Ref: As Gorge Orwell says : We all are equal, but some are more equal than 
others.

http://blogs.aljazeera.net/middle-east/2010/11/13/red-workers-green-trains-make-hajj-easier-some

Red workers, green trains make Hajj easier - for some
      By Imran Garda in     November 13th, 2010. 

 
Photo by GALLO/GETTY
More than two million people kick off the Hajj pilgrimage today by heading out 
east from Mecca to Mina, a tent city on a majestic scale that's only in use 
once a year. ??Once there, a series of rituals take place, involving visits to 
the valley of Muzdalifa, Mount Arafat to sincerely ask for forgiveness and 
erase one's previous sins, and the Jamarat where pilgrims will stone the devil 
- satan or al-shaytaan in Arabic.?

"Symbolic" stoning is the intention theologically, to provide a physical outlet 
for each pilgrim's personal battle with the temptations of worldly possessions, 
the ego and other such evils that hinder submission to God and purity of 
heart.??

However during a visit on the lesser "Umrah" pilgrimage that I made here seven 
years ago, where I could inspect the Jamarat devoid of crowds six weeks after 
the Hajj had ended, I noticed spray-painted graffiti on one of the concrete 
pillars, reading "PUSH" (I think it meant to say "BUSH") and another saying 
"SHARON". The sight made me question whether the concrete devil wasn't actually 
THE devil for some passionate pilgrims who pelted it.
 
Devils and former US and Israeli politicians aside - the mass exodus from Mecca 
to Mina and all the back-and-forth scrambling of rich and poor among the 
eclectic, more-than-one-billion strong global Muslim population, is taxing. For 
the sincere pilgrim - and also for authorities. 

These mini-journeys within the big spiritual odyssey can take up 12 hours each, 
and often are quicker by foot that by bus or car - in nerve-wracking 
bumper-to-bumper traffic.
 
Two billion dollar railway

A Saudi solution has been to unveil the Mashair rail project. It cost them 
nearly $2bn, and will eventually replace thousands of cars and buses and ease 
congestion at the holy sites.
 
It is a line that has three stations at each Arafat, Muzdalifa and the Jamarat. 
It won't be touching Mecca yet, but in the long-term Saudi officials plan for 
it to not only reach Islam's holiest site but also the second holiest  - 
Madina, the city of the Prophet -  over 300km away.
 
It will only operate at 35 per cent capacity this year and will incrementally 
expand its services over each forthcoming Hajj. 



I met up with Habib Zein Al Abideen - the "Chief of Central Directorate for 
Development of Project" at the central office site for the Mashair project and 
asked him why the train line, was, according to rail definitions, only a 
"light" rail and not something more substantial. 
 
"It is not a light rail, it is mass transit!" he half-reprimanded, 
half-educated me. "It is big - 70,000 persons per hour. This is not light!"
 
Exuberant, pleasant and conversant in English, Arabic and German (as he chatted 
to the German consultants in his office), he was confident that in the 
long-term, the "big problem" of "too many cars and buses" could finally be 
overcome by the railway line. 
 
The line is impressive. Modern, elegant and in many places above-ground so as 
not to disturb the flow of pilgrims on foot - these lime-green trains zip 
through stations where announcements can be heard in English and Arabic for 
passengers to "mind the gap" - between the platform and train - though I 
couldn't find any gap. Nonetheless it pricked my nostalgia for Leicester Square 
station in London.
 
Controversial Sino-Saudi partnership

Some 14,000 of the 20,000 workers who built (and continue to expand) Mashair 
are Chinese. Chinese contractors were the best bidders to clinch this lucrative 
contract. The Sino-Saudi partnership hasn't been without controversy though. In 
October, 16 of those workers were arrested and deported back to China. 

Their crime was to strike, over pay and poor working conditions. I quizzed 
Habib Zein Al Abideen about the events of October. He became visibly uneasy, 
and irritated at the very mention of this. 
 
"This happens sometimes, in each country, we have not any big problems 
actually..."  And then, recovering like a train momentarily diverting off-track 
onto a new line, "What is important is this project it is finalised for the 
Stage One in just one year."
 
I wondered about the Chinese workers that I saw at the Arafat station. They 
were neither Hui nor Uighur - the Chinese ethnic-Muslim groups. Although some 
media reports noted that about 1,600 of the railway workers converted to Islam 
recently, what about the almost twelve and a half thousand others? 

Had they received a special dispensation by the Saudi government to work on the 
sites, explicitly forbidden to non-Muslims for 1400 years? Had they done 
"symbolic" (we see that word crop up again) conversions like the two French 
paratroopers who helped Saudi forces flush out Juhayman al-Otaibi's messianic 
group during the siege of the Grand Mosque in Mecca in 1979? 

I feared my questions would be too impolite, so I'll leave it to you, the 
reader to ponder over them. What was clear, though, was that soon after we 
arrived at Arafat station, a handful of Chinese workers were involved in a 
fist-fight with their Arab work colleagues. 

Our minders quickly ensured we weren't filming it.


 
Gulf countries first

There's little doubt that the train is a magnificent engineering feat, that 
will slash travel time, remove choking congestion and possibly save lives as a 
result. But whose lives?

Pilgrims from Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Bahrain, Oman and the United Arab Emirates 
who make up the GCC countries can use the train if they fork over SAR250 (just 
under $70) for a week-long Hajj ticket. Single-ride tickets are also available. 

Habib Zein Al Abideen indicated that those entering the Kingdom for Hajj, via 
car from neighbouring states like Jordan, Kuwait and Iraq will be allowed to 
use the train from next year. 

There are no plans, at present, to extend the service to those of other 
nationalities, who make up the majority of the pilgrims. Indonesia, Pakistan 
and India (in debatable order) have the largest Muslim populations in the world.
 
So while acknowledging the usefulness of the train and its attempt to make Hajj 
easier, the bulk of pilgrims who will be unable to buy a ticket should be 
forgiven for seeing it as nothing more than "symbolic".


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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