot of sins, and they want to get it off,” she said.

Dozens of Facebook photos posted from last year’s hajj showed Cambodians in the ancient city: groups of men dressed in white, holding signs in Arabic. “In the past, maybe six years ago, you could not see the real hajj, but now it’s everywhere [online] encouraging people to go,” So said.

For those who do not make the trip, there is consolation in the celebrations that will take place this weekend in Cham communities to mark the festival of Eid-al-Adha, or the Feast of the Sacrifice, which coincides with the end of hajj.

On Tuesday morning, in Veal Khmom village, Tboung Khmom province, a crowd of hundreds of villagers gathered as Malaysian donors handed over a stack of foam cut-out cattle to symbolise the gift of 184 sacrificial cows.

“If they were real cows, it would have been a bit dangerous,” Chea Sopgara, minister for Rural Development, who presided over the ceremony, told the crowd.

Tomorrow flesh and blood counterparts will be sacrificed as Muslims commemorate Abraham’s willingness to sacrifice his son on God’s command.

San Nary, 27, said.....

...click link to continue reading and for more pictures...

http://www.phnompenhpost.com/post-weeke ... p-lifetime
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flying chicken
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Re: Cambodian Muslims Coming to Saudi Arabia to Visit Me!

Post by flying chicken »

Don't forget to tell them to take selfies.
EVERYONE BOW DOWN AND PAY EXTREME HOMAGE TO HIS MAJESTIES flying chicken©
badneighour
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Re: Cambodian Muslims Coming to Saudi Arabia to Visit Me!

Post by badneighour »

Thats a shame you missed them.....how is India....is it nice to see women again...
flying chicken
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Re: Cambodian Muslims Coming to Saudi Arabia to Visit Me!

Post by flying chicken »

I am happy for the General. Choking one's chicken every night in the desert can get bored pretty fast.
EVERYONE BOW DOWN AND PAY EXTREME HOMAGE TO HIS MAJESTIES flying chicken©
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Bitte_Kein_Lexus
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Re: Cambodian Muslims Coming to Saudi Arabia to Visit Me!

Post by Bitte_Kein_Lexus »

That's actually a really interesting article. Especially since I was wacking weeds all afternoon yesterday with two chams. They asked for this morning off because of Hajji. I'm surprised they're not "paid for" by some Saudi organization. Pretty impressive that they drum up the money themselves. I wonder if some of them end up "unhappy" though. Not about the religious trip, but about the cultural shock of going g to Saudi (women, etc). anyways, that was a good read about an interesting Cambodian minority.
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Milord
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Re: Cambodian Muslims Coming to Saudi Arabia to Visit Me!

Post by Milord »

Can you say, "Ebola". Wouldn't that be "cleansing".
Sailorman
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Re: Cambodian Muslims Coming to Saudi Arabia to Visit Me!

Post by Sailorman »

What every gets you through the day, but its amazing the silliness that is done in the name of religion. (not to mention the wars fought over religions. My supreme being is better than your supreme being, Bam! Bam! Slice! Slice! Behead!)
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Digg3r
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Re: Cambodian Muslims Coming to Saudi Arabia to Visit Me!

Post by Digg3r »

I believe it's Eid which is very holy for Muslims. Time for feasts. Still a pity though on the whole booze ban.
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frank lee bent
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Re: Cambodian Muslims Coming to Saudi Arabia to Visit Me!

Post by frank lee bent »

Saudi banned pilgrims from ebola countries
flying chicken
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Re: Cambodian Muslims Coming to Saudi Arabia to Visit Me!

Post by flying chicken »

frank lee bent wrote:Saudi banned pilgrims from ebola countries
Lol. I wonder what Allah has to say about this.
EVERYONE BOW DOWN AND PAY EXTREME HOMAGE TO HIS MAJESTIES flying chicken©
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