Ihram is the sacred state of ritual consecration that hacilar enter for Hac or Umre. For men, it involves wearing two white unstitched sheets. Prohibitions include cutting hair/nails, using perfume, wearing sewn clothing (men), hunting, and marital relations. It is entered at the Miqat with a specific niyyah (intention) and the Telbiye.
Ihram is both a physical state and a spiritual condition. The word derives from the Arabic root h-r-m, meaning 'to make sacred' or 'to prohibit.' When a haci enters Ihram, they consecrate themselves for worship, voluntarily accepting a set of restrictions that strip away worldly distractions and focus the mind entirely on Allah. The simplicity of Ihram clothing — two plain white sheets for men, modest regular clothing for women — erases distinctions of wealth, status, and culture. A king and a laborer become indistinguishable. This radical equality is not merely symbolic; it is a lived experience of Kur'an-i Kerimic principle that the only distinction Allah recognizes is taqwa (God-consciousness).
The Miqat refers to the designated boundary points at which hacilar must enter the state of Ihram before proceeding to Mekke. Five Miqat points were established by Hz. Peygamber Muhammad (sallallahu aleyhi ve sellem): Dhul Hulayfah (for those coming from Medine), al-Juhfah (from the direction of Syria/Egypt), Qarn al-Manazil (from Najd/eastern Arabia), Yalamlam (from Yemen), and Dhat Irq (from Iraq). Pilgrims flying into Jeddah typically enter Ihram on the aircraft as it approaches the nearest Miqat. Before reaching the Miqat, it is sunnah to perform gusul (full ablution), apply perfume to the body (not the Ihram garments), and put on the Ihram clothing. At the Miqat, the haci makes the niyyah for either Hac or Umre and begins reciting the Telbiye.
Upon entering Ihram, specific actions become prohibited (haram): cutting or removing hair from any part of the body, clipping nails, using perfume or scented products, wearing sewn or fitted clothing (for men — women wear their normal modest clothing), covering the head (men) or covering the face (women, according to most scholars), hunting land animals, contracting marriage, and engaging in marital relations. These prohibitions serve a spiritual purpose: by restricting normal grooming, adornment, and physical pleasures, the haci enters a state of focused devotion where worldly comforts become secondary to worship. Violations of Ihram restrictions require specific compensations (fidyah), which vary by the type and severity of the violation.
If a haci violates an Ihram prohibition — either intentionally, forgetfully, or out of necessity — a fidyah (compensation) is required. For most violations (cutting hair, using perfume, wearing prohibited clothing), the fidyah is one of three options: fasting three days, feeding six poor people, or sacrificing a sheep. If a haci hunts a land animal, the compensation is the equivalent value of the animal killed. Marital relations during Ihram before the standing at Arafah invalidate the Hac entirely, requiring the Hac to be repeated the following year — though the current Hac must still be completed. The scholars emphasize that accidental or forgetful violations are treated more leniently, and that the compensatory system demonstrates Islam's balance between upholding sacred rules and providing mercy for human weakness.