Prophet Ibrahim (Abraham) established the rituals of হজ্জ by divine command. He built the কাবা শরীফ with his son Ismail, called humanity to হজ্জ (কুরআন 22:27), and his personal trials — leaving Hajar in the desert, the সাঈ, the sacrifice — became the very rituals হাজীগণ perform today.
Prophet Ibrahim's connection to মক্কা মুকাররমা began when Allah commanded him to take his wife Hajar and infant son Ismail to the barren, uninhabited valley. This act of obedience — leaving his beloved family in a place with no water, food, or shelter — was the first of several extraordinary tests of faith that would shape the rituals of হজ্জ. Ibrahim's willingness to obey despite every human instinct to protect his family demonstrates the level of tawakkul (reliance on Allah) that হজ্জ is designed to cultivate in every হাজী. The কুরআন describes Ibrahim as a model of faith: 'Indeed, Ibrahim was a nation unto himself, devoutly obedient to Allah' (16:120).
After Ismail grew to maturity, Allah commanded Ibrahim to return to মক্কা মুকাররমা and build the কাবা শরীফ — the first house of worship established for all humanity. Father and son labored together, with Ibrahim standing on the stone now known as Maqam Ibrahim to reach the upper walls. Their সালাত during construction — 'Our Lord, accept this from us. Indeed, You are the Hearing, the Knowing' (2:127) — is a model of humility in worship. After completing the construction, Allah commanded Ibrahim to proclaim the হজ্জ: 'And proclaim to the people the হজ্জ; they will come to you on foot and on every lean camel; they will come from every distant pass' (22:27). This proclamation established হজ্জ as an obligation for all who are able.
Each major হজ্জ ritual connects directly to an event in Ibrahim's life. The সাঈ between Safa and Marwah recreates Hajar's desperate search for water after Ibrahim left them in the desert. The তালবিয়াহ ('Here I am, O Allah, here I am') is the response to Ibrahim's call to হজ্জ. The stoning of the জামারাত commemorates Ibrahim's rejection of Shaytan, who appeared three times to tempt him away from obeying Allah's command to sacrifice Ismail. The Hadi (animal sacrifice) on the 10th of Dhul Hijjah recalls Allah's substitution of a ram when Ibrahim proved his willingness to sacrifice his son. Even the ইহরাম garments — simple, unadorned cloth — echo Ibrahim's simplicity and single-minded devotion.
Ibrahim holds a unique position in Islam as the 'Khalil Allah' (Friend of God) and the patriarch whose example defines multiple aspects of Muslim worship. The daily সালাতs include blessings upon Ibrahim in the tashahhud. The Eid al-Adha sacrifice commemorates his willingness to sacrifice Ismail. And হজ্জ — the fifth pillar of Islam — is essentially a reenactment of Ibrahim's most profound acts of faith. The কুরআন repeatedly instructs Muslims to follow Ibrahim's way: 'Then We revealed to you, [O Muhammad], to follow the religion of Ibrahim, inclining toward truth' (16:123). When a হাজী performs হজ্জ, they are not merely completing a religious obligation — they are living Ibrahim's story, testing their own faith against his extraordinary standard.