## When the Journey Was the Pilgrimage
For the vast majority of Islamic history — from the 7th century until the mid-20th century — reaching Mekke for Hac was itself an epic undertaking. Today's haci boards an airplane, sleeps through most of the journey, and arrives in Jeddah within hours. For over a thousand years, hacilar walked, rode camels or donkeys, or sailed treacherous seas, traveling for weeks, months, or even years to reach the holy city. The Hac caravans that formed along major routes were among the largest organized human movements in pre-modern history, and their stories reveal a depth of devotion that can humble even the most dedicated modern haci.
## The Syrian Caravan: The Road from Damascus
The Syrian (Shami) caravan, departing annually from Damascus, was one of the most prestigious and well-organized. Under Ottoman administration, it was led by the Amir al-Hac, a high-ranking official responsible for the safety and logistics of the entire journey. The route stretched approximately 1,300 kilometers south through modern Jordan, along the eastern edge of the Hijaz mountains, to Medine and then Mekke. The journey took approximately 45 days. The caravan could number 20,000-30,000 people at its peak, with thousands of camels carrying supplies, water, tents, and trade goods. The Ottomans built a series of fortified rest stations (qal'at) along the route, each with water cisterns, granaries, and small garrisons to protect against Bedouin raids.
## The Egyptian Caravan and the Mahmal
The Egyptian caravan from Cairo was equally famous and carried a special symbolic load: the Mahmal, an elaborately decorated empty litter mounted on a camel, which symbolized the sultan's sovereignty over the Hac route. The Mahmal tradition began in the Mamluk era and continued under the Ottomans. Alongside it traveled the Kiswa — the ornate cloth covering for the Kabe, which Egypt provided for centuries. The Egyptian caravan crossed the Sinai Peninsula, followed the Red Sea coast through Aqaba and down to the port towns of the Hijaz. The sea route was an alternative — hacilar from Egypt and North Africa could sail from Suez or other Red Sea ports to Jeddah, cutting the journey significantly but facing the dangers of shipwreck on the coral reefs and piracy.
## The Sub-Saharan African Pilgrimage
Perhaps the most arduous Hac journeys were those undertaken by hacilar from West and Sub-Saharan Africa. The famous account of Mansa Musa of Mali, who traveled to Hac in 1324 with a caravan reportedly including 60,000 people and 80 camels carrying gold, is legendary — his generosity along the way reportedly caused gold prices to crash in Cairo for a decade. But beyond this exceptional case, thousands of ordinary West African Muslims undertook the journey each year, crossing the Sahara Desert to reach North Africa, then continuing east to Egypt and south to the Hijaz. The journey could take two to three years in each direction. Communities of West African hacilar who settled along the route — unable to continue due to lack of funds or health — can still be found in Sudan and other transit countries.
## Dangers of the Road
The historical record is filled with accounts of caravan disasters. Bedouin raids were a constant threat, particularly in remote stretches where military escorts were thin. The Great Hac Caravan of 1757 was attacked so severely that thousands of hacilar perished. Water scarcity caused entire caravans to die of thirst when cisterns ran dry or wells were blocked. Disease — particularly cholera and plague — could devastate a caravan once it took hold in the close quarters of a large traveling group. Extreme heat caused heatstroke casualties, especially among elderly hacilar. Sandstorms could disorient and scatter caravans for days. Historical estimates suggest that in some periods, a significant percentage of hacilar who set out for Hac never returned.
## The Hejaz Railway: A Brief Revolution
In 1908, the Ottoman Sultan Abdulhamid II inaugurated the Hejaz Railway, connecting Damascus to Medine over approximately 1,320 kilometers of track. The railway reduced the Syrian hac ibadeti journey from 45 days by camel to just three days by train. It was funded in part by donations from Muslims worldwide, who saw it as a service to Hac hacilar. The railway was an engineering marvel, crossing harsh desert terrain with numerous bridges and tunnels. However, its life was short — during World War I, the famous T.E. Lawrence ('Lawrence of Arabia') and Arab revolt forces systematically destroyed much of the line. After the war, the railway was never fully restored, and the era of the great camel caravans was already giving way to motor vehicles and, eventually, air travel.
## The Legacy of the Caravans
Modern hacilar who fly business class to Jeddah and check into air-conditioned hotels near the Haram might consider what their predecessors endured. The caravan hacilar left their families for months or years, risked their lives on dangerous roads, endured extreme physical hardship, and arrived in Mekke already exhausted — yet they performed Hac with a depth of gratitude and presence that perhaps came precisely from the sacrifice of the journey itself. There is a lesson here for the modern haci: ease of access does not guarantee depth of experience. The scholars say that the reward of Hac is proportional to the hardship endured. While we need not romanticize suffering, we might allow the memory of the caravan hacilar to inspire us to approach our own, much easier Hac with the same spirit of total devotion.