| Arabic | مِيقَات يَلَمْلَم |
|---|---|
| Pronunciation | mee-QAAT ya-LAM-lam |
| Etymology | Yalamlam (يلملم) is the name of a mountain in the area. Some linguists suggest it derives from a pre-Arabic South Arabian language. The modern name Al-Sadiah (السعدية) refers to the town that has developed near the traditional Miqat site. |
Miqat Yalamlam(مِيقَات يَلَمْلَم) Yalamlam is the designated Miqat for jamaah haji traveling to Mekkah from Yemen and southern directions. Located about 120 kilometers south of Mekkah, it is also known as Al-Sadiah.
مِيقَات يَلَمْلَم
Yalamlam is one of the five Miqat stations designated by Nabi Muhammad (shallallahu alaihi wa sallam) as recorded in authentic hadith collections. It primarily serves jamaah haji from Yemen, but also those traveling from parts of southern Arabia, East Africa, and historically from India and Southeast Asia via maritime routes. The modern site at Al-Sadiah features a masjid and basic facilities for jamaah haji. Yalamlam refers to a mountain in the Tihamah region of the Hejaz. Due to the increase in air travel, many jamaah haji who would traditionally use Yalamlam now arrive via Jeddah airport and enter Ihram before crossing the Miqat line. However, overland travelers from Yemen still use this traditional route.
Yalamlam (يلملم) is the name of a mountain in the area. Some linguists suggest it derives from a pre-Arabic South Arabian language. The modern name Al-Sadiah (السعدية) refers to the town that has developed near the traditional Miqat site.
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