| Arabic | الحَطِيم / حِجْر إِسْمَاعِيل |
|---|---|
| Pronunciation | ha-TEEM / HIJR is-maa-EEL |
| Etymology | Hateem (حطيم) may derive from the root ح-ط-م (h-t-m), meaning 'to break' or 'shatter,' possibly referring to the 'broken off' section of the Kabah. Hijr (حجر) means 'enclosure' or 'restricted area,' and Ismail refers to Nabi Ishmael, son of Ibrahim. |
Hateem(الحَطِيم / حِجْر إِسْمَاعِيل) The Hateem (Hijr Ismail) is a semicircular low wall adjacent to the Kabah on its northwestern side. The enclosed area was originally part of the Kabah's foundation and is considered part of it for the purposes of Tawaf.
الحَطِيم / حِجْر إِسْمَاعِيل
The Hateem is a semicircular white marble wall approximately 1.3 meters high, located about 2 meters from the northwestern wall of the Kabah. The area between the wall and the Kabah is known as Hijr Ismail, as Islamic tradition associates it with the place where Prophet Ismail (Ishmael) and his mother Hajar (Hagar) were sheltered. When the Quraysh rebuilt the Kabah before Islam, they lacked sufficient legitimate funds to include the full original foundation laid by Prophet Ibrahim, so they excluded this portion and marked it with the low wall. Nabi Muhammad (shallallahu alaihi wa sallam) told Aisha that had his people not been recent converts from polytheism, he would have rebuilt the Kabah on Ibrahim's original foundation, incorporating the Hijr. Because the Hateem area is considered part of the original Kabah, jamaah haji performing Tawaf must circumambulate around the outside of the Hateem wall — walking through it would invalidate that circuit. Prayer within the Hijr is considered as shalat inside the Kabah itself.
Hateem (حطيم) may derive from the root ح-ط-م (h-t-m), meaning 'to break' or 'shatter,' possibly referring to the 'broken off' section of the Kabah. Hijr (حجر) means 'enclosure' or 'restricted area,' and Ismail refers to Nabi Ishmael, son of Ibrahim.
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